Human brucellosis is caused mainly by Brucella melitensis, which is often acquired by ingesting contaminated goat or sheep milk and cheese. Bacterial factors required for food-borne infection of humans by B. melitensis are poorly understood. In this study, a mouse model of oral infection was characterized to assess the roles of urease, the VirB type IV secretion system, and lipopolysaccharide for establishing infection through the digestive tract. B. melitensis strain 16M was consistently recovered from the mesenteric lymph node (MLN), spleen, and liver beginning at 3 or 7 day postinfection (dpi). In the gut, persistence of the inoculum was observed up to 21 dpi. No inflammatory lesions were observed in the ileum or colon during infection. Mutant strains lacking the ureABC genes of the ure1 operon, virB2, or pmm encoding phosphomannomutase were constructed and compared to the wild-type strain for infectivity through the digestive tract. Mutants lacking the virB2 and pmm genes were attenuated in the spleen (P < 0.05) and MLN (P < 0.001), respectively. The wild-type and mutant strains had similar levels of resistance to low pH and 5 or 10% bile, suggesting that the reduced colonization of mutants was not the result of reduced resistance to acid pH or bile salts. In an in vitro lymphoepithelial cell (M-cell) model, B. melitensis transited rapidly through polarized enterocyte monolayers containing M-like cells; however, transit through monolayers containing only enterocytes was reduced or absent. These results indicate that B. melitensis is able to spread systemically from the digestive tract after infection, most likely through M cells of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue.Brucella spp. are facultative intracellular gram-negative bacteria that cause chronic infections in mammalian hosts. Brucella melitensis infects mainly goats and sheep, causing abortion, placentitis, and infertility, and it is considered the most pathogenic species of Brucella to humans (15). Human brucellosis is an important worldwide zoonosis that causes social and economic impacts on public health and animal production. The disease is prevalent mostly in the Middle East, Mediterranean, Central Asia, Latin America, and North Africa, with over 500,000 new cases of human brucellosis registered annually (41).Human brucellosis usually does not present with specific clinical symptoms. It is frequently associated with intermittent fever, anorexia, weakness, soreness, and inflammation affecting several organs. Spondylitis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, and epididymo-orchitis are common manifestations of the infection. However, infection of the heart and brain may also occur and can result in death (34). Human brucellosis caused by B. melitensis results mostly from ingestion of unpasteurized milk and dairy products from infected goats, sheep, camels, and cattle. The importance of food-borne infection is underlined by a recent study in Mexico, which reported that in 98% of cases, the major risk factor for brucellosis was ingestion of contaminated dairy p...