Enterococcus faecalis: Difference between revisions

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[http://aac.asm.org/cgi/content/full/51/6/2043?view=long&pmid=17438057 6.) Arias C., Singh K., Panesso D., Murray BE. “Time-Kill and Synergism Studies of Ceftobiprole against Enterococcus faecalis, Including ß-Lactamase-Producing and Vancomycin-Resistant Isolates” Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. June 2007. Vol. 51, No. 6. p. 2043-2047.]
[http://aac.asm.org/cgi/content/full/51/6/2043?view=long&pmid=17438057 6.) Arias C., Singh K., Panesso D., Murray BE. “Time-Kill and Synergism Studies of Ceftobiprole against Enterococcus faecalis, Including ß-Lactamase-Producing and Vancomycin-Resistant Isolates” Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. June 2007. Vol. 51, No. 6. p. 2043-2047.]


[http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/JID/journal/issues/v195n10/37546/37546.html 7.) Bourgeois-Nicolaos N., Massias L., Couson B., Butel MJ, Andremont A., Doucet-Populaire F. “Dose Dependence of Emergence of Resistance to Linezolid in Enterococcus faecalis In Vivo” The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2007. Vol. 195. p. 1480-1488.]
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Revision as of 00:47, 29 May 2007

Template:Biorealm genus

Enterococcus faecalis. Photo by:Pete Wardell / CDC


Classification

Higher order taxa

Bacteria; Firmicutes; Bacilli; Lactobacillales; Enterococcaceae; Enterococcus

Genus

Enterococcus faecalis

Description and significance

Enterococcus are gram-positive cocci that can survive harsh conditions in nature. They can be found in soil, water, and plants. Some strains are used for the manufacture of foods whereas others are the cause of serious human and animal infections (i.e. they are known to colonize the gastrointestinal and gential tracts of humans). They are associated with both community and hospitial acquired infections. Enterocci can grow at a temperature range of 10 to 42°C and in environments with broad pH values. Some are known to be motile.While there are over 15 species of the Enterococcus genus, 80-90% of clinical isolates are E. faecalis. Enterocci typically form short chains or are arranged in pairs. However, under certain growth conditions, they elongate and appear coocobacillary. In general, enterococci are alpha-hemlytic. Some possess the group D Lancefield antigen and can be detected using monoclonal antibody-based agglutination tests. Enterococci are typically catalase negative, and are anaerobic. They are able to grow in 6.5% NaCl, can hydrolyze esculin in the presence of 40% bile salts and are pyrrolidonyl arylamidase and leucine arylamidase positive. Enterococci have proven to present a therapeutic challenge because of their resistance to many antimicrobial drugs, including cell-wall active agents, aminoglycosides, penicillin and ampicillin, and vancomycin. In the last decade, vancomycin-resistnat enerococci have become a major challenge. The enterococci have the capacity to acquire a wide variety if antimicrobial resistance factors which present serious problems in the management of patients with enteroccoal infections. In general, entercoccal isolates with lowered susceptibility to vancomycin can be categorized as vanA, vanB, and vanC. vanA and vanB pose the greatest threat because they are the most resistant and the resistance genes are carried on a plasmid. Since the resistance genes are carried on a plasmid they readily transferable. E. faecalis strains are categorized as vanA isolates. E. faecalis are also resistant to teicoplanin. Enterococcal strains that are vancomycin dependent have been reported, but are rare and are less common that vancomycin-resistant strains.

Genome structure

Genome of E. faecalis strian v583 Stothard P, Van Domselaar G, Shrivastava S, Guo A, O'Neill B, Cruz J, Ellison M, Wishart DS (2005) BacMap: an interactive picture atlas of annotated bacterial genomes. Nucleic Acids Res 33:D317-D320

