Pasteurella multocida mutants are being researched for their ability to cause diseases.
In vitro experiments show the bacteria respond to low iron. Vaccination against progressive atrophic rhinitis was developed by using a recombinant derivative of
P. multocida toxin. The vaccination was tested on pregnant gilts (female swine without previous litters). The piglets born to treated gilts were inoculated, while the piglets born to unvaccinated mothers developed atrophic rhinitis. Other research is being done on the effects of protein, pH, temperature, sodium chloride (NaCl), and sucrose on
P. multocida development and survival in water. The research seems to show the bacteria survive better in water compared to water. The addition of 0.5% NaCl also aided bacterial survival, while the sucrose and pH levels had minor effects, as well. Research has also been done on the response of
P. multocida to the host environment. These tests use DNA microarrays and proteomics techniques.
P. multocida-directed mutants have been tested for their ability to produce disease. Findings seem to indicate the bacteria occupy host niches that force them to change their gene expression for energy metabolism, uptake of iron, amino acids, and other nutrients.
In vitro experiments show the responses of the bacteria to low iron and different iron sources, such as
transferrin and
hemoglobin.
P. multocida genes that are upregulated in times of infection are usually involved in nutrient uptake and metabolism. This shows true virulence genes may only be expressed during the early stages of infection.
Genetic transformation is the process by which a recipient bacterial cell takes up DNA from a neighboring cell and integrates this DNA into the recipient's
genome.
P. multocida DNA contains high frequencies of putative
DNA uptake sequences (DUSs) identical to those in
Hemophilus influenzae that promote donor DNA uptake during
transformation. The location of these sequences in
P. multocida shows a skewed distribution towards genome maintenance genes, such as those involved in
DNA repair. This finding suggests that
P. multocida might be competent to undergo transformation under certain conditions, and that genome maintenance genes involved in transforming donor DNA may preferentially replace their damaged counterparts in the DNA of the recipient cell. ==References==