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Abstracts and Author Index Postersessions • Desinfektionsmittel (DIP01-03) .........................................................................................................................................4-5 Disinfectants • Diagnostische Verfahren (DVP01-28)..............................................................................................................................5-15 Diagnostic methods • Eukaryontische Krankheitserreger (EKP01-07) .............................................................................................................21-23 Eukaryotic pathogens • FEMS-Satellitensymposium: „Life inside cells“ (FEMS-P01-10) .................................................................................32-36 FEMS-satellite symposium: “Life Inside Cells“ • Freie Themen (FTP01-38) ..............................................................................................................................................37-51 Free topics • Gastrointestinale Infektionen (GIP01-19).......................................................................................................................51-58 Gastrointestinal infections • Allgemeine Hygiene und Krankenhaushygiene (HYP01-17).........................................................................................62-68 General and hospital hygiene • Infektionsimmunologie (IIP01-22) .................................................................................................................................73-81 Infection and immunity • Klinische Mikrobiologie, Infektiologie, Fallvorstellungen (KMP01-21) .......................................................................87-94 Clinical microbiology, infectious diseases, clinical case reports • Lebensmittelmikrobiologie und –hygiene (LMP01-08) .................................................................................................97-99 Food microbiology and food hygiene • Mikrobielle Pathogenität (MPP01-74)........................................................................................................................100-126 Microbial pathogenicity • Mikrobielle Systematik, Populationsgenetik und Infektionsepidemiologie (MSP01-13)...........................................141-146 Microbiological classification, population genetics and epidemiology of infections • Nationale Referenzzentren und Konsiliarlaboratorien (RKP01-14) ...........................................................................149-154 National reference centers and consultant laboratories • Qualitätssicherung (QSP01-02) .........................................................................................................................................157 Quality management 1 Oral Presentations • Diagnostische Verfahren (DVV01-14) ...........................................................................................................................15-21 Diagnostic methods • Eukaryontische Krankheitserreger (EKV01-11).............................................................................................................23-27 Eukaryotic pathogens • Eingeladene Sprecher (ESV01-17) .................................................................................................................................27-32 Invited Spreakers • FEMS-Satellitensymposium: „Life inside cells“ (FEMS-V01-04).................................................................................36-37 FEMS-satellite symposium: “Life Inside Cells“ • Gastrointestinale Infektionen (GIV01-11)......................................................................................................................58-62 Gastrointestinal infections • Allgemeine Hygiene und Krankenhaushygiene (HYV01-12) ........................................................................................68-73 General and hospital hygiene • Infektionsimmunologie (IIV01-13) ................................................................................................................................81-87 Infection and immunity • Klinische Mikrobiologie, Infektiologie, Fallvorstellungen (KMV01-07) ......................................................................94-97 Clinical microbiology, infectious diseases, clinical case reports • Lebensmittelmikrobiologie und –hygiene (LMV01-02)...............................................................................................99-100 Food microbiology and food hygiene • Mikrobielle Pathogenität (MPV01-44) .......................................................................................................................126-141 Microbial pathogenicity • Mikrobielle Systematik, Populationsgenetik und Infektionsepidemiologie (MSV01-07) ..........................................146-149 Microbiological classification, population genetics and epidemiology of infections • Nationale Referenzzentren und Konsiliarlaboratorien (RKV01-07) ..........................................................................154-156 National reference centers and consultant laboratories • Qualitätssicherung (QSV01-07) .................................................................................................................................157-160 Quality management Author Index.......................................................................................................................................................................162-172 Hinweis/Notice Keine Veröffentlichung gewünscht: No publication requested: EKV08, GIP08, MPV23, MPV30 Keine Abstractveröffentlichung gewünscht: No abstract publication requested: MPP58, RKV03 TED: KMV08-11 2 AESKU.SEVEN-UP DER ELISA ANALYSER FÜR AUTOIMMUNDIAGNOSTIK UND INFEKTIONSSEROLOGIE SETZT NEUE STANDARDS IN SACHEN S I C H E R H E I T, S C H N E L L I G K E I T U N D W I R T S C H A F T L I C H K E I T. AUTOIMMUNDIAGNOSTIK UND INFEKTIONSSEROLOGIE AESKU.SEVEN-UP AESKU.SEVEN-UP ... WENN JEDE MINUTE ZÄHLT • INFEKTIONSSEROLOGIE UND AUTOIMMUNDIAGNOSTIK • ZUVERLÄSSIGE TEST-PARAMETER FÜR DIE FRÜHE DIAGNOSE • AUTOMATISIERT UND GLEICHZEITIG FLEXIBEL • ENORM SCHNELL, INDIVIDUELL UND SICHER • KOSTENGÜNSTIGE EINZELTESTUNG • KEINE VERSTECKTEN KOSTEN ODER MATERIALVERSCHWENDUNG Mehr Information zum neuen ELISA-ANALYSER:AESKU.SEVEN-UP erhalten Sie jederzeit bei: AESKU.DIAGNOSTICS GMBH Mikroforum Ring 2, 55234 Wendelsheim Tel. 06734 96 27 0, Fax 06734 9627 27 E-Mail: [email protected] DIP01 Impact of mycobacterial outer membrane structures on the biocidal efficacy of disinfectants K. Steinhauer1, J. Käding2, E. Frenzel3 1 Schuelke & Mayr GmbH, Research & Development Norderstedt, Germany 2 University of Applied Sciences Luebeck, Department of Applied Science, Luebeck, Germany 3 University Hamburg, Department Microbiology, Hamburg Germany Mycobacteria are significantly more resistant to chemical agents including antibiotics and disinfectants compared to other Grampositive bacteria. This increased resistance is mainly due to their unique cell wall structure, which contains large amounts of fatty acids and mycolic acids. Due to their clinical importance and their intrinsic resistance to many chemical agents mycobacteria are important organisms to study in infection control. In mycobacteria diffusion of small and hydrophilic molecules across the outer membrane is mediated by pore proteins, called porins. However, little is known about the uptake of biocides and their mode of action against mycobacteria. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the impact of mycobacterial outer membrane structures and porin expression on the biocidal efficacy of disinfectants. Mycobacterium smegmatis wt and three isogenic porin mutants were used in quantitative suspension tests (EN 14348) to assess whether the loss of porins influences the sensitivity of M.smegmatis under simulated practical conditions. Porin loss was found to result in a significantly increased resistance towards the tested disinfectants. Furthermore, porin expression was found to be involved in biofilm formation and consequently to also account for clumping of M. smegmatis, which is used as a test organism when testing according to AFNOR. Our data indicates that clumping of M. smegmatis significantly impacts efficacy testing. Reduction factors were found to vary significantly (> 2 log) when using different methods for homogenization. The same phenomenom was also found, when using M. terrae, which is used as a test organism when assessing the tuberculocidal efficacy of disinfectants according to EN and DGHM-standards. In conclusion our data shows that porins play an important role in the efficacy of biocides against mycobacteria. Furthermore we could demonstrate, that the methods used for homogenization of the mycobacterial test suspensions have a significant impact on the efficacy of the tested disinfectants. ___________________________________________________ DIP02 Testing of the disinfectants-neutralize effect of Tryptic-SoyAgar with the neutralizers LTHTh in a surface-independent method B. Gerten1 1 Heipha Dr. Müller GmbH, Research & Developement Eppelheim, Germany For the inactivation of disinfectants used in pharmaceutical processes it is mandatory to inactivate residuals of disinfectants by neutralizing agents. Such neutralizing agents are added to the media used in hygiene/environmental monitoring. Although these neutralizers are used for decades, there are only a few studies showing their exact effect to the disinfectants. The current study shows the neutralizing activity of Tryptic Soy Agar (TSA) with LTHTh against different disinfectants with a panel of EP/USP test strains. LTHTh is a commonly used combination of neutralizers consisting of lecithin, tween, histidin and thiosulphate. In this study a method was developed to analyse the neutralizing effect of LTHTh independently of the surfaces to be tested. Therefore the disinfectants were applied evenly on the plates using a spiral plater. After a defined period the test strains were inoculated in the same way. The recovery rates on plates with and without neutralizers were determined and compared to each other. The results show that the neutralizer combination LTHTh is able to inactivate disinfectants containing different active agents, like alcohols, quaternary ammonium compounds as well as peroxides. ___________________________________________________ DIP03 Sanitation care with less risk for human and environment – The Viennese WIDES-Database for disinfectants M. Jaros1, M. Klade2 1 Vienna Ombuds-Office for Environmental Protection, Vienna Austria 2 IFF/IFZ, Inter-University Research Center for Technology Work and Culture, Graz, Austria In hospitals disinfectants are routinely used to prevent infections. As a matter of fact their application serves as a sanitary measure. However, disinfectants themselves show certain characteristics, which are dangerous to human beings and environment. The continuous contact with disinfectants may cause allergies and asthma, as shown by various studies. Moreover, disinfectants in waste water may affect the performance of sewage treatment plants or persist in the aquatic environment. Appropriate measures enabling a comparative assessment of these hazards arising from disinfectants have not been available until now. Within the scope of the project OEkoKauf Vienna the municipality of Vienna developed an user-friendly database, which enables the purchasing department and/or sanitation commissioner of hospitals to select those disinfectants from the market supply, which pose less risk for hospital staff, patients and environment. The database was developed in cooperation with the Austrian Society for Hygiene, Microbiology and Preventive Medicine (OEGHMP) and the General Accidents Insurance Corporation (AUVA) amongst others. The Inter-University Research Center for Technology, Work and Culture (IFF/IFZ) in Graz designed an evaluation scheme, which can be used to assess and compare (eco)toxicological and human health characteristics of antimicrobial active substances and commercial disinfectants. 