Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors

Human enteric pathogen Salmonella contaminates raw produce and triggers significant economic loss and illness. Under a natural environment, Salmonella resides in soil and enters the interior of plants without causing disease or eliciting symbiotic growth. Upon being consumed by humans, complex virul...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yulan
Other Authors: Shan, Libo
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-12-8934
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2010-12-89342013-01-08T10:42:49ZSalmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen FactorsZhang, YulanSalmonellaArabidopsisinfectionfactorHuman enteric pathogen Salmonella contaminates raw produce and triggers significant economic loss and illness. Under a natural environment, Salmonella resides in soil and enters the interior of plants without causing disease or eliciting symbiotic growth. Upon being consumed by humans, complex virulence mechanisms are elicited by the specific intestine conditions, such as high temperature and humidity and lead to profound infection. The lack of effective prevention and drug treatment are largely attributed to the unclear mechanistic understanding on Salmonella association with environmental media, and in vivo host and pathogen factors required for persistent infection. We have explored the potential of deploying the model plant organism Arabidopsis thaliana to tackle this fundamental yet clinically challenging question, as Arabidopsis possesses many advantages as a model system, including enriched genomic resources, powerful genetic tools, low maintenance cost and a large collection of individual gene deletion mutants. Our preliminary data demonstrated Arabidopsis seedlings under liquid culture conditions mimicking the intestine environment were infected and killed by salmonella within 2 days upon inoculation. The Arabidopsis system possesses well-developed genetic information and the resources to study host factors required for infection on very short time scales, thus complementing traditional animal genetic studies. We aim to define the pathogen factors required for this infection. By merging the fields of extremely powerful Arabidopsis genetics and bacterial genetics/genomics, we hope to provide insight into possible new paradigms for addressing salmonella-mediated food born infection.Shan, Libo2012-02-14T22:18:54Z2012-02-16T16:13:42Z2012-02-14T22:18:54Z2012-02-16T16:13:42Z2010-122012-02-14December 2010thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-12-8934en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Salmonella
Arabidopsis
infection
factor
spellingShingle Salmonella
Arabidopsis
infection
factor
Zhang, Yulan
Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
description Human enteric pathogen Salmonella contaminates raw produce and triggers significant economic loss and illness. Under a natural environment, Salmonella resides in soil and enters the interior of plants without causing disease or eliciting symbiotic growth. Upon being consumed by humans, complex virulence mechanisms are elicited by the specific intestine conditions, such as high temperature and humidity and lead to profound infection. The lack of effective prevention and drug treatment are largely attributed to the unclear mechanistic understanding on Salmonella association with environmental media, and in vivo host and pathogen factors required for persistent infection. We have explored the potential of deploying the model plant organism Arabidopsis thaliana to tackle this fundamental yet clinically challenging question, as Arabidopsis possesses many advantages as a model system, including enriched genomic resources, powerful genetic tools, low maintenance cost and a large collection of individual gene deletion mutants. Our preliminary data demonstrated Arabidopsis seedlings under liquid culture conditions mimicking the intestine environment were infected and killed by salmonella within 2 days upon inoculation. The Arabidopsis system possesses well-developed genetic information and the resources to study host factors required for infection on very short time scales, thus complementing traditional animal genetic studies. We aim to define the pathogen factors required for this infection. By merging the fields of extremely powerful Arabidopsis genetics and bacterial genetics/genomics, we hope to provide insight into possible new paradigms for addressing salmonella-mediated food born infection.
author2 Shan, Libo
author_facet Shan, Libo
Zhang, Yulan
author Zhang, Yulan
author_sort Zhang, Yulan
title Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
title_short Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
title_full Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
title_fullStr Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
title_full_unstemmed Salmonella Infection on Arabidopsis Seedlings Requires Both Host and Pathogen Factors
title_sort salmonella infection on arabidopsis seedlings requires both host and pathogen factors
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-12-8934
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangyulan salmonellainfectiononarabidopsisseedlingsrequiresbothhostandpathogenfactors
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