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      Transmission of Yersinia pestis from an infectious biofilm in the flea vector.

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          Abstract

          Transmission of plague by fleas depends on infection of the proventricular valve in the insect's foregut by a dense aggregate of Yersinia pestis. Proventricular infection requires the Y. pestis hemin storage (hms) genes; here, we show that the hms genes are also required to produce an extracellular matrix and a biofilm in vitro, supporting the hypothesis that a transmissible infection in the flea depends on the development of a biofilm on the hydrophobic, acellular surface of spines that line the interior of the proventriculus. The development of biofilm and proventricular infection did not depend on the 3 Y. pestis quorum-sensing systems. The extracellular matrix enveloping the Y. pestis biofilm in the flea appeared to incorporate components from the flea's blood meal, and bacteria released from the biofilm were more resistant to human polymorphonuclear leukocytes than were in vitro-grown Y. pestis. Enabling arthropod-borne transmission represents a novel function of a bacterial biofilm.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Infect Dis
          The Journal of infectious diseases
          University of Chicago Press
          0022-1899
          0022-1899
          Aug 15 2004
          : 190
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Human Bacterial Pathogenesis, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana 59840, USA.
          Article
          JID32214
          10.1086/422695
          15272407
          36e651e3-3ca3-4932-bbd7-c5594cf3e218
          History

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