4 Data about toxic, mutagenic, allergenic and dermal effects, as well as effects on sewage treatment plants and surface water were considered to be the most important indicators for hazard potentials and compiled in a list of corresponding impact categories. The evaluation scheme provides rules how to deduce valuation numbers from R phrases or data sets and how to consider data gaps. Only disinfectants were integrated into the database, whose efficiency was accredited by independent societies for hygiene. Users of the database, mainly purchasers of disinfectants and infection control teams, can retrieve the register of assessed products, which can be sorted according to application mode and the required anti-microbial spectra. Users can recall detailed product information as well as toxicological data collection. The possibility to compare potential risk to human health and environment of different products by a mouse click facilitates the consideration of associated risks in purchasing decisions. The WIDES-Database will be published via Internet in July 2007. q.v.: www.wides.Vienna.at ___________________________________________________ DVP01 Real-Time RT-PCR for detection of bacterial contamination in blood products M. Störmer1, K. Kleesiek1, J. Dreier1 1 Heart- and Diabetes Center NRW, Institute for Laboratory and Transfusion Medicine, Bad Oeynhausen, Germany Transfusion-associated sepsis, mostly due to platelet concentrate (PC) contamination, is recognized as the most frequent infectious complication in transfusion therapy, surpassing by up to 2 orders of magnitude the incidence of transfusion-associated viral transmission. The bacterial contamination of PCs is a major problem due to the current requirement to store PCs at room temperature with agitation to preserve platelet function. As a result small bacterial inocula can grow into very high numbers within a short period of time. Therefore a screening method allowing the early detection of very low levels of bacteria in PCs would improve transfusion safety. Here we present the applicability of our real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR method as a routine screening system in blood banks. We adapted a novel high-volume nucleic acid extraction procedure based on magnetic separation technology with a broad-range 23S rRNA real-time RT-PCR assay for fast and sensitive detection while the BacT/Alert automated culturing system served as the reference method. We spiked two model bacteria, S. epidermidis and E. coli, to a single pool of apheresis-derived single-donor platelets, and assayed the PCs by real-time RT-PCR analysis employing an improved primer?probe system and locked nucleic acid technology. Coamplification of human beta2-microglobulin mRNA served as an internal control (IC). Studies to determine the optimal sampling-time for real-time PCR screening showed that the sampling should not be carried out earlier than 24 h after preparation. For automated magnetic bead?based extraction technology with the real-time RT-PCR, the 95%-detection limit was 29 CFU/mL for S. epidermidis and 22 CFU/mL for E. coli. No false-positive results of culturenegative tested PCs were observed, due to nucleic acid contamination of reagents, during testing of 1500 PCs. The high-volume nucleic acid extraction, the improved primerprobe system and the integration of an IC make the RT-PCR assay appropriate for platelet bacteria screening. This assay has a much shorter turnaround time than culture, facilitating the testing of PCs before release. ___________________________________________________ DVP02 Use of Bartonella adhesin A (BadA) immunoblotting in the serodiagnosis of Bartonella henselae infections C. Wagner1, T. Riess1, D. Linke2, C. Eberhardt1, A. Schäfer1 S. Reutter1, V. Kempf1 1 University Hospital of Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Max-Planck-Institute for Developmental Biology, Department of Protein Evolution, Tuebingen, Germany Bartonella henselae causes a variety of human diseases (e.g., cat scratch disease, and the vasculoproliferative disorders bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis hepatis). The laboratory diagnosis of B. henselae infections is usually based on the detection of antiB. henselae antibodies by an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) which, unfortunately, suffers a significant amount of cross-reactivity and hence is prone to deliver false positive results. In this pilot study, we evaluated the use of a potential two-step serodiagnosis of B. henselae infections by combining IFA and anti-Bartonella adhesin A (BadA) immunoblotting. Our data revealed that ~75% of the IFA positive sera of patients, with a suspected B. henselae-infection, reacted specifically with BadA and only ~20% of the IFA negative sera of healthy blood donors. Although Yersinia adhesin A (YadA) is structurally closely related to BadA, no cross-reactivity of sera from patients suffering from a Yersinia enterocoliticaor Y. pseudotuberculosis-infection with BadA was detected in immunoblotting. Unfortunately, recombinantly expressed BadAdomains (head, connector, stalk fragment) were not suitable for immunoblotting. Finally, the best resolution for full-length BadA immunoblotting was obtained when whole cell lysates of B. henselae were separated using continuous 4-15% sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels. In summary, our results show that BadA-antibodies are reliably detectable in the sera of B. henselae-infected patients and, therefore, this pilot study suggests to include BadA-immunoblotting in the laboratory diagnosis of B. henselae infections. ___________________________________________________ DVP03 Evaluation of the GenoType® MTBDRplus assay for the direct detection of isoniazid- and rifampicin-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis K. Bögli-Stuber1, B. Léchenne1, A. Hilty1, T. Bodmer1 1 University of Bern, Institute for Infectious Diseases, Bern Switzerland Background: The world-wide emergence of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) strains compromises the efficacy of modern tuberculosis (TB) drug regimens, of which rifampicin (RMP) and isoniazid (INH) are considered the pillars. Resistance to both drugs in Mtb is chromosomally determined by missense mutations and/or deletions. The novel 5 GenoType® MTBDRplus assay (HAIN Lifescience GmbH, Nehren, Germany) is designed to detect genetic events that are associated with INH and RMP resistance directly from smearpositive respiratory specimens, and thus allows the rapid identification of multidrug-resistant Mtb (MDR-TB). Methods: Mtb patient isolates and the corresponding sediments of smear-positive respiratory specimens were selected from our repositories. Drug susceptibility was assessed by the radiometric method (Bactec 460-TB instrument, PRISE, Becton-Dickinson, Germany). The critical concentrations in mg/L were: RMP, 2.0; INH, 0.1 and 0.4. GenoType® MTBDRplus was performed according to the manufacturer’s instructions, in a blinded manner, from DNA obtained from both the strains and the sediments. Results: Ten Mtb isolates were evaluated. Of these, four had a MDR-TB phenotype, two were high-level INH-resistant, two were low-level INH-resistant, and two were susceptible to INH and RMP. There was a 100% agreement, in this collection of 10 Mtb isolates, between standard drug susceptibility testing and GenoType® MTBDRplus results; in addition, the results of the GenoType® MTBDRplus assay obtained from the strains and from the respective sediments were concordant. The turnaround-time of the GenoType® MTBDRplus assay was approximately 5 hours. Conclusions: These results indicate that GenoType® MTBDRplus may have a role to play in the rapid detection of MDR-TB in the respiratory specimens of patients with suspected MDR-TB, e.g. with a relapse or coming from regions with a known MDR-TB risk. The assay’s performance will depend upon the nature of the genetic events leading to INH or RMP resistance in the Mtb strains encountered in a particular clinical setting. ___________________________________________________ DVP04 Increasing sensitivity through use of a direct fluorescent antibody test for Legionella pneumophila in bronchoalveolar lavage samples by immunomagnetic separation based on BioMags S. Sethi1, M. Gore2, K. Sethi3 1 Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Microbiology Homburg/Saar, Germany 2 Integrated DNA Technologies Inc., DNA Technologies Coralville, USA 3 Seroscan Laboratories, Serology, Heidelberg, Germany In the present study, immunomagnetic separation of L.pneumophila from mock bronchoalveloar lavage (BAL) fluid samples, which were artificially spiked with L.pneumophila, and culture positive patient BAL fluid samples, was achieved using BioMags (superparamagnetic particles ) loaded with purified rabbit immunoglobulin G specific for L.pneumophila. Bacteria binding onto. BioMag-immunomatrix were directly stained with a L.pneumophila species-specific DFA reagent and examined under a fluorescence microscope. BioMag-based immunomagnetic separation (BIMS) followed by DFA staining (BIMS-DFA) could correctly identify all the 20 (100 %) BAL samples which were spiked with low numbers (2 x102 CFU) of L.pneumophila. Cultures could be recovered from 15 (75 %) of these 20 spiked BAL samples, 5 (25 %) of the samples failed to yield positive cultures. Both culture and BIMS-DFA methods showed 100 % positive results when spiked BAL samples containing high bacterial load (104 CFU) were tested. The findings with true patient culture positive BAL specimens which were examined retrospectively indicated that BIMS-DFA is significantly more sensitive for detecting L.pneumophila than conventional cytospin method of DFA staining (cytospin-DFA). Out of the 25 culture-positive BAL specimens tested, 7 (28 %) proved negative by cytospin-DFA whereas BIMS-DFA correctly detected all the 25 (100 %) specimens. It is suggested that the BIMS-DFA procedure increases the sensitivity of DFA testing for L.pneumophila in large volume samples such as BAL fluids. ___________________________________________________ DVP05 Development of a phage typing system for Salmonella enterica serovar infantis T. Miller1, R. Prager1, W. Rabsch1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode, Germany The EU demands a decrease in diseases that are transferable from animals to human (zoonosis) for consumers protection. Salmonella Infantis is one zoonotic agent, causative of human enteritis that has increased in recent years. The incidences in humans show that S. Infantis is a new emerging pathogen. An EU-wide Salmonella study of the prevalence of Salmonella (S.) in hen flocks, initiated by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) was carried out in all member states. The three most frequently serovars in the EU-study were in descending order: S. Enteritidis, S. Infantis and S. Typhimurium [1]. There are phage typing schemes for S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium which are used worldwide for outbreak investigations. We develop a phage typing scheme for S. Infantis, necessary for epidemiological surveillance and control of this pathogen. The phages were isolated from 119 lysogenic strains collected from 1973 until 2006. The strains were isolated from human faecal smears and different animal products as well. A total of 150 S. Infantis strains were typed. The most discriminating phages (n = 22) were used for the final typing scheme and further validation. Additionally we investigated the presence of the phage encoded virulence gene sopE in S. Infantis strains by PCR as an additional epidemiological marker. 1] http://www.efsa.europa.eu ___________________________________________________ DVP06 Characterization and detection of extended-spectrum betalactamase (ESBL)-producing Enterobacteriaceae by use of different updated automated susceptibility testing systems K. - A. Moder1, J. Färber1, F. Layer1, I. Tammer1, W. König1 B. König1 1 Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany Multi resistant organism cause severe infections, which are complicated to handle including limited treatment options. Especially ESBL producing Enterobacteriaceae have important infection control implications and are still a major challenge to 6 detect in routine clinical microbiology laboratories. The validation of the different screening tests for ESBL basically apply to E. coli and Klebsiella spp.. Problems detecting an ESBL production particularly occur with various Enterobacter spp., Serratia spp. and Citrobacter spp. No CLSI recommendations exist for ESBL detection and reporting for organisms besides E. coli and Klebsiella spp. or for detecting plasmid-mediated AmpC beta-lactamases. There exist several different test methods, among them automated identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing systems, e.g. the BD PhoenixTM (BD Diagnostic Systems, Sparks, MD) and the Vitek®2 System (bioMerieux, Marcy l' Etoile, France). Few data exist about the compatibility of the various ESBL detection methods. So we tested 120 isolates of different Enterobacteriaceae for ESBL production using the BD PhoenixTM Automated Microbiology System (NMIC/ID-50 and NMIC/ID-70 BD PhoenixTM GN Combo panels) and the Vitek®2 System (Vitek®2 ID-GNB for identification; ASTN041- and AST-N062 panels for antimicrobial susceptibility testing). We screened for the common ESBL gene families (TEM, SHV, OXA, CMY and CTX-M) by PCR as reference method. Using E-Test we detected 89 ESBL producing and 31 non ESBL producing strains. The performance of the automated systems was variable, in particular with organism such as Enterobacter spp. and Citrobacter spp. Noticeable were the different results generated with the various panels from both systems testing the same isolate. The integration of an ESBL confirmation test into the panels reduce time to accurate ESBL detection. Nevertheless, concerning organism such as Enterobacter spp., manual test for confirmation an ESBL production is recommended. ___________________________________________________ DVP07 Detection of extended-spectrum -lactamase (ESBL) producing Enterobacteriaceae with a selective chromogenic agar medium J. Färber1, K. - A. Moder1, F. Layer1, I. Tammer1, W. König1 B. König1 1 Otto-von-Guericke University of Magdeburg, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany Nosocomial infections caused by extended-spectrum betalactamase (ESBL) and ampC beta-lactamase producing gramnegative bacteria complicate therapy and limit treatment options. The CLSI has issued guidelines for phenotypic confirmation of suspected ESBL strains among E. coli and Kelebsiella spp. No Interpretation criteria exist for other organisms or for detecting plasmid-mediated AmpC betalactamases. Meanwhile there exist several different test methods, among them automated identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing systems, e.g. the Vitek®2 System (bioMerieux, Marcy l' Etoile, France). In addition chromogenic agar mediums, e.g. the chrom IDTM ESBL (bioMérieux, Marcy l' Etoile, France) is available for ESBL screening. Therefore we tested 120 isolates of different Enterobacteriaceae for ESBL production. We compared the performance of the Vitek®2 System (Vitek®2 ID-GNB for identification; AST-N020 and AST-N041 panels for antimicrobial susceptibility testing) with the chromogenic agar medium chrom IDTM ESBL. The detection of the common ESBL gene families (TEM, SHV, OXA, CMY and CTX-M) by PCR was used as reference method. Using E-Test we detected 89 ESBL producing and 31 non ESBL producing strains. The main advantage of the chrom IDTM ESBL agar is its sensitivity, which enable the recovery and identification of most ESBL producing organism within 24 hours. The Vitek®2 system showed variable results, in particular with organism such as Enterobacter spp. and Citrobacter spp.. In conclusion, the new agar screen plate is a convenient method to screen for ESBL organisms, even possible out of clinical samples, with the potential for incorporation into routine clinical laboratory service. ___________________________________________________ DVP08 DNA-microarray for genotyping antibiotic susceptibility of multidrug resistant P. aeruginosa isolates J. Weile1, C. Knabbe1 1 Robert-Bosch-Hospital, Laboratory Medicine, Stuttgart Germany Multidrug-resistant bacteria in both the hospital and community environment are of great concern as it is the major cause of failure in the treatment of infectious diseases. Regarding the worldwide increase of multidrug resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, new strategies using molecular diagnostics are needed. P. aeruginosa is characterized by an intrinsic resistance to various antimicrobial agents and the ability to develop multidrug resistance during antibiotic therapy. Standard laboratory methods based on phenotypically determined microbiological and biochemical characteristics require usually 48 to 72 hours. One approach to cope with this problem is the development of new, faster methods for antibiotic susceptibility and species identification, allowing an earlier therapy onset and a more adequate therapy, particularly for critically ill or immunocompromised patients in intensive care units.We developed a DNA-microarray based biochip for genotyping P. aeruginosa in order to determine antibiotic susceptibility and virulence. The inclusion of virulence factors like toxins or alginate production broadens the information about the virulence potential of P. aeruginosa at the same time. The whole procedure can be performed in less than 5 hours and consists of DNA isolation directly from primary clinical specimen, target gene amplification concomitant with fluorescence labeling, DNAse I fragmentation and array hybridization. A collective of P. aeruginosa clinical isolates from ICU was analyzed. The array covers mutations in regulatory genes (mexR, nfxB, mexT, mexZ, nalC, nalD, ampD, ampR) of efflux systems and AmpClactamase, as well as gyrA and parC . A variety of aminoglycoside modifying enzymes (aph(3’), aac(6’), aac(3), aadA, aadB) and oxa-, imp-, vim-, ges-, per-, and gim- lactamases were included. Concerning the genotype-phenotype correlation in the test collection, the coverage of relevant resistance determinants for antibiotics used in a calculated therapy of critical-ill patients was about 90 %. It was also possible to retrospectively detect genetic determinants for resistance in isolates which initially showed no corresponding 7 resistance phenotype, but developed such under therapy, demonstrating the advantage of molecular diagnostics over the classical phenotyping methods. ___________________________________________________ DVP09 Applications for quantitative real-time immuno-PCRs (qRTiPCRs): Highly sensitive detection of staphylococcal toxins in clinical specimens and food-derived samples A. Fischer1, C. von Eiff1, T. Kuczius2, G. Peters1, K. Becker1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany As immunological methods used until now are known to be limited in sensitivity and specificity, there is an obvious need for new highly sensitive and specific methods for the detection of Staphylococcus aureus exotoxins. To extend the sensitivity of nucleic acid amplification techniques to the detection of toxic shock syndrome-mediating staphylococcal superantigen toxins TSST-1 and staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB, also responsible for staphylococcal food poisoning), two quantitative real time immuno-PCR (qRT-iPCR) approaches with highly increased performance have been developed. The detection of TSST-1 and SEB, respectively, was achieved by coating toxin-specific antibodies (ABs) to microtiter plates in order to capture the target superantigens followed by specific detection of the antigen-AB complex. The resulting immunocomplex was subsequently detected using an antibody covalently bound to a reporter-DNA molecule followed by realtime amplification of the reporter-DNA. Amplification was carried out in an iCycler iQ real-time PCR system. After optimization in buffered systems, qRT-iPCR protocols have been used to detect SEB and TSST-1 in a variety of clinical specimens and food-derived samples. For this reason, samples were spiked with a dilution series of the respective toxin and subsequently detected by qRT-iPCR. SEB and TSST1 were successfully detected in culture supernatants, serum, urine, and milk at minimum concentrations as low as 100pg/ml (approx. 4amol/µl) and 1ng/ml, respectively. Thus, the limit of detection (LOD) was lowered up to 100-fold compared to commercially available ELISA or RPLA. The qRT-iPCR introduced here offers an ultra-sensitive detection of staphylococcal superantigens in clinical specimens and food-derived samples. Furthermore, the qRT-iPCR approach offers high versatility for adaptation to a broad range of toxins and other antigen targets. ___________________________________________________ DVP10 Real Time PCR assay for detection of species of the genus Mannheimia S. Günther1, P. Schierack1, M. Grobbel1, L. H. Wieler1 C. Ewers1 1 Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany Infections caused by species of the genus Mannheimia cause diverse disease complexes in many wild and domestic animals worldwide. Fast and accurate detection of single species within the genus remains an unsolved problem till today. To solve this diagnostic challenge, we developed a real time PCR assay for the rapid and specific identification of five species of the genus Mannheimia (M.haemolytica, M.varigena, M.ruminalis, M.granulomatis and M.glucosida) from bacterial cultures and tissue samples. The assay was validated with reference strains, field isolates and bacteria spiked tissue samples. The sodA gene was used as target region for species specific primer pairs. The real time PCR assay demonstrated species specificity for all five examined Mannheimia spp. and a rapid test completion time of less than 5 hours. This is a considerable advantage in comparison to the currently used traditional phenotyping methods to distinguish between the species of the genus. The assay was able to detect approximately 102 bacterial cells per gram lung tissue sample, as determined with spiked tissue samples. We assume that the assay will be useful for fast laboratory diagnostic assessment of particularly respiratory infections caused by Mannheimia in animals. ___________________________________________________ DVP11 Low sensitivity of direct MRSA PCR-based tests due to low colony counts from nasal swabs. H. von Wulffen1, S. Scherpe2, T. Brodegger1, H. Feucht2 M. Äpfelbacher2 1 MEDILYS c/o AK Altona, Central Labor/Microbiology Hamburg, Germany 2 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Institute for Microbiology, Hamburg, Germany To evaluate an inhouse real-time PCR assay for direct detection of MRSA in clinical samples results from 491 nasal swabs taken under routine conditions for MRSA direct testing were compared to those achieved with a commercial test system and to those achieved by parallel culture from same specimens. Swabs were washed out in 300 µl lysis solution, a 100 µl aliquot of this solution was plated out on MRSA CHROM agar (MAST Diagnostics). After the lysis reaction 5 µl each was employed in the PCR tests. Cultures were read after 24 and 48 hours, results expressed as colony forming units (cfu) per swab. Species identification and oxacillin resistance were confirmed using the VITEK 2 system (Biomérieux).Using culture as gold standard the inhouse and the commercial PCR tests yielded sensitivities of 64.6% and 68.8%, specificities of 98.0 and 94.6%, positive predictive values (PPV) of 77.5% and 57.9%, and negative predictive values (NPV) of 96.2% and 96.5% respectively. If the gold standard was extended to include culture results from other patient specimens from the same time period, the sensitivities were 65.5% and 69.2%, the specificities 99.5% and 97.7%, the PPV 95.0% and 79.4%, and the NPV 95.6% and 96.1% respectively. For the inhouse test positive cultures yielded a median of 550 cfu (95% CI 72-1000) for positive PCR results (n=30) opposed to a median of only 9 cfu (95% CI 3-120) for negative PCR results (n=17). For the commercial test these medians were also 550 cfu (95% CI 100-1200) for positive PCR results (n=32) and 9 cfu (95% CI 3-24) for negative PCR results (n=15). The results suggest that PCR tests are suitable for screening purposes (high NPV values), but they need to be backed up by parallel cultures due to frequently low colony 8 counts from nasal swabs that lie below detection limits of PCR based tests. ___________________________________________________ DVP12 Comparison of commercial DNA preparation kits for the detection of Brucellae in tissue using quantitative real-time PCR H. Tomaso1, H. Scholz1, S. Al Dahouk2, U. Wernery3 M. Pfeffer1, M. Eickhoff4 1 Bundeswehr Institute for Microbiology, Bacteriology, Munich Germany 2 Bundeswehr Central Hospital Koblenz, Koblenz, Germany 3 Central Veterinary Research Laboratory, Dubai, United Arab Emirates 4 Qiagen Diagnostics GmbH, Hamburg, Germany Brucellosis is a ‘re-emerging’ zoonosis with a worldwide distribution. Humans are mainly infected by B. melitenis, B. abortus, and B. suis. Brucella is the most frequent cause of laboratory-acquired infections. The identification of Brucella species with conventional microbiological techniques is timeconsuming and hazardous. Real-time PCR assays allow for the rapid and specific detection of Brucella species, but the amount of bacteria in tissues is frequently extremely low. Therefore, the step of DNA preparation is critical to avoid false negative PCR results. The aim of this study was therefore to assess the performance of commercially available kits for the preparation of Brucella DNA from tissues. We evaluated the following kits: QIAampae DNA Mini Kit (QIAGEN), peqGoldae Tissue DNA Mini Kit (PeqLab), UltraCleanae Tissue DNA Isolation Kit (MoBio), DNA Isolation Kit for Cells and Tissues (Roche), and NucleoSpinae Tissue (Macherey-Nagel). Twelve tissue samples of two camels with culture proven generalized Brucella melitensis infections were processed. Identification of the organisms was performed using conventional microbiological techniques including species specific AMOS PCR. Tissue samples were inactivated in formalin and homogenized using a Bio 101 FastPrep instrument (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany). A 100-µL sample was further processed with the above mentioned kits. All DNA preparations were performed in duplicates and the amount of DNA was determined in triplicates using a real-time PCR assay with hybridization probes targeting the insertion sequence 711. Cycle threshold values were used to calculate the amount of DNA that was prepared from the tissue samples. We also assessed the costs per sample, the time required and ease of handling for the respective kits. We observed differences in the amount of DNA that was harvested of up to two log steps among the kits. The time required and the costs also differed markedly. In summary, this study provides data that should facilitate the choice of DNA purification kits suitable for specific clinical samples with regard to sample volume, DNA yield, costs and hands-on time. ___________________________________________________ DVP13 Evaluation of broad-range PCR for the diagnostic of infectious endocarditis T. Vollmer1, J. Dreier1, C. Piper2, C. Freytag1, K. Kleesiek1 1 Institute for Laboratory and Transfusion Medicine, Heart- and Diabetes Center NRW, Bad Oeynhausen, Germany 2 Clinic for Cardiology, Heart- and Diabetes Center NRW Bad Oeynhausen, Germany Infectious endocarditis (IE) is associated with a high degree of mortality and morbidity. The crucial factor in diagnosis and effective therapy is the identification of the etiologic agent. To date blood cultures are the gold standard in laboratory testing and identification of the pathogen. Pathogen identification based on culturing methods and broad-range PCR has also been described for heart valves after surgical excision. Due to slow growing, fastidious bacteria or previous antibiotic treatment, blood cultures as well as cultures of surgically removed specimen often give a negative result. In the present study, the performance of a broad-range 16S rDNA assay is compared to that of an automated culture system (21 days at 37°C) with additional attention to clinical implications. A total of 323 heart valves of patients with definite or suspected IE were surgically removed between September 2001 and December 2006 and were screened for bacterial infection. In case of positive results, isolates were identified according to standard procedures. A total of 156 (48%) surgically removed heart valves were detected positive of which 36 (11%) were detected in both systems. 