Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3415663 | Microbes and Infection | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Clostridium perfringens and Clostridium septicum are the most common causes of clostridial myonecrosis or gas gangrene. Although they mediate a similar disease pathology, they elaborate functionally very different α-toxins. We used a reciprocal complementation approach to assess the contribution of the primary toxin of each species to disease and found that C. perfringens α-toxin (PLC) was able to mediate the gross pathology of myonecrosis even in a C. septicum background, although it could not induce vascular leukostasis. Conversely, while C. septicum α-toxin restored some virulence to a C. perfringens plc mutant, it was less active than in its native background.
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Authors
Catherine L. Kennedy, Dena Lyras, Jackie K. Cheung, Thomas J. Hiscox, John J. Emmins, Julian I. Rood,