Chitinolytic enzymes contribute to the pathogenicity of Aliivibrio salmonicida LFI1238 in the invasive phase of cold-water vibriosis
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27483Dato
2022-08-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Skåne, Anna; Edvardsen, Per Kristian Thorén; Cordara, Gabriele; Loose, Jennifer Sarah Maria; Leitl, Kira Daryl; Krengel, Ute; Sørum, Henning; Askarian, Fatemeh; Vaaje-Kolstad, GustavSammendrag
Results - In the present study we investigated the role of LPMOs in the pathogenicity of A. salmonicida LFI238 in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). In vivo challenge experiments using isogenic deletion mutants of the two LPMOs encoding genes AsLPMO10A and AsLPMO10B, showed that both LPMOs, and in particular AsLPMO10B, were important in the invasive phase of cold-water vibriosis. Crystallographic analysis of the AsLPMO10B AA10 LPMO domain (to 1.4 Å resolution) revealed high structural similarity to viral fusolin, an LPMO known to enhance the virulence of insecticidal agents. Finally, exposure to Atlantic salmon serum resulted in substantial proteome re-organization of the A. salmonicida LPMO deletion variants compared to the wild type strain, indicating the struggle of the bacterium to adapt to the host immune components in the absence of the LPMOs.
Conclusion - The present study consolidates the role of LPMOs in virulence and demonstrates that such enzymes may have more than one function.