90 infected heart valves (28%) were detected only by broad-range PCR, whereas in 30 cases (9%) positive results were detected only by culture. These results showed increased diagnosis of bacterial infection by broad-range PCR amplification which therefore seems to be a powerful method for the identification of the causative organism of IE. The most frequently identified pathogens are Streptococcus spp. (PCR: 47%, culture 18%), Staphylococcus spp. (PCR: 18%, culture: 29%) and Enterococcus spp. (PCR: 7%, culture: 26%). Further analysis of the patient files is under way with regard to patient?s history including antibiotic treatment, diagnosis and clinical outcome. This retrospective examination is carried out to differentiate between acute, appropriate attended, successfully healed or rejected cases of IE. The disease stadium at the time of heart valve replacement is crucial for the ensured occurrence of an etiologic agent and thus for the determination of the diagnostic limitations of both methods. ___________________________________________________ DVP14 Rapid detection of pathogenic bacteria in blood samples by eubacterial Gram-Differentiating multiplex real-time PCR in conjunction with pre-analytic DNA preparation kit MolYsis S. Gebert1, D. Siegel1, M. Lorenz2, C. Disqué2 N. Wellinghausen1 1 University Hospital, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Ulm, Germany 2 Molzym GmbH & Co.KG, Bremen, Germany Rapid detection of bacterial pathogens in blood from septic patients is essential for adequate antimicrobial therapy and 9 prognosis of patients. Blood cultures are the diagnostic tool of choice but usually take a few days until identification of the pathogens. Aim of this study is to facilitate detection and identification of bacteria in blood samples by molecular methods before positive signalling of blood cultures in an automated system. We used a eubacterial 16S rDNA based real-time LightCycler PCR assay that enables detection of bacterial DNA and simultaneous differentiation of Gram-positive and Gramnegative bacteria by dual-colour multiplex FRET probe design (Gram-diff-PCR). The assay has a sensitivity of 50-500 fg DNA/PCR tested with several bacterial pathogens and detects all relevant species. For investigation of spiked blood samples, DNA preparation was performed by MolYsis (Molzym GmbH & Co.KG, Bremen, Germany). MolYsis DNA preparation is characterised by lysis of human cells and degradation of human DNA prior to bacterial cell lysis which leads to minimisation of human background DNA and selective enrichment of bacterial DNA. In spiked citrate blood samples, the Gram-diff-PCR assay in conjunction with MolYsis DNA preparation allowed detection of 2-5 CFU E. coli and S. aureus per PCR-reaction, i.e. 40-100 CFU per 200 µl blood. In addition, BACTEC blood culture bottles spiked with bacteria were analysed continuously with the Gram-diff-PCR assay and pre-analytic MolYsis protocol until positive signalling in the automated BACTEC system. This procedure allowed detection of E. coli and S. aureus in the blood culture bottle 7,5 h and 5,5 h respectively, previous to positive signalling of the BACTEC system. In conclusion, the Gram-diff-PCR in conjunction with MolYsis DNA preparation allows sensitive detection and Gramdifferentiating of bacterial DNA in native blood and blood culture samples. Based on the results of the Gram-diff-PCR species- or genus-specific PCR assays can be applied for subsequent identification of the respective pathogen. In the near future, further validation of the assay on patient blood samples will be done. ___________________________________________________ DVP15 Triple Faeces Test: A successful Dutch approach for detection of intestinal parasites A. Buss1, B. Kesztyues1 1 Laboratory for Infectious Diseases, Groningen Netherlands Introduction: The Laboratory for Infectious Diseases (LvI) is a regional public health laboratory in Groningen, Netherlands. In 2002 we introduced the by van Gool et al1 developed “Triple Faeces Test” (TFT) as standard tool for detection of intestinal parasites. The TFT both combines multiple sampling, SAF (sodium acetate acetic acid formalin) fixative and the use of chlorazol black dye. We present this diagnostic approach for detection of parasites and discuss the advantages and disadvantages compared to the conventional diagnostic method, i.e. analysis of a single fresh stool specimen. Because of the intermittent shedding of intestinal protozoa, delivery of three stool specimens is recommended, but often not performed in daily practice. Material and Methods: Patients are asked to collect stool specimens on 3 consecutive days: on day 1 in a tube containing SAF (TFT1), on day 2 in the empty tube (TFT2)and on day 3 in the other tube containing SAF (TFT3). An instruction form with detailed information on how to handle the TFT collection kit is included in each set. After day 3, the complete TFT set is returned to the laboratory. From tube TFT2 (without fixative) additional diagnostic for bacteria and viruses can be performed. Results: Between september 2006 until may 2007 3644 TFTsets were analysed in our laboratory. 992 (26%) TFT-sets were positive for at least one protozoan species. First results revealed the low-pathogen Blastocystis hominis (n=421) as most common species detected. Dientamoeba fragilis (n=185), and Gardia lamblia (n=146) were the most frequently observed pathogens. In 183 TFT-sets more than one protozoa were found. Discussion: The increase in the costs of material and a longer “hands-on time” by performance of a TFT compared to the examination of a single fresh stool sample are compensated by the higher sensitivity of the TFT due to the detection of vegetative stages of protozoa and a higher compliance with the request to submit multiple stool samples. Having a nonfixed sample in the TFT (TFT2) allows the performance of additional molecular techniques and antigen tests. References1. T. van Gool,·R. Weijts, E. Lommerse, T. G. Mank Triple Faeces Test: An Effective Tool for Detection of Intestinal Parasites in Routine Clinical Practice. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis (2003) 22:284–290 ___________________________________________________ DVP16 Temperature Dependency of Detection of Fastidious and Endocarditis-causing Organisms in Delayed-Entry Samples in the BacT/Alert 3D Blood Culture System I. Seegmüller1, M. Wilms2, S. Stanzel3, R. R. Reinert2 1 University Heidelberg, Hygiene, Heidelberg, Germany 2 University Aachen, Medical Microbiology, Aachen, Germany 3 University Aachen, Institute for Medical Statistic, Aachen Germany Background: This study evaluates the effect of preincubation temperature on delayed entry samples for fastidious organisms including the HACEK group, several Streptococci spp including S. pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitides, Haemophilus spp. and Corynebacterium spp. for the BacT/Alert 3D system (bioMérieux) using the FA medium. Method: Bottles were inoculated with two different concentrations (0.5 McFarland and a 1:100000 dilution) of each organism and either loaded into the system immediately or incubated at 4 °C, room temperature (RT) or 37 °C for 24h prior to loading. For some strains bottles were supplemented with either human blood, Bactec Fos medium or both. Logistic regression was applied to evaluate detection rate (DR), ANOVA to evaluate the time to detection (TTD). Results: DR was 92.5% for bottles loaded immediately with a mean TTD of 26.7h (Max: 81.6h) for the low concentration and 9.21h (Max: 40.3h) for the high concentration. Preincubation at 4°C did not affect the DR. The DR at RT was 90.0% for the low concentration and 83.6% for the high concentration. At 37°C the DR was 76.3% and 66.3% for the low and the high concentration respectively. Bottles inoculated with Streptococci ssp. and Haemophilus spp. failed to signal despite showing visible indicator alteration after preincubation. TTD was 29.8h 10 (Max: 91.2h) and 11.9h (Max: 48.0h) , 24.4h (Max: 86.4h) and 9.6h (Max: 40.7h), 8.3h (Max: 48.0h) and 4.9h (Max: 38.1h) for the bottles held at 4 °C, RT and 37 °C for the low and the high concentration respectively. Differences in DR due to preincubation temperature were statistically significant. Eikenella corrodens and Gemella sanguis were only detected in the presence of blood. Kingella kingae remained undetected. Conclusion: For delayed entry samples storage at RT seems to be advisable. It only affected the DR in one isolate (for the low concentration mimicking bacteremia) and offers a reasonable TTD. An absolute incubation time of blood culture bottles of four days seems to be sufficient, as none of the bottles signalled positive after this period. To successfully culture Kingella kingae alternative media should be used. ___________________________________________________ traditional culture methods. Molecular assays are known to be more sensitive than culture or microscopic techniques. Therefore it is very likely that the PCR-RLB positive, culture negative samples are in fact positive. ___________________________________________________ DVP17 Comparison of PCR-Reverse line blot analysis and traditional culture of dermatophytes in clinical samples. G. J. Wisselink1, B. Kesztyues1, E. van Zanten1 K. R. van Slochteren1, S. Coops1, A. M. C. Bergmans2 R. G. F. Wintermans2, A. M. D. Kooistra-Smid1 1 Laboratory for Infectious Diseases, Groningen, Netherlands 2 Franciscus Hospital , Department of Medical Microbiology Roosendaal, Netherlands Separation of bacterial DNA from human DNA in clinical samples may have an important impact on downstream applications, involving nucleic-acid based microbial diagnostic systems. We evaluated two commercially available reagents (MolYsis® and Pureprove®) for their potential to isolate and purify bacterial DNA from human DNA. We chose oral samples, which usually contain very high amounts of both human and bacterial cells. Three different DNA preparations each were made from eight caries- and eight periodontal specimens using the two reagents above and a conventional DNA extraction strategy as reference. Based on target-specific RT-PCR assays we compared the reduction of human DNA versus loss of bacterial DNA. Human DNA was monitored by targeting the -2-microglobulin gene, while bacteria were monitored by targeting 16S rRNA gene (total bacteria and Porphyromonas gingivalis) or the glycosyltransferase gene (Streptococcus mutans). We found that in most cases at least 90% of human DNA could successfully be removed, with complete removal in eight of 16 cases using the MolYsis® protocol, and two (of 16) cases using Pureprove®. Conversely, detection of bacterial DNA was possible in all cases with a recovery rate generally ranging from 35% to 50%. In conclusion, both reagents are useful for reducing background interference from the host DNA. Bacterial DNA can be up-concentrated, possibly resulting in enhanced sensitivity and specificity of subsequent nucleic-acid based microbial diagnostic systems. ___________________________________________________ Objectives Traditionally, laboratory detection and identification of dermatophytes consists of culture on selective media and potassium hydroxide (KOH) tests. This process yields positive results within approximately 2-6 weeks. Using PCR followed by Reverse Line Blot (PCR-RLB) analysis it becomes possible to obtain positive and negative results within 2-3 days. In this study we compared traditional culture with PCR-RLB analysis. Methods Two hundred and three clinical samples (187 nail, 16 skin) were analysed retrospectively by PCR-RLB after traditional culture. Samples were processed using QIAamp® DNA mini kit (Qiagen, Germany) with a separate pre-lysis step. PCR targeted the ITS region between the genes coding for 18S and 5.8S rRNA. PCR products were analysed using RLB [Bergmans et al., submitted]. The membrane harboured 13 different probes to identify and discriminate between 9 different dermatophyte species within 3 genera, namely; T. rubrum, T. mentagrophytes, T. interdigitale, T. tonsurans, T. violaceum, T. verrucosum, M. canis (complex), M. audouinii and E. floccosum. Results Culture, KOH and PCR-RLB analysis yielded 37/203, 93/200 and 97/203 positive results respectively. Of the 37 culture positive samples 35 scored positive in the PCR-RLB.. Sixty-two samples scored positive in PCR-RLB but remained negative in culture, 53 of these samples were KOH positive. Of the 97 PCRRLB positive samples 79 were identified as T. rubrum, 14 as T. interdigitale, 3 as Trichophyton sp. Sensitivity for the PCR-RLB compared to culture for dermatophytes is 100% (34/34), compared to the KOH the sensitivity of PCR-RLB is 92 % (86/93). Conclusion These data show PCR-RLB to be a fast and very sensitive method to detect and identify dermatophytes compared to DVP18 Selective isolation of bacterial DNA from clinical specimens H.