Due to many public health dangers, the genome sequence data from a strain of Enterococcus was necessary and would signal an important advance in the study of bacterial pathogens. The strain chosen for genome DNA sequencing was E. faecalis V583, the first vancomycin-resistant isolate in the United States. The genome of strain V583 was sequenced by The Institute for Genome Research (TIGR). Strain V583 contains four DNA molecules: the main 3,218,030 base pair bacterial chromosome and three circular plasmids. The chromosome contains about 3,500 open reading frames (ORFs), about 1/3 of these ORFs have no assignable function. The analysis of the genes harbored in the enterococcal genome shows, as was predicted by its ability to survive a wide range of environmental conditions, that this organism is metabolically diverse and contains a wide range of regulatory systems. The three plasmids are circular DNA molecules identified as Plasmid-1, Plasmid-2, and Plasmid-3. Plasmid-1 contains 66,320bp, Plasmid-2 contains 17,963bp, and Plasmid-3 contains 57,660bp. The plasmids encode a number of genes, including, transposases, multidrug resistance proteins, and a ppGpp-regulated growth inhibitor. The average G+C composition of the E.faecalis chromosome is 37.38%. Since the DNA molecule is so large, regional deviations from the average occur. One of these locations is the large segment associated with the vancomycin resistance gene cluster positioned near 2.22 Mb, showing a large increase in percent G+C content. These differences associated with antibiotic resistance or virulence suggested the acquisition of genetic material from a frogein species through horizontal transfer. Whether the transfers are responsible for the variations in DNA composition is still unknown. The information contained in the genome of E. faecalis V583 will greatly aid the understanding of how the organism has adapted to be a versatile human pathogen. Using comparative genomics, the role of the different regulatory elements can be better understood in how they respond to various environmental stresses and in the expression of potential virulence factors. More studies like these will suggest new or alternate vaccines to bacterial infections caused by the Enterococci.

The TIGR contains a complete list of genes for the E. faecalis chromosomes.

Cell structure and metabolism

Cell Metabolism

The Enterococci inhabit harsh environments, like the intestinal tracts of humans and animals. Growth under these hostile conditions requires that “E. faecalis have a metabolism that is flexible.” E. faecalis are capable of not only fermentation to produce latic acid but also can “catabolize a spectrum of energy sources” from carbohydrates, glycerol, lactate, malate, cirtrate, diamino acids and many α-keto acids.

t has been shown that under selected growth conditions E. faecalis can enhance growth through oxidative phosphorylation using a “proton motive force established by electron transport.” A consequence of “nascent respiration is production of potent oxidants” like superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, oxidative stress the E. faecalis can tolerate. The tolerance of this stress, combined with other severe growth conditions, allows the E. faecalis to grow at 10 to 45°C, in bile salts, and at extremely low and high pHs. In addition, “E. faecalis resist azide, detergents, heavy metals, and ethanol.” The capacity to utilize varied sugar sources allows E. faecalis to “live in diverse environments,” especially in the intestine where nutrients are limited. In the intestine, E. faecalis derive most of their energy from the fermentation of nonabsorbed sugars. E. faecalis can also get energy by degrading mucins, “a carbohydrate that is heavily glycosylated and produced by intestinal goblet cells.”

The E. faecalis uses “phosphoenolypyruvate phosphotransferase system (PTS) to sense sugars outside the cell and couples uptake of sugars with phosphorylation.” In doing so, less energy is wasted compared to “sugar accumulation by non-PTS systems” that use many ATP per sugar molecule. Sugars metabolized by E. faecalis are “PTS substrates and include: D-glucose, D-fructose, lactose, maltose,” and others. In Enterococci, PTS also “regulates glycerol metabolism, inducer explosion and catabolite repression.” E. faecalis is one of a few low-GC content gram+ bacteria that “expel sugar during growth on glucose, a phenomenon termed inducer expulsion.”

E. faecalis can even ferment glycerol under aerobic and microaerophillic conditions. E. faecalis can also grow on glycerol under anaerobic conditions because it “expresses a gene for NAD+-linked anaerobic glycerol dehydrogenase activity.” Glycerol can cross the cell membrane using a protein called the glycerol diffusion facilitator (GlpF). The GlpF makes the concentration of glycerol inside and outside the cell equal and for E. faecalis this protein is inhibited by glycolysis.

E. faecalis are able to live in extreme alkaline pH and high salt concentration. These traits “require cation transport to maintain the constant cytosolic ion composition essential for homeostasis.” All cells must expel excess sodium to maintain cytosolic concentrations in range that favors homeostasis. E. faecalis expresses both a Na+/H+ antiporter and a vacuolar-type ATPase. Potassium is a major intracellular cation. The potassium concentration within E. faecalis of 0.4 to 0.6 M is essential for normal cellular metabolism, it “neutralizes intracellular anions, activates diverse enzymes, and regulates cytosolic pH.” E. faecalis expresses at least two potassium transporters to perform the regulation, KtrI and KtrII along with the Kep system for K+ extrusion. Although it is known that KtrI and KtrII are K+ uptake systems (they are K+/H+ symporters), little more is known the proteins.


