2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0882-4010(02)90526-7
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Response regulator important in pathogenesis of Streptococcus suis serotype 2

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Cited by 32 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Since we were unable to determine a 50% lethal dose for S. suis, it was decided to compare the virulence of the ⌬covR mutant with that of the wild-type strain in a competitive-infection assay in piglets. This kind of cocolonization experiment has been successfully applied to determine the virulence of mutants of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae and S. suis in piglets (14,15,21). The data showed that the ⌬covR strain was capable of colonizing the most-examined organs, including heart, liver, kidney, and brain, with higher efficiency than the wild-type strain, which indicates that some components regulated by CovR may play roles in the colonization process.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Since we were unable to determine a 50% lethal dose for S. suis, it was decided to compare the virulence of the ⌬covR mutant with that of the wild-type strain in a competitive-infection assay in piglets. This kind of cocolonization experiment has been successfully applied to determine the virulence of mutants of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae and S. suis in piglets (14,15,21). The data showed that the ⌬covR strain was capable of colonizing the most-examined organs, including heart, liver, kidney, and brain, with higher efficiency than the wild-type strain, which indicates that some components regulated by CovR may play roles in the colonization process.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In S. suis serotype 2, at least 15 TCSs have been identified (11). Among them, only the orphan response regulator RevS (14) and the SalK-SalR (46) system have been reported and shown to positively control S. suis serotype 2 virulence. It is known that bacterial virulence is tightly regulated by both positive and negative feedback mechanisms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No less than 16 pleiotropic regulators have been suggested to be involved in modulation of S. suis virulence, which consist of nine transcription factors (five well-studied ones [ adcR , 149 ccpA , 118 , 119 argR , 40 rgg , 31 a Fur-like repressor PerR 150 ] plus four poorly-known transcription factors such as 00SSU0053, treR , nadR , and scrR 100 ), five TCS systems ( sal K- sal R [renamed as suiK-suiR ], 27 , 151 cia R- cia H, 42 ihk-ihr , 152 virR/virS , 153 and nisK-nisR 154 ), and three orphan regulators (CovR, 30 RevSC21, 155 and RevS 156 , 157 ). …”
Section: Molecular Mechanism For Streptococcus Suis Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An orphan two-component transcriptional regulator can also control the transcription of virulence genes. Knockout strains harboring deletion in the S. suis ciaRH [24] and in the genes revS and revSC21 encoding orphan regulators show decreased adhesion to Hep-2 cells [25,26]. SalK/SalR is another recently described TCS required for the virulence of S. suis in the porcine model, but its role in the regulation of adhesion is not well known [27,28].…”
Section: Virulence Genes With a Role In Adhesionmentioning
confidence: 99%