-P. Horz1, S. Scheer1, F. Huenger2, M. Vianna1, G. Conrads1 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Division of Oral Microbiology and Immunology, Department of Operative and Preventive Dentistry & Periodontology, and Department of Medical Microbiology, Aachen, Germany 2 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Department of Infection Control and Infectiology, Aachen, Germany DVP19 Enhanced universality of broad-ranged (inosine-containing) 16S rDNA primers as determined by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) profiling B. Brands1, G. Conrads1, H. - P. Horz1 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Division of Oral Microbiology and Immunology, Department of Operative and Preventive Dentistry & Periodontology, and Department of Medical Microbiology, Aachen, Germany Nucleic acid-based techniques offer a rapid and highly sensitive option for detecting pathogenic bacteria directly from clinical specimens. In particular broad-ranged (universal) bacterial primers are useful when the etiological agent of an infectious disease is not known and cultivation efforts remain 11 unsuccessful. However, the choice of primers to be used is nontrivial since a true “universal” PCR system does not exist and so-called universal 16S rDNA primers differ dramatically in their ‘universality’. This limitation, frequently ignored, can lead to false-negative results in routine microbial diagnosis and in case of studies on the human microbiota to a distorted picture of the true microbial diversity. To enhance the universality of 16S rDNA primers we modified one validated broad-ranged primer pair by replacing the essential 3’ termini of each primer with inosine. The advantage of this base analogue is its potential to pair with any of the four nucleotides. Whole genomic DNA was extracted from five periodontal samples and bacterial 16S rRNA genes amplified either with or without inosine containing primers and with the forward primer being labeled with a fluorescence dye. Resulting PCR products were digested with the endonuclease Alu I followed by electrophoresis and size determination of labeled terminal restriction fragments (T-RFs) using automated capillary DNA sequencer technology. The average number of 16 T-RFs detected when the original primers were used was exceeded in most cases with an average detection of 17 T-RFs when the forward primer contained inosine and 21 T-RFs when the reverse primer contained inosine. Based on the interactive web-tool MICA (Microbial community analysis, http://mica.ibest.uidaho.edu/default.php) and on preliminary sequence analysis of cloned PCR-products, three of these additional T-RFs were identified as uncultivated Treponema sp., uncultivated Synergistes sp. and Methanobrevibacter oralis. In conclusion, inosine-primers can improve molecular inventories of human microbial ecosystems and increase the sensitivity of nucleic-acid based diagnosis of bacterial pathogens. ___________________________________________________ DVP20 Identification of clinically relevant streptococcus species by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) A. Sigge1, B. Spellerberg1, T. Zelensky1, N. Kästner1 S. Güntner1, S. Poppert1 1 University Hospital, Medical Microbiology, Ulm Germany Objectives: The current classification of the genus Streptococcus differentiates several heterogeneous groups. A reliable species identification of Streptococci via conventional biochemical and phenotypic tests is not always possible, particularly considering the viridans streptococci. Aim of the study was to evaluate a set of 6 newly designed and 6 previously published FISH probes for the identification of the of the most important pyogenic streptococci and S. pneumoniae to species level and of the viridans streptococci to group level. Methods: A number of 240 strains including 26 ATCC and DSM strains were evaluated. The 214 clinical isolates gained from blood cultures, respiratory and urogenital tracts were identified by API systems, Lancefield antigen agglutination, Optochin susceptibility tests and sequencing of the sodA gene as the gold standard. The following Streptococcus species were included: S. acidominimus, S. agalactiae, S. anginosus, S. australis, S. constellatus, S. dysgalactiae equisimilis, S. equi, S. infantis, S. intermedius, S. massiliensis, S. mitis, S. mutans, S. oligofermentans, S. oralis, S. parasanguis, S. peroris, S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes, S. salivarius, S. sanguis, S. sobrinus, S. suis, S. uberis, S. vestibulariis. Results: Seven FISH probes for the identification of all Streptococcus spp., S. pyogenes, S. agalactiae, S. pneumoniae and S. dysgalactiae subspec. equisimilishad a sensitivity and specificity of 100%. The probes targeting the anginosus, mitis andsalivarius and mutans groups had a sensitivity of 87 up to 100 % and a specificity of 95 up to 100% respectively. Conclusions: The described FISH assay allows reliable identification of the clinically most relevant Streptococci and may thus be a suitable alternative tool, in particular for the identification of strains that exhibit biochemical variability belonging to the anginosus, mutans and mitis group. ___________________________________________________ DVP21 Quantification of HPV16 E6*I transcripts in cervical cancer screening using rapid real-time RT-PCR amplification Increased levels of E6*I mRNA are indicative for severe cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN II+) S. Kösel1, S. Burggraf1, W. Engelhardt1, B. Olgemöller1 1 Labor Becker, Olgemoeller und Kollegen, Munich, Germany The integration of human papilloma virus (HPV) DNA into the host genome and the up-regulation of viral E6 and E7 proteins play a central role in the carcinogenesis of cervical carcinoma. Since cervical dysplasia may regress to normal cytology or progress to cervical carcinoma, it would be valuable to have a diagnostic tool to help decide whether conisation should be performed. Cervical samples of 301 HPV16 positive women were collected in RNAlater reagent to prevent RNA degradation. Relative levels of HPV16 DNA and HPV16 E6*I mRNA in the samples were determined using real time PCR. HPV16 DNA was determined in relation to the beta-globin gene. E6/E7 mRNA was quantitated against G6PDH mRNA. Molecular genetic findings were correlated with histological diagnoses and cytological follow-up. HPV16 E6*I mRNA levels were significantly higher in women with cytologically diagnosed severe cervical dysplasia than in those with mild-to-moderate dysplasia, borderline or normal cytology. Viral DNA levels were not significantly different between severe and mild-to-moderate dysplasia. The positive predictive value for a histological diagnosis of severe cervical dysplasia (CIN II+) increased with the amounts of E6*I mRNA to more than 90% whereas the sensitivity decreased. The absence of HPV16 E6*I transcripts as well as HPV16 DNA considerably increased the negative predictive value and the specificity. However, low concentrations (or complete absence) of E6*I mRNA did not preclude a CIN II+ diagnosis. High levels of viral DNA were not indicative for CIN II+. Although the sensitivity is limited, high levels of HPV16 E6*I mRNA are indicative of CIN II+ in cytologically diagnosed cervical dysplasia of individual patients. Thus, women may benefit from early histological diagnosis and treatment without further control samples. ___________________________________________________ 12 DVP22 Serodiagnosis of Tularemia: Clinical validation of a combination of certified diagnostic test kits and comparison with a new bead assay based on LuminexTM technology S. Kopf1, A. Buckendahl1, E. Seibold1, P. Kaysser1 W. D. Splettstösser1,2 1 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Immunology, Munich Germany 2 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Virology & Hygiene Medical Microbiology, Rostock, Germany Background: Detection of anti-Francisella tularensis antibodies in sera from tularemia patients still represents a keystone in the confirmation of the clinical diagnosis. In many European countries, certified assays which are in accordance with the in vitro diagnostic guideline (EC directive 98/79/EG) are not readily available.In this study we demonstrate our clinical experience with a newly introduced and certified combination of classic immunological tests. Additionally, we show that the application of a new test format might be an alternative to more conventional test systems. Methods: We compared a fluorescent microsphere immunoassay (FMIA) for the detection of specific antibodies against Francisella tularensis (LPS) with established and certified diagnostic tools (enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunoblot). Two additional microsphere populations were used as internal serum and conjugate control. Results: Employing 48 positive sera from patients and 246 negative sera from blood donors the FMIA had a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and 99.2% respectively. From 238 samples sent for a definite diagnosis of tularemia to our reference laboratory, 43 specimens (18.1%) gave positive ELISA results. But only 32 of these sera (74.4%) were also reactive in the immunoblot which was similar in the FMIA. Conclusion: The combination of a screening assay (ELISA) with a confirmatory test (immunoblot) can reduce the occurrence of false positive results by almost 30%. The FMIA proved to be a promising tool with sensitivity and specificity comparable to the combination of classic immunoassays but showed several additional advantageous features: Broad dynamic range, potential of multiplexing and automation and cost reduction of about 90%. ___________________________________________________ DVP23 Species-specific signature sequence of medically important black yeast species G. Haase1, G. S. de Hoog2 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Aachen, Germany 2 Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, Utrecht, Netherlands Background: Members of the herpotrichiellaceaeous black yeasts i.e. Cladophialophora spp., Exophiala spp., Fonsecaea spp., Phialophora spp., Ramichloridium spp., and Rhinocladiella spp. are of medical importance because they can cause a variety of different mycoses whereas some of them could be even life threatening. Therefore, a rapid and reliable identification of respective isolates is mandatory. Unfortunately with some rare exception classical phenotypical identification of these pleoanamorphic fungi is hardly to achieve especially in view of some of the recently described species like e. g. E. calicioides, E. crusticola, E. nishimurae, E. oligosperma, and E. xenobiotica. Method: While assigning a secondary structure to their nuclear ITS2 RNA molecule we came across that part of its second domain exhibits a species-specific region of about 30 nucleotides. By screening a proprietary database including all ITS2 sequences of the currently described type species of the above mentioned genera we could confirm our observation with exception of E. dermatitidis and E. phaeomuriformis both exhibiting identical sequences at this locus. In the latter case they could be discriminated by respective sequences differences of the ITS1 gene. Results: When comparing the respective sequences of further isolates (> 5) of these species e. g. E. bergeri, E. castellanii, E. dermatitidis, E. heteromorpha, E. jeanselmei, E. lecanii-cornu, E. oligosperma, E. phaeomuriformis, E. pisciphila, E. salmonis, E. spinifera, E. xenobiotica we could show that they all exhibit this distinct barcode-like