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Although the hemO mutant was ineffective at killing hamsters, it was still able to colonize the kidneys of most of the animals. Colonization was assessed by culturing kidney or urine in Leptospira growth medium. The mutant was recovered by culturing of kidney or urine from 17 of 20 hamsters that survived the challenge with the hemO mutant and all 3 that died. These results were similar to what was obtained with hamsters inoculated with the control strain, which was recovered from all 8 animals that survived and all 12 that died. (Not all hamsters were examined for colonization.)
Why was the hemO mutant able to colonize the kidney when it was unable to extract iron from heme? Heme is not the only source of iron in the body. The mutant may have captured one of the other forms of iron present in the host. The genome of L. interrogans encodes several homologs of transporters that the spirochete may use to acquire non-heme sources of iron (Louvel et al., 2006). Since these other iron sources are less abundant than heme, the tissue burden (density of bacteria) of the mutant in the kidneys may have been lower than that of the control strain thereby allowing most of the hamsters challenged with the hemO mutant to survive.
One obvious limitation of the study is that the investigators did not attempt to complement the hemO mutation with a wild-type copy of the gene. However, I should point out that currently no plasmid is available that replicates in L. interrogans, rendering complementation of L. interrogans mutations difficult. The researchers did verify that the gene immediately downstream of hemO was still transcribed in the mutant.
This work is significant for the following reasons. First, although there have been two other studies that have examined the role of Leptospira genes in virulence, this study was the most satisfying to read because it was the first to show that a gene encoding a product of known function has a role in the virulence of Leptospira. Second and perhaps more importantly, it is the first to demonstrate the importance of a bacterial heme oxygenase in virulence.
Featured papers
Murray, G., Ellis, K., Lo, M., & Adler, B. (2008). Leptospira interrogans requires a functional heme oxygenase to scavenge iron from hemoglobin Microbes and Infection, 10 (7), 791-797 DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2008.04.010
Murray, G., Srikram, A., Henry, R., Puapairoj, A., Sermswan, R., & Adler, B. (2009). Leptospira interrogans requires heme oxygenase for disease pathogenesis Microbes and Infection, 11 (2), 311-314 DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2008.11.014
Other references
Kikuchi, G., Yoshida, T., and Noguchi, M. (2005). Heme oxygenase and heme degradation. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 338(1):558-567. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2005.08.020
Louvel, H., Bommezzadri S., Zidane, N., Boursaux-Eude, C., Creno, S., Magnier, A., Rouy, Z., Médigue, C., Saint Girons, I., Bouchier, C., and Picardeau, M. (2006). Comparative and functional genomic analyses of iron transport and regulation in Leptospira spp. Journal of Bacteriology 188(22):7893-7904. DOI: 10.1128/JB00711-06