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Monday, November 29, 2004
WRITER: Phil Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
SOURCE: Rob Maier, 706/542-2323, rmaier@uga.edu
NEW STUDY SHOWS FOR THE FIRST TIME THAT SALMONELLA USES HYDROGEN
AS AN ENERGY SOURCE; INDICATES NEW THERAPIES
ATHENS, Ga. – New research, headed by microbiologists from
the University of Georgia, show for the first time that Salmonella—a
widespread and often deadly bacterial pathogen—use molecular
hydrogen to grow and become virulent. The discovery represents a way
that diseases caused by Salmonella and other enteric infections could
be lessened or even eliminated.
The research, just published in the journal Infection and Immunity,
was led by Dr. Rob Maier, Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar
and Ramsey Professor of Microbiology at UGA. Other authors of the
paper from UGA were and researcher Adriana Olczak and research coordinator
Susan Maier; and Shilpa Soni and John Gunn from Ohio State University.
“This builds on our earlier findings that major human pathogens
are using an unexpected energy source,” said Maier. “This
new work expands our knowledge that molecular hydrogen is very important
in the process of diseases caused by these organisms.”
Enteric pathogens such as Salmonella are responsible for an estimated
2 million deaths a year and cause millions more cases of diarrheal
illnesses, even in developed countries. But Maier was the first to
discover that hydrogen is not lost from the body as a waste product,
as researchers previously thought, but remains at substantial levels
and is an energy source for pathogenic bacteria. This knowledge that
human pathogens can grow on hydrogen while residing in an animal may
have profound implications for the treatment of some diseases.
In 2002, Maier published in the journal Science evidence
that the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori, which gives
rise to peptic ulcers, gastritis and some kinds of gastric cancers,
needs hydrogen as an energy source. The new research extends those
earlier findings to Salmonella.
The work has been possible because of the increasing number of entire
genomes that are being sequenced for everything from bacteria to humans.
Knowing the exact position of individual genes on the entire genome
allows scientists a much richer understanding of how disease processes
work than ever before.
“From the gene sequence we found that Salmonella was predicted
to have three distinct membrane-associated enzymes that split molecular
hydrogen using a unique metal center, which is composed of nickel,
iron, cyanide and carbon monoxide,” said Maier. “Humans
don’t make this kind of metal cluster in cells, and so it’s
an excellent target for therapeutic intervention. Also, making nickel
unavailable to the cells by use of metal sequestering agents would
be expected to stop the hydrogen using reactions required for growth
of the bacterium.”
The new research showed that each of the three membrane-associated,
hydrogen-utilizing enzymes in Salmonella is coupled to a respiratory
pathway that uses oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor. This permits
growth of the pathogen.
Maier believed that these enzymes might enable bacteria to glean
energy from the splitting of molecular hydrogen. Because the high-energy
gas produced by the reactions of normal flora bacteria in the intestinal
tract is freely diffusible, it can be measured within tissues colonized
by pathogens. So, using mice as a model system, Maier and his colleagues
were able to find that, indeed, Salmonella use molecular hydrogen
as an energy source to grow and cause disease.
It should be noted that the team studied a type of Salmonella
enterica called Typhimurium, a common food-poisoning bacterium
closely related to a different strain of Salmonella that causes
typhoid fever.
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