sequence thereby approving that this signature sequence is really species-specific and showing no intraspecific variation. Conclusion: Since the ITS2 gene exhibits longer stretches of identical nucleotides at the 5’ end and showed length differences upon alignment respective BLAST searches can give rise to ambiguous or even erroneous species identification by using the whole sequence. In contrast to such an approach usage of the described signature sequence is highly reliable and identification can be performed manually by simply inspecting this particularITS2 sequence of a given isolate ___________________________________________________ DVP24 Novel strongyloides spp. real-time PCR S. Kramme1, K. Erttmann1, N. Brattig1, B. Fleischer1 C. Drosten1, M. Panning1 1 Bernhard-Nocht-Institute, Hamburg, Germany Stongyloides infection is widely distributed in tropical as well as subtropical regions worldwide. Clinical presentation of the infection in most cases remains asymptomatic. However, in immunocompromised hosts disseminated infection can be serious and often fatal. Classically diagnosis relies on the detection of larvae in fecal samples but is rather insensitive due to low and intermittent output. Use of up to three fecal samples can increase sensitivity. Culture methods do exist but are rather time consuming and labour intensive. Recently PCR based protocols for helminth parasites have been described. We present the first real-time PCR to detect Strongyloides spp. in stool samples. The assay targets the 28S rRNA gene. Real-time detection is accomplished by use of hybridization probes on a LightCycler instrument. The limit of detection is around 10 DNA copies/reaction. To detect possible inhibitory substances the assay is equipped with a competitive internal control meeting the requirements of modern molecular tools. Quantification of Strongyloides spp. DNA copies per g stool is possible. For preclinical evaluation the assay was used to monitor Strongyloides ratti larvae excretion in a rat model. S. ratti was detected by real-time PCR 4 days post infection. PCR remained positive for at least 18 days. For specificity testing a 13 panel of 30 stored stool specimens of patients without a travel history to endemic regions was tested and remained negative. In addition the test remained negative when different other helminth parasites were tested. This novel real-time PCR will be useful to complement diagnosis in suspected patients with negative stool specimens. Definite diagnosis will allow for initiation of specific chemotherapy, which can be life-saving in immunocompromised hosts. Furthermore this assay can be used in experimental settings to gain insights into the pathogenesis of this not well understood disease. ___________________________________________________ DVP25 Development of semi-nested and quantitative real time pool PCR methods for the detection of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis in seropositive and seronegative dairy cows I. Völkel1, S. Urstadt1, A. Karapetyan1, S. Thebille1 M. Niederhausen1, F. Schmelz1, C. - P. Czerny1 1 Georg-August-University, Institute of Veterinary Medicine Goettingen, Germany The etiologic association of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis and Morbus Crohn in humans remains still unclear, however, the bacteria are the infectious agents of Johne´s disease, a chronic and degenerative wasting disorder primarily in adult wildlife and domestic ruminants, such as cattle, sheep, and goats. Transmission to newborn calves occurs insidiously through the fecal-oral route by introduction of subclinically or persistently infected cattle. These asymptomatic carriers and undiscovered shedders are one of the driving forces of permanently occurring herd infections and are the reason of unsuccessful eradication efforts over many years based on serological methods. For future certification programs we developed and evaluated several new and highly sensitive PCR assays detecting Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis DNA in feces, milk, organs, tissues of infected animals, as well as in environmental samples. Based on a conserved and specific region within the IS 900, a semi-nested PCR was established amplifying 587 bp and 278 bp products. Both genome regions were also targets for the development of two real-time PCR types on the LightCycler. Specificity of the PCRs was confirmed by reference strains and field isolates cultivated on HEY-medium, IS 900 specific DNA probes, and sequencing of the amplicons. The detection limit of the semi-nested PCR was calculated with 1 genome equivalent. The limits of the real time PCR variants were 10 and 2 genome equivalents, respectively. The PCRs were able to detect one shedder within 800 fecal samples or 40 milk samples of non-infected animals under field conditions. For an economic screening of shedders in cattle herds feces pools were prepared on an ELISA-based selection strategy. In continous control surveys of herds with 6-12 months test intervals most of the PCR positve animals shedding the pathogen were seropositive in commercial ELISAs, too. Intermediate shedding was observed in animals with low serum antibody values, whereas high antibody titres and positve PCR results were correlated with clinical disorders in most of the cases. The unmatched value of the pool PCR methods was the detection of serologically negative shedders which could be traced back by individual PCRs. These animals remained seronegative over several months and showed no signs of the disease. Fecal PCR methods are the only alternative indicating these silent shedders within a herd rapidly and contribute to their immediate elimination. In pooled milk samples bacteria contents are too low. ___________________________________________________ DVP26 Realtime-like species identification of candidemia using dual colour PNA gene probes H. Peltroche-Llacsahuanga1, R. Lütticken1, S. von Oy1 G. Haase1 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Aachen, Germany Background: Candida albicans (Ca) and Candida glabrata (Cg) are the two most frequently isolated fungi from blood cultures (BC). Since almost all Ca isolates are still susceptible to fluconazole, whereas a higher proportion of Cg is only intermediate susceptible or resistant against this inexpensive and relatively easy-to-handle antifungal drug, immediate and reliable discrimination of these two species is desirable. This can not be achieved by applying conventional identification procedures. Therefore, we evaluated performance of the newly developed fluorescence in situ hybridisation test (FISH) applying differently labeled peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probes allowing discrimination of Ca and Cg within ~2.5h. Methods: Fluorescent labelled PNA probes targeting species specific 26S rRNA sequences of Ca and Cg were developed and evaluated by FISH (prototype - AdvanDX, Woburn, MA, USA). The probe reagent containing a mixture of the two PNA probes was applied to smears made directly from positive BC bottles of different types (BactAlert, bioMérieux, Nuertingen, Germany – bottle types SA, SN, FA, FN, PF). After incubation for 90 min at 55°C, unbound probe was removed by washing at 55°C for 30 min. Smears were then examined by fluorescence microscopy. Ca and Cg were identified as bright green or red fluorescent yeast cells, respectively. Results were compared to identification achieved by ID 32C (bioMérieux). Results: When testing BC of different types, 100% agreement between the results of PNA FISH and conventional methods was revealed (C. albicans, n = 3; C. glabrata n = 3; C. dubliniensis n = 2; C. guilliermondii n = 1; C. krusei n = 2; C. lusitaniae n = 2; C. parapsilosis n = 2; C. tropicalis n = 2; S. cerevisiae n = 2; T. asahii n = 1). Testing spiked BC (n = 17) inoculated with a mixture of Ca and Cg with these other commonly encountered yeast species also revealed 100% species specific results when applying the dual color PNA FISH. Conclusion: Dual colour PNA FISH turned out as a reliable and rapid (~2.5h) method for identification of both Ca and Cg directly from positive BC bottles. Preliminary data show that the hybridization time can be shortened to 30’ without obvious loss of sensitivity. Application of dual PNA FISH in the routine workflow turned out to be promising. Rapid discrimination of these two most frequently encountered fungi should lead to improvements in antifungal therapy. ___________________________________________________ 14 DVP27 Malaria investigation by Beckman Coulter Gen.S Y. Aniwatangkoora1, S. Toonkomdang1,2, P. Kongdoung1 Y. Changtrakun2 1 Khon Kaen University, Department of Clinical microscopy Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences, Khon Kaen, Thailand 2 Khon Kaen University, Diagnostic Microscopy Unit Srinagarind Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, Khon Kaen Thailand Detection of malaria infection by means of routine laboratory instrument is still limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of positional parameter; volume, conductivity and scatter (VCS) performed by Beckman Coulter Gen. S in 9 cases of malaria patients prior to treatment; positive cases and in those of negative cases; after treatment. The discriminant value of VCS for malaria investigation was calculated, based on criterion of greater than 5.0568 indicated the presence of malaria with sensitivity of 96.9% and specificity of 82.5%. The results of the positional parameters composition between 9 positive cases and 9 negative cases of malaria exhibited the significant differences for neutrophil mean conductivity, p<0.01 and standard deviation conductivity for lymphocyte, p<0.01. The discriminant value in either all positive cases or negative cases were greater than 5.0568, showing of response to malaria by a large activated monocyte. No significant correlation between the percentage of parasitemia (0.15-21.1%) and the discriminant value was detected. The presence of a typical peak at WBC threshold (35 fl) was observed in both positive cases and negative cases. This typical peak was not present in normal samples. The scatterplot demonstrated heterogeneity of the volume of monocyte and lymphocyte. The conclusion of present study indicated possibility of malaria detection by Beckman Coulter Gen. S. The user must first consider on the discriminant value of positional parameters, platelet histogram, WBC histogram and the message then focus on blood smear. Most of studied malaria cases were Plasmodium falciparum, investigation of patient with other malaria species should be performed for further study to complete the knowledge. ___________________________________________________ DVP28 Detection and identification of Legionella spp. from manmade water systems and aquatic environments H. Zinecker1, R. Gutjahr2, H. Maucher1, A. Breitenstein1 1 Scanbec GmbH, Halle/Saale, Germany 2 University of Applied Science Merseburg, Department Engineer- and Natural Sciences, Merseburg, Germany In this study we present a rapid and sensitive detection method for the genus Legionella and for the clinically relevant species Legionella pneumophila. Legionella species, the cause of legionellosis, are predominant in artifical water systems. Legionella infections are transmitted from these via aerosols by aspiration to the human respiratory system. Thus, providing fast, reliable and sensitive detection methods of Legionella bacteria for routine water diagnostics is of high urgency. The FastScan molecular test system is based on the detection of target molecules (rRNA) from the microorganism of interest by means of specific oligonucleotide capture and detection probes in an enzyme linked sandwich hybridization assay (SHA) [1]. The most sensitive assay has a detetion limit of 5 amol target molecules that corresponds to 3x106 16S rRNA molecules and about 450 cells Legionella pneumophila. We were able to detect specifically 26 Legionella strains of 8 species including 15 Legionella pneumophila serogroups. Since there is the possibility to apply the SHA test system as a cultivation independent analytical method not only viable but also non-culturable Legionella cells can be detected. The problem of non-culturable Legionella cells, the occurence of Legionella in clumps or intracellular in amoebae and finally the overgrowing by faster propagating microorganisms are major difficulties of the certified culture methods following ISO 11731-2 which leads to an underestimation of the real number of Legionella cells in a sample. As the FastScan test targets RNA only living cells as well as non culturable organisms will be detected. Therefore the FastScan method is perfectly applicable for risk assessment or monitoring of biocide treatments of manmade water systems. Furthermore we demonstrate the evaluation of the new developed test system with real water samples from cooling towers by comparison with the cultivation based methods (ISO 11731-2, NF-T 90431). [1] Leskela T, Tilsala-Timisjarvi A, Kusnetsov J, Neubauer P, Breitenstein A (2005) Sensitive genus-specific