Discriminating Virulence Mechanisms amongBacillus anthracisStrains by Using a Murine Subcutaneous Infection Model

Abstract
Bacillus anthracisstrains harboring virulence plasmid pXO1 that encodes the toxin protein protective antigen (PA), lethal factor, and edema factor and virulence plasmid pXO2 that encodes capsule biosynthetic enzymes exhibit different levels of virulence in certain animal models. In the murine model of pulmonary infection,B. anthracisvirulence was capsule dependent but toxin independent. We examined the role of toxins in subcutaneous (s.c.) infections using two different genetically complete (pXO1+pXO2+) strains ofB. anthracis, strains Ames and UT500. Similar to findings for the pulmonary model, toxin was not required for infection by the Ames strain, because the 50% lethal dose (LD50) of a PA-deficient (PA) Ames mutant was identical to that of the parent Ames strain. However, PA was required for efficient s.c. infection by the UT500 strain, because the s.c. LD50of a UT500 PAmutant was 10,000-fold higher than the LD50of the parent UT500 strain. This difference between the Ames strain and the UT500 strain could not be attributed to differences in spore coat properties or the rate of germination, because s.c. inoculation with the capsulated bacillus forms also required toxin synthesis by the UT500 strain to cause lethal infection. The toxin-dependent phenotype of the UT500 strain was host phagocyte dependent, because eliminating Gr-1+phagocytes restored virulence to the UT500 PAmutant. These experiments demonstrate that the dominant virulence factors used to establish infection byB. anthracisdepend on the route of inoculation and the bacterial strain.