W. Zheng et S. Kathariou, TRANSPOSON-INDUCED MUTANTS OF LISTERIA-MONOCYTOGENES INCAPABLE OF GROWTH AT LOW-TEMPERATURE (4-DEGREES-C), FEMS microbiology letters, 121(3), 1994, pp. 287-291
Transposon mutagenesis was used to pursue the molecular basis of cold
resistance in Listeria and its possible involvement in pathogenesis. W
e have generated transposon-induced mutants of Listeria monocytogenes
which were unable to grow at 4 degrees C but grew at 8 degrees C, 22 d
egrees C and 37 degrees C. The transposon was localized in the same 1.
8-kb EcoRI fragment in two independently derived mutants. Mutants whic
h carried single transposon insertions had normal hemolytic activity,
motility and invasion of cultured fibroblasts. These results indicate
that in L. monocytogenes cold sensitivity can be caused by single tran
sposon insertions and that loss of cold resistance may not interfere w
ith other phenotypes, including invasion in a cell culture model.