detection of Legionella by a 16S rRNA based sandwich hybridization assay. J Microbiol Methods 62:167-79. ___________________________________________________ DVV01 Combination of a unique sample preparation and a novel PCR-based analytical tool for the detection of microorganisms in sepsis patients S. Sachse1, M. Lehmann2, J. Landré2, K. - H. Schmidt1 S. Russwurm2, E. Straube1 1 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany 2 SIRS-Lab GmbH, Jena, Germany Purpose: In recent years molecular diagnostic has become a well established discipline within laboratory medicine. In contrast to culture based methods, molecular procedures e.g. nucleic acids techniques (NAT) enable fast detection of potential pathogens irrespective of their growth, sample source as well as independent from already initialised antibiotic therapy. However, NAT has hurdles such as lower sensitivity caused by the high human DNA background and presence of inhibitory substances in the sample. Reduction of these problems requires an appropriate DNA preparation that eliminates inhibitory substances like immunoglobulins or haemin. Furthermore, to avoid false-negative results caused by disproportionately high interfering human DNA load in contrast to low amount of bacterial DNA present in DNA material, conventional preparation kits reach their limits. We developed a new preanalytical tool based on the concentration of bacterial DNA (Looxster®), followed by a multiplex PCR-based assay allowing the detection of sepsis-relevant pathogens. Methods: We developed a multiplex PCR-based assay in combination with a unique sample preparation tool. The assay was tested using artificial DNA mixtures (pro- and eukaryotes) 15 as well as DNA derived from blood spiked with various microorganisms. The validation process was performed using clinical whole blood samples from patients having a suspected systemic infection (sepsis) and controls. Results: It was demonstrated, that the multiplex-assay is able to specifically detect the targeted micro-organisms in a single as well as multiple infection model. These results were validated with clinical samples. Conclusion: This multiplex PCR-based assay in combination with Looxster®, a kit for bacterial DNA concentration from complex samples, can provide the clinician with a specific and sensitive microbiological result within the first hours of sepsis. Thus, the clinician can initiate an appropriate antibiotic treatment or change as well as de-escalate already started antibiotic therapy. ___________________________________________________ DVV02 A diagnostic tool for the detection of Legionella RNA T. Schüler1, R. Möller1, A. Breitenstein2, W. Fritzsche3, J. Popp1 1 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute for physical Chemistry, Jena, Germany 2 ScanBec GmbH, Halle, Germany 3 Institute for Photonic Technology, Nanobiophotonic, Jena Germany In the last decade DNA microarray technology has become of great importance in the field of bio analytics. The need for simple, fast and, cost effective methods for the analysis of bio molecules was the initialization to develop various detection units. Currently bio molecules such as DNA, proteins and others are mainly detected on biochips by marking them with fluorescence dyes. To overcome the disadvantages of this technique, like photo bleaching and quenching, metal nanoparticles are widely used. Due to the unique physical properties of metal nanoparticles for example electrical conductivity, their specific mass or the interesting optical attributes many approaches have been developed[1]. The coupling of gold nanoparticles to bio molecules allows a specific analysis of bio molecule interactions. This work presents an electrical method for DNA detection. It is based on the immobilization of single stranded capture DNA in a gap between two microstructured electrodes on a specially designed chip. The use of an enzyme instead of gold nanoparticles offers advantages like low background, increase of the sensitivity and a fast reaction. After the hybridization of the target DNA to the specific partner immobilized on the chip, an enzyme (horseradish peroxidase) is bound to a special modification in the target molecule. Finally, an enzyme induced deposition of silver nanoparticles leads to a bridging of the gap between the electrodes. An increase in the conductivity over the gap serves as signal in the reader[2]. The aim of this work was to automate the system and realize a fast, robust, and easy way for the detection of bio molecules. For that purpose we developed a special reaction camber. This allows the integration of the DNAchip in a micro fluidic system, which offers some advantages like time saving and increase of sensitivity. Additionally the possibility of an online detection, to control the conductivity over the gaps simultaneously, was investigated. To show the potential of this technology a specific detection of Legionella- RNA, especially Legionella pneumophila, was aspirated, to enable a fast and robust detection of Legionella outside of specialized laboratories. References 1. Fritzsche, W. and T.A. Taton, Metal Nanoparticles as Labels for Heterogeneous, Chip-Based DNA Detection. Nanotechnology, 2003. 14: p. R63-R73. 2. Moeller, R., et al., Enzymatic Control of Metal Deposition as Key Step for a Low-Background Electrical Detection for DNAChips. Nano Letters, 2005. ___________________________________________________ DVV03 Identification of Coxiella burnetii with a novel Low-Costand-Density (LCD)-Microarray D. Frangoulidis1, V. Heiser2, O. Landt3, H. Meyer1 1 Institute for Microbiology, Munich, Germany 2 Chipron GmbH, Berlin, Germany 3 TIB-MOLBIOL GmbH, Berlin, Germany In our study we investigated the suitability of a new and fast “low cost and density”(LCD) DNA microarray for the detection of Coxiella (C.). burnetii, the causative agent of Q fever. Results were compared with a conventional and a LightCyclerHyprobePCR assay in terms of specificity and sensitivity. The LCD-microarray has the format of a plastic slide-frame which contains eight identical microarrays in individually addressable hybridization fields, with oligonucleotides derived from the IS1111-region (repetitive element, up to 20 copies) and the adaA-gene (recently proposed as a marker for acute Q fever disease). A non-fluorescent detection principle, based on the formation of a clearly visible substrate precipitate, is used. Analysis can be done with a simple transmission light scanning device or by pure eye only. Eleven different C. burnetii strains derived from animals and humans with acute and chronic disease were analyzed. All strains showed in all three assays a positive reaction with both targets, with the exception of one chronic and one animalderived strain that were negative for adaA. The sensitivity was determined to be 10 genomic copies/µl template for IS1111 and 100 copies for adaA. No unspecific reactions were seen with a DNA panel of related bacteria. The results of the realtime-and conventional PCR-method were similar to the LCD-Chip. This new technique provides a very fast, economic, sensitive and specific detection of Coxiella burnetii. In addition, since no sophisticated lab equipment is needed, this method could be introduced into the field to conduct clinical, experimental and epidemiological studies in animals and man. ___________________________________________________ DVV04 MALDI-TOF for species identification of nonfermenting bacteria: Evaluation and Comparison to 16S rDNA Sequencing A. Mellmann1, J. Cloud2, T. Maier3, U. Keckevoet1 I. Ramminger1, P. Iwen4, J. Dunn5, G. Hall6, D. Wilson6 P. R. LaSala7, M. Kostrzewa3, D. Harmsen8 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institut für Hygiene, Muenster Germany 2 ARUP Inst. Clin. Exper. Pathol., Salt Lake City, Utah, USA 16 3 Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Leipzig, Germany University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska USA 5 Cook Children’s Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas, USA 6 Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA 7 University of Texas Medical Branch, Dept. of Pathology Clinical Microbiology, Galveston, Texas, USA 8 University Hospital Muenster, Polyclinic for Parodontology Muenster, Germany 4 Nonfermenting bacteria (NFs) are ubiquitous environmental opportunists causing infection in severely ill and immunocompromised patients. Due to their limited biochemical reactivity and different morphotypes, phenotypic misidentification occurs frequently. Therefore, we evaluated matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry for species identification. Using 277 NF culture collection strains composed of 29 genera most relevant for human infections, a reference database was established for MALDI-TOF based species identification by following manufacturer’s recommendations for microflex testing and MALDI BioTyperTM software (Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Germany). To evaluate the database, 93 blind-coded clinical NFs were analyzed. As “gold-standard” for species designation, partial 16S rDNA sequencing was used. From the 93 isolates, all 13 Acinetobacter isolates were excluded due to their ill-defined species designations. Using 16S rDNA sequencing, 57 of the remaining 80 isolates produced unique species identification ( 99% sequence similarity). 10 isolates were identified to genus level ( 97% similarity), 11 isolates gave no unique result, and 2 isolates gave a sequence similarity <97%. MALDI-TOF identified 57 of the 67 isolates (85.1%) to the correct species or genus within 5 minutes without any substantial costs for consumables. MALDI-TOF provides accurate, fast, and economical results and represents a promising alternative for species identification in routine diagnostics of NFs. Future expansion of the database will enhance the utility of this methodology to identify unusual bacterial pathogens. ___________________________________________________ DVV05 Diagnostic DNA chips to detect -Lactam resistance in the clinic D. M. Leinberger1,2, V. Grimm2, M. Rubtsova3, A. Henn2 K. Schröppel4,5, T. A. Wichelhaus6, C. Knabbe4, J. Weile4 R. D. Schmid2, T. T. Bachmann1,2 1 University, Division of Pathway Medicine, Edinburgh United Kingdom 2 University, Institute of Technical Biochemistry, Stuttgart Germany 3 National Research Center for Antibiotics, Moscow, Russia 4 Robert-Bosch-Hospital, Department of Clin. Chem. and Laboratory Medicine, Stuttgart, Germany 5 Eberhard-Karl-University, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 6 Hospital of J. W. Goethe-University, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Infection Control, Frankfurt am Main Germany Culture based antimicrobial susceptibility testing methods are mostly too slow to allow for a rapid prospective therapy and in practice the calculated therapy is selected according to a clinical standard. Microbial resistance against beta-lactam antibiotics in gram negative bacteria predominantly originates from extended spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBL) whose activity against betalactam antibiotics and resistance against inhibitors is determined by mutations in members of the blaTEM, blaSHV, or blaCTX-M gene family. Additionally, plasmid-mediated AmpC lactamases have emerged in the clinics during the past decade as a new severe problem since they are likely to hydrolyze modern cephalosporins. The more and more frequently detected OXAtype enzymes may be even more considered as a critical thread because they can confer resistance against carbapenems which are regularly used for the treatment of ESBL pathogens. Here, we describe an ESBL-chip comprising of an integrated diagnostic oligonucleotide microarray for the rapid identification of ESBL in gram negative bacteria by genotyping blaTEM, blaSHV, or blaCTX-M. The validity of the chip was demonstrated on 60 clinical samples which where collected during one year in a clinical routine laboratory and phenotypically characterized as “ESBL positive”. The chip demonstrated an excellent resolution, high phenotype genotype correlation, and robustness towards mixed genotypes. The data where confirmed by standard DNA sequencing. All ESBL phenotypes could be ascribed to the presence of ESBL variants of either blaCTX-M (78%) or blaSHV (22%), whereas no ESBL blaTEM variant was found. Two isolates contained two ESBL blaCTX-M variants originating from different specimens of a single patient. The assay was performed within four hours and may be an attractive option for rapid identification of beta lactamase resistance in clinics with high prevalence of ESBL positive gram negative species. Because of its full coverage of 98% of all known variants to date, we anticipate a great value of the ESBLchip assay for epidemiologic monitoring as well. To further increase the ESBL-chip coverage for other lactamases, we developed new chip modules for all known plasmid-mediated AmpC and group I, II, and V OXA-type beta lactamases which will further enhance the clinical value of the ESBL-chip