Cell Structure

Enterococcus are gram-positive cocci that typically form short chains or are arranged in pairs. Under certain growth conditions they can elongate and appear coocobacillary. The cell wall of E. faecalis 20 to 38% of the dry cell weight (in the exponential and stationary phase cells). Given that the E. faecalis is a Gram+ bacteria there are three main components that make up its cell wall: peptidoglycan, teichoic acid, and polysaccharide. 40% of the cell wall is made up of peptidoglycan, while the rest of the cell wall is made up of a “rhamnose-containing polysaccharide and a ribitol-containing teichoic acid.” The peptdioglycan functions (as in most gram+ cells) to resist bursting induced by high cytoplasmic osmotic pressure. E. faecalis are generally considered a nonencapsulated organism, shown by the “lack of a detectable mucoid phenotype.” However, a subset of E. faecalis isolates possess a capsular polysaccharide, although uncommon. E. faecalis can exchange genetic material (plasmids) by conjugation processes induced by small peptide pheromones. Successful joinings are secured by “surface proteins such as the aggregation substances that recognize a specific ligand on recipient cells.”


Describe any interesting features and/or cell structures; how it gains energy; what important molecules it produces.

Ecology

Describe any interactions with other organisms (included eukaryotes), contributions to the environment, effect on environment, etc.

Pathology

Enterococci have emerged in the last part of the 20th century as a major cause of nosocomial infections, and within this group Enterococcus faecalis causes the majority of human enterococcal infections. These infections may be local or systematic and include uninary tract and abdominal infections, wound infections, bacteremia, and endocarditis. Enterococci are part of the many bacteria that make up the normal human intestinal tract and are capable of surviving numerous environmental challenges such as temperature extremes and the presence of bile salts. Their acquisition of resistance to multiple antibiotics has made these bacteria a major health problem. The National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance (NNIS) system has reported a rapid rise in the incidence of infection and colonization with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) since 1989. This poses serious health problems, which include the lack of available antimicrobial therapy for VRE infections, because most VRE strains harbor resistance to multiple antibiotics (e.g. aminoglyscoides and ampicillin) and “vancomycin is often the antibiotic of last resort”.

The transfer of vanocmycin resistant genes from VRE to other gram-positive pathogens is a serious public health concern. The most common way that the E. faecalis cause infection occurs in a hospital/long term care facility is transmission of E. faecalis between patients. Enterococci can be carried on the hands of health care workers and be carried (transferred) from one patient to another. It has been shown that VRE inoculated on the hands can persist for up to 60mins. The transmission from a health care worker’s hands to the patient could take place direct contact with the patient’s intravenous or urinary catheters. Rectal thermometers, not properly cleaned after use, can transmit the VRE from patient to patient as well. Sometimes the transmission can result in colonization of the patient’s GI tract with the acquired strain. The new strain then becomes part of the patient’s endogenous flora. The acquired strain, carrying antibiotic resistance genes, is able to live in the GI trtact. Infections then arise from these newly acquired E. faecalis strains.

E. faecalis can cause many bodily infections. The most common infection caused by enterococci is infection of the urinary tract. E. faecalis can cause lower urinary tract infections (UTI), such as cystisis, prostatitis, and epididymitis. E. faecalis are also found in intra-abdominal, pelvic, and soft tissue infections. The E. faecalis are the third leading cauase of nosocomial bacteremia. The source of bacteremia is most often the urinary tract, occurring from an infected intravenous catheter (for example). Endocarditis is the most serious enterococcal infection. Due to the intrinsic resesitence of enterococci to many antibiotics, treatment of endocarditis is difficult. In many cases of endocarditis, antibiotic treatment fails and surgery to remove the infected valve is necessary. Less common infectrions caused by E. faecalis include meningitis, hematogenous, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, and (very rare) pneumonia.


How does this organism cause disease? Human, animal, plant hosts? Virulence factors, as well as patient symptoms.

Application to Biotechnology

Does this organism produce any useful compounds or enzymes? What are they and how are they used?

