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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Role of CcpA in Regulating the Carbon-Starvation Response of Clostridium perfringens

Varga, John Joseph 01 December 2006 (has links)
Clostridium perfringens is a significant human pathogen, causing 250,000 cases of food poisoning in addition to several thousand potentially lethal cases of gas gangrene each year in the United States. Historically, work in this field has centered around toxin production, as C. perfringens can produce over 13 toxins. This work expands the knowledge of the starvation-response of C. perfringens, which includes several potential virulence factors, sporulation, motility and biofilm formation. Sporulation protects cells from a variety of stresses, including starvation. Efficient sporulation requires the transcriptional regulator CcpA, mediator of catabolite repression. Sporulation is repressed by glucose, but, surprisingly, in a CcpA-independent fashion. C. perfringens cells in a biofilm are resistant to a number of environmental stresses, including oxygen and antibiotics. Biofilm formation is repressed by glucose, and other carbohydrates, independently of CcpA. Gliding motility, a type four pili (TFP)-dependent phenomenon, affords C. perfringens with a mechanism for moving across a solid surface in response to carbohydrate starvation, while carbohydrates supplementation at high levels delay the initiation of the motility response. CcpA is required for the proper initiation of motility, a ccpA<sup>-</sup>C. perfringens strain showed a considerable increase in the time to initiation of motility on lactose and galactose, and was unable to move at all in the presence of glucose. Gliding motility represents the most significant finding of this work. TFP were previously undescribed in any Gram-positive bacterial species, and this work produced genetic evidence suggesting their presence in all members of the clostridia, and physical evidence for TFP-dependent gliding motility in a second species, C. beijerinckii. / Ph. D.

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