Listeria monocytogenes
A Microbial Biorealm page on the genus Listeria monocytogenes
Classification
Higher order taxa
Bacteria; Firmicutes; Bacilli; Bacillales; Listeriaceae; Listeria; L.monocytogenes
Species
NCBI: Taxonomy |
Listeria Monocytogenes
Description and significance
Listeria monocytogenes are a Gram-positive rod-shaped bacterium that form single short chains (1), and can be resistant to the effects of freezing, drying, and heat (2) surprisingly well for a nonsporeforming bacterium. Listeria are mainly found in the soil, though Listeria monocytogenes, a pathogen, may specifically be found in raw foods, such as pasteurized fluid milk (5), raw vegetables, raw and cooked poultry (4). It has the ability to grow at low temperatures; thus, allowing it to grow in refrigerated foods. Listeria monocytogenes was thought to be exclusively associated as infections in animals, but recently, this pathogenic species has also been isolated, in its dormant form, in the intestinal tract of small percentage of the human population (3). Because Listeria monocytogenes is an agent of listeriosis, a serious disease where the overt form has a severe mortality greater than 25 percent (3), sequencing of the bacterium’s genome is of significant importance. Sequencing the genome of this organism allows for the measurement and study of traits such as new aspects regarding virulence and evolution using comparative genomics and DNA arrays (6). 16S rRNA cataloging studies have also been conducted to demonstrate Listeria monocytogenes’ close relationship to different stains of listeriae, based on genome size, GC-content and other various characters (7), which also helped place the bacterium within the bacterial phylogeny constructed by Woese (3).
Genome structure
The genome of Listeria monocytogenes strain EGD-e is just one of several stains of the bacterium that have been sequenced. Strain EGC-e is 2,944,528 base pairs long with 2853 open reading frames and a GC content of 39% (NCBI). Other strains include the genome of Listeria monocytogenes str.4b F2365, which is 2,905,310 base pairs long with a GC content of 38% (NCBI). Currently the genomes of Listeria monocytogenes str. 1/2a F6854, and Listeria monocytogenes str. 4b H7858 are being sequenced (8). Listeria monocytogenes has a single circular chromosome. The ability of Listeria to inhabit a wide range of environments is paralleled to the presence of 331 genes encoding different transport proteins, comprising 11.6% of the total gene compliment of L. monocytogenes. Listeria also has an extensive regulatory range occupying much of the total genome (8).
Cell structure and metabolism
Listeria monocytogenes do not form spores or branch and are motile via peritrichous flagella at room temperature (20º-25º), but surprisingly cannot synthesize flagella at body temperature (37º) (13). Because Listeria monocytogenes are intercellular pathogens, virulence is associated with the ability of bacteria to move into host cells by polymerization of host cell actin at one end of the bacterium, which helps them propel through cytoplasm. Flagellar motility is used more for existence and spread of the bacteria outside the host environment (9, 13).
Ecology
Listeria monocytogenes has been found widely distributed throughout the environment, especially in the soil and fecal matter. Studies have shown that infected animals may contribute to Listeria monocytogenes’s dispersal into the environment through animal fecal matter and feedstuff (10). Listeria monocytogenes, as an intracellular pathogen, has been associated with severe foodborne infections in humans and animals, though rarely through raw animal-derived food products (11). Listeria monocytogenes have also been shown to survive in different habitats with extreme conditions including high salt concentrations, high pH, and high temperature (3). Listeria monocytogenes can also form biofilms, which enables them as a community to attach to solid surfaces where they proliferate and become extremely difficult to remove (20).
Pathology
Most Listeria monocytogenes are pathogenic to both animals and humans to some degree; however, the bacterium has been reported to be carried in the intestinal tract of a small percentage of the human population without apparent symptoms (3). As with many different pathogens, the virulence of this bacterium varies depending on the particular strain and with the susceptibility of the victim. Listeria monocytogenes has been associated with ingested raw and contaminated foods, such as raw and pasteurized dairy products (5), raw vegetables, raw meats and smoked fish (3). Because of its ability to grow at low temperatures, Listeria monocytogenes can be found growing in refrigerated foods as well (3). Listeria monocytogenes causes the disease listeriosis in humans, with common manifestations in septicemia (12), meningitis (13), encephalitis (13), corneal ulcer (14), pneumonia (15), and cervical infections in pregnant women, which may have resulted in spontaneous abortion or stillbirth (13). Patient symptoms include influenza- like symptoms, and gastrointestinal symptoms of vomiting and diarrhea (3). When Listeria monocytogenes invades the gastrointestinal epithelium and then enters the host’s monocytes, macrophages, or polymorphonuclear leukocytes, it becomes blood-borne and multiplies, both intracellularly and extracellularly. Intracellularly, it has access to the brain and transplacental migration to the fetus in pregnant women (16). In animals infected with Listeria monocytogenes, such as mice, the bacteria first appear in macrophages and then spread to hepatocytes in the liver (17). The bacteria stimulate a response that includes the production of gamma interferons, macrophage activating factors and a cytotoxic T cell response (17). The pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes thrives on its ability to survive and multiply in phagocytic host cells. Virulence is thus associated with the ability of the bacterium to move within the cytoplasm of the host cells by polymerization of host cell actin (9). Secreting the enzyme invasion allows the Listeria monocytogenes to penetrate host cells of the epithelial lining (CITE). The immune system can usually eliminate the infection before it spreads by using T lymphocytes specifically for Listeria antigens (17). However, systemic disease may develop with a compromised immune system. Another virulence factor is the bacterium’s ability to bind to epithelial cells by means of adherence to D-galactose receptors on the host cell (16).
Application to Biotechnology
Listeria monocytogenes does not produce any known useful compounds or enzymes
Current Research
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References
Edited by student of Rachel Larsen and Kit Pogliano