assay. ___________________________________________________ DVV06 Real-time PCR-based in vitro susceptibility testing of Borrelia burgdorferi against antimicrobial agents in the presence of eukariotic cells. T. Bittner1, A. Freyer1, V. Brade1, K. - P. Hunfeld1 1 University Hospital Frankfurt am Main, Institute for Med. Microbiology and Hygiene, Frankfurt am Main Germany There is evidence that human cells may have protective effects on B. burgdorferi isolates against antibiotic agents in vitro but the clinical impact of such observations remains uncertain. Nevertheless, very few isolates of Borrelia burgdorferi have been tested for their antimicrobial susceptibility in the presence of eukaryotic cells. As with other fastidious or intracellular bacteria, the exact monitoring of borrelial growth in cell cultures is laborious and no precise standardized test methods are currently available. Here, a recA-real-time PCR-based susceptibility assay was evaluated and used to test 5 borrelial 17 strains including strains obtained from patients before and after antibiotic treatment under standardized conditions. The isolates were tested in the presence and absence of a human acute monocytic leukaemia cell line (THP-1) against doxycycline and ceftriaxone, antibiotic agents that are known for their mainly intracellular respective extracellular activity. After 72 h of incubation, minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were determined by software-assisted calculation of bacterial growth in samples and controls from semi-quantitative PCR results. Our new recA-PCR-based assay system was shown to be sensitive, convenient, and reliable. The assay is capable of testing larger numbers of isolates and antimicrobial agents under standardized and very precise test conditions in the presence of eukaryotic cells. In the absence of THP-1 cells median MICs ranged between 0,125 and 0,25 mg/l for doxycycline and between 0,016 and 0,063 mg/l for ceftriaxone. In contrast to previous reports, however, our study did not substantiate significant differences in the susceptibility of borrelia to both agents after co-cultivation with THP-1 cells. Our new assay proved convenient and offers a competent technical solution of the known difficulties associated with in vitro testing of fastidious organisms such as borrelia when cultivated in the presence of eukaryotic cells. Such studies may be helpful to further analyse potential escape mechanisms of borrelia exposed to antimicrobial agents in the presence of other human cell lines. ___________________________________________________ DVV07 Biochip-based resistance monitoring in pathogenic fungi for clinical diagnostics M. Mai1, S. Rupp1, N. Hauser1 1 Fraunhofer IGB, Molecular Biotechnology, Stuttgart, Germany For the treatment of fungal systemic infections mostly caused by Candida albicans, C. glabrata or Aspergillus fumigatus there exists only a certain amount of antifungal drugs (azoles, echinocandins, polyenes and pyrimidine analogues). With the increasing number of immuno-compromised patients (e.g. AIDS, organ transplants or other immunosuppressive therapies) worldwide, antifungal treatments have increased with a paralleled increase of the incidence of antifungal resistance. Antifungal resistance mechanisms fall into different categories according to their molecular principles as for instance transport or target alterations. Target gene alterations as a cause for antifungal resistance have been observed in several alleles of the ERG11 gene encoding lanosterol 14a-demethylase, the target of azoles in fungal pathogens. Mutations in TAC1 gene are associated with azole resistance by up-regulation of the ABC transporter genes CDR1 and CDR2. In C. albicans, many different single point mutations and loss of heterozygosis in the ERG11 gene as well as in the TAC1 gene have been described. To determine new resistance mechanisms in clinical relevant fungal pathogens a European network has been established, the EURESFUN network (European RESistance FUNgal network). Within this network we developed a diagnostic tool based on minisequencing with on-chip primer extension for monitoring resistance in clinical relevant fungal pathogens (Candida and Aspergillus). This method enables a high parallel genotyping of homozygote and heterozygote situations associated with resistance. Up to now we have established a biochip with approximately 100 probes for the detection of resistance in Candida albicans. Initially, a model-system using synthetic templateshas beendeveloped to optimise the experimental parameters for the chip-based enzymatic reaction. This system is further used as control and for normalisationof signals. The optimised system could be adapted for the detection of SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) and LOHs (loss of heterozygosis) with high specificity and sensitivity. Using genomic DNA from clinical isolates homozygous and heterozygous situation associated with resistance could be detected. Furthermore we will expand our chip by new resistance genes being identified by the network. ___________________________________________________ DVV08 Rapid identification of pathogens from blood cultures by Fluorescence in situ Hybridization (FISH) S. Poppert1, M. Bartel1, A. Lakner1, N. Wellinghausen1 A. Essig1 1 University Ulm, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Ulm Germany Rapid identification of pathogens from blood cultures is of major importance, because the timely initiation of an adequate therapy greatly influences patient outcome and in addition may lead to cost savings. As previously published rapid identification (1-2 hours) may be achieved by Fluorescence in situ Hybridization using fluorescently labelled probes complementary to specific sequences of the ribosomal RNA. The method has not yet been broadly introduced into routine diagnostics, because the number of covered pathogens is still limited and available probes have not yet been evaluated on sufficiently large sample collections. In a first step we therefore evaluated 12 probes from the literature and 17 newly designed probes, including probes for Staphylococci, Streptococci, Enterococci, Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Propionibacterium and yeasts using a collection of more than 900 clinical isolates. Nearly all selected probes demonstrated a sensitivity of 100% and specificities of better than 95%. In the next step the FISH method was assessed on 891 positive blood cultures according to an algorithm based on the gram stain. In 829 (93%) cases the pathogen was correctly identified by FISH. In 56 cases (6,3 %) no result was achieved because the respective rare pathogens were not covered by the probe set. In just 6 cases (0,7%) FISH lead to a false result. In conclusion FISH proved to be a highly sensitive and specific tool for fast identification of pathogens from blood cultures. As an easy performable and cheap method, FISH is suitable to accelerate pathogen identification in a routine laboratory and may thus improve patient outcome and lower therapy costs. ___________________________________________________ DVV09 Rapid identification of Listeria species using MALDI-TOF MS fingerprinting with MALDI BioTyper S. Barbuddhe1, T. Maier2, G. Schwarz2, M. Kostrzewa2, E. Domann1, T. Chakraborty1, T. Hain1 1 Institute for Medical Microbiology, Giessen, Germany 2 Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Leipzig/Bremen, Germany 18 Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen that is the causative agent of human listeriosis, an opportunistic infection that primarily infects pregnant women and immunologically compromised individuals. Rapid, accurate discrimination between Listeria strains is essential for appropriate food quality, therapeutic management and timely intervention for infection control. A rapid method involving mass spectrometry (MS) is presented that shows promise for identification, discrimination of Listeria species and lineage typing after analysis of 111 strains. The method was compared with the PFGE analysis of 47 Listeria strains isolated from varied sources including 27 L. monocytogenes strains associated with foodborne epidemics and sporadic cases. Cells from a bacterial colony are applied to a sample target plate directly or after a short extraction protocol. After drying and addition of a chemical matrix, the samples are analysed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation time-offlight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). This technique examines the chemistry of the whole bacterial extracts, yielding spectra consisting of a series of peaks mainly derived from ribosomal proteins. Specimens can be prepared in a few minutes from plate cultures and a spectrum can be obtained within one minute. MS spectra for Listeria isolates showed characteristic peaks, conserved at species level, some at lineage level. MS may have potential for Listeria identification and lineage subtyping of L. monocytogenes strains, and may improve food quality and clinical infection control measures. ___________________________________________________ DVV10 Multiplexed genotyping of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolates with padlock probes and tag microarrays. U. Nübel1, K. Kurt1, B. Strommenger1, A. Weller1, C. Cuny1 A. Alderborn2, M. Nilsson2, W. Witte1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode, Germany 2 Uppsala University, Department of Genetics and Pathology Uppsala, Sweden We developed and tested a ligase-based assay for simultaneous probing of core genome diversity and typing of methicillin resistance determinants in Staphylococcus aureus isolates. This assay uses oligonucleotide padlock probes whose two ends are joined through ligation when they hybridize to matching target DNA. Circularized probes are subsequently amplified by PCR with common primers and analysed by using a microarray equipped with universal tag probes. Our set of padlock probes includes oligonucleotides targeting diagnostic regions in ccrB, ccrC, and mecA genes of the SCCmec cassette in methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA). These probes determine the presence and type of SCCmec cassettes (i. e., SCCmec types I to VI). Additional oligonucleotides interrogate a number of highly informative single nucleotide polymorphisms retrieved from a multilocus sequence typing (MLST) database. These latter probes enable the exploration of isolates'phylogenetic affiliation to major clonal lineages of MRSA as defined by MLST, including, for example, clonal complexes CC1, CC5, CC8, CC22, CC30. The described assay enables multiplexed genotyping of MRSA, based on a single-tube reaction. It usefully complements the more common sequence-based spa typing. DVV11 Multi locus VNTR sequence typing (MLVST) for vancomycin resistant Enterococcus faecium B. Middendorf1, D. Harmsen2, A.W. Friedrich1, C. Georgi1 J. Top3, R. J. L. Willems3, A. Mellmann1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany 2 University Hospital Muenster, Department of Periodontology Muenster, Germany 3 University Medical Center Utrecht, Department of Medical Microbiology, Utrecht, Netherlands Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREF) cause nosocomial infections especially in immunocompromised and severely ill patients. To elucidate their molecular epidemiology, PFGE is the current “gold standard” typing method for outbreak investigations. However, it is very laborious and difficult to standardize for intra- and inter-laboratory comparisons. Recently, MLST and MLVA schemes were developed to overcome these drawbacks. However, due to their low discriminatory power their applicability in outbreak investigations is limited. Therefore, we established a multi locus VNTR sequence typing (MLVST) scheme for VREF. To identify suitable repeat regions for MLVST, we analyzed the preliminary genome sequence of E. faecium DO with the program ‘Tandem Repeats Finder’. From a total number of 1580 repeat regions, three were finally selected for further analysis (VNTR0032, VNTR0047, and VNTR1398). The corresponding regions were amplified and sequenced from a well characterized collection of 144 VREF representing a broad spectrum of strains isolated from environmental and clinical associated sources. To evaluate MLVST, the discriminatory index (DI) and the concordance to MLST and MLVA were determined for different VNTR combinations. The three VNTRs displayed individual DIs of 0.718, 0.794, and 0.835, whereas MLST and MLVA resulted in DIs of 0.971 and 0.935. The typeabilities for the various methods were 100 % (VNTR0032), 91.67 % (VNTR0047), 84.03 % (VNTR1398), 100 % (MLST), and 80.56 % (MLVA). The combination of all three VNTRs increased the DI to 0.931. Analysis between the combination of all three VNTRs and MLST/MLVA resulted in concordances of 93.1 % and 91.6 %. The highest DI values of 0.970 and 0.974 were accomplished by the combinations VNTR0032/VNTR1398/atpA and VNTR1398/atpA/ddl (both genes from the MLST scheme) with concordances to MLST of 97.3 % and 98.7 %, respectively. In summary, MLVST could