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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., May 1996, 1693-1698, Vol 62, No. 5
B O'Driscoll, CG Gahan and C Hill
The ability of Listeria monocytogenes to tolerate low-pH environments is of
particular importance because the pathogen encounters such environments in
vivo, both during passage through the stomach and within the macrophage
phagosome. In our study, L. monocytogenes was shown to exhibit a
significant adaptive acid tolerance response following a 1-h exposure to
mild acid (pH 5.5), which is capable of protecting cells from severe acid
stress (pH 3.5). Susceptibility to pH 3.5 acid is growth phase dependent.
Stationary-phase Listeria cultures are naturally resistant to the challenge
pH (pH 3.5), while exponential- phase cultures require adaptation at pH 5.5
to induce acid tolerance. Adaptation requires protein synthesis, since
treatment with chloramphenicol prevents the development of acid tolerance.
Induction of the acid tolerance response also protects L. monocytogenes
against the effect of other environmental stresses. Acid-adapted cells
demonstrate increased tolerance toward thermal stress, osmotic stress,
crystal violet, and ethanol. Following prolonged exposure of L.
monocytogenes to pH 3.5, we isolated mutants which constitutively
demonstrate increased acid tolerance at all stages of the growth cycle.
These mutants do not display full acid tolerance, but their resistance to
low pH can be further increased following adaptation to mild-acid
conditions. The mutants demonstrated increased lethality for mice relative
to that of the wild type when inoculated by the intraperitoneal route. When
administered as lower inocula, the mutants reached higher levels in the
spleens of infected mice than did the wild type. The data suggest that
low-pH conditions may have the potential to select for L. monocytogenes
mutants with increased natural acid tolerance and increased virulence.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Adaptive acid tolerance response in Listeria monocytogenes: isolation of an acid-tolerant mutant which demonstrates increased virulence
Department of Microbiology and National Food Biotechnology Centre, University College Cork, Ireland.
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