Current Research

1.) “Time-Kill and Synergism Studies of Ceftobiprole against Enterococcus faecalis, Including ß-Lactamase-Producing and Vancomycin-Resistant Isolates”6

It can be seen from my article above on E. faecalis that vancomyacin resistance bacteria pose many problems to society, causing bacterial infections in humans that are difficult to treat. The Enterococcal infections are challenging because the organisms have the ability to quickly acquire and disseminate resistance genes. Ceftobiprole (BPR) was used as an investigational cephalosporin against gram-positive cocci. BPR is a broad-specturm parenteral cephalosporin with high affinities from gram-positive and gram negative penicillin-binding proteins. It also shows stability against hydrolysis by B-lactamases.

This study examined the activity of BRP against a large collection of E. faecalis, looking at BPR bactericidal activity against vancomycin-resistant isolates. The study found that susceptibly to BPR in E. faecalis is not affected by the presence of vancomycin resistance or by B-lactamase production in enterococci. In the strains of E. faecalis showing either vancomycin resistance (VanA and VanB phenotypes) or ampiciliin resistance, the BPR was bactericidal. The researchers suggested that their results supported the fact that BPR would likely exhibit bactericidal activity against E.faecalis at a dose of 750mg. This does inhibited 100% of their E.faecalis activity. Although the presence of the enzyme B-lactamase is rare in E. faecalis, its presence compromises the use of the most effective antienterococcal B-lactams (ampicillin). BPR is a poor substrate for B-lactamase enzyme, explaining its excellent activity against B-lactamase-producing E. faecalis.

This research demonstrated that BPR has potent activity against a very large collection of E. faecalis isolates. The activity of the BPR was not affected by vancomycin resistance or production of ß-lactamase. Therefore, BPR is a promising agent for use to treat B-lactamase producing and vancomycin-resistant E. faecalis infections in humans.


Enter summaries of the most recent research here--at least three required

References

1.) I. T. Paulsen, L. Banerjei, G. S. A. Myers, K. E. Nelson, R. Seshadri, T. D. Read, D. E. Fouts, J. A. Eisen, S. R. Gill, J. F. Heidelberg, H. Tettelin, R. J. Dodson, L. Umayam, L. Brinkac, M. Beanan, S. Daugherty, R. T. DeBoy, S. Durkin, J. Kolonay, R. Madupu, W. Nelson, J. Vamathevan, B. Tran, J. Upton, T. Hansen, J. Shetty, H. Khouri, T. Utterback, D. Radune, K. A. Ketchum, B. A. Dougherty, C. M. Fraser. "Role of Mobile DNA in the Evolution of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecalis" Science. March 2003. Vol. 299, No. 5615. p. 2071-2074

2.) Stothard P, Van Domselaar G, Shrivastava S, Guo A, O'Neill B, Cruz J, Ellison M, Wishart DS (2005) BacMap: an interactive picture atlas of annotated bacterial genomes. Nucleic Acids Res 33:D317-D320

3.) Murrary BE. May 1998. "Diversity among the multidrug-resistant “enterococci”. Emerging Infectious Diseases. Vol. 4, No. 1. p. 46-65.

4.) De la Maza, Luis M., Marie T. Pezzlo, and Janet T. Shigei. Color Atlas of Medical Bacteriology. Washington, DC: American Society for Microbiology, 2004.

5.) De Boever EH, Clewell DB, Fraser CM. "Enterococcus faecalis conjugative plasmid pAM373: complete nucleotide sequence and genetic analyses of sex pheromone response." Molecular Microbiology. 2000. Vol. 37, No. 6. p. 1327-1341.

6.) Arias C., Singh K., Panesso D., Murray BE. “Time-Kill and Synergism Studies of Ceftobiprole against Enterococcus faecalis, Including ß-Lactamase-Producing and Vancomycin-Resistant Isolates” Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. June 2007. Vol. 51, No. 6. p. 2043-2047.

7.) Bourgeois-Nicolaos N., Massias L., Couson B., Butel MJ, Andremont A., Doucet-Populaire F. “Dose Dependence of Emergence of Resistance to Linezolid in Enterococcus faecalis In Vivo” The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2007. Vol. 195. p. 1480-1488.


Edited by Richard A. Martinez of UC San Diego, student of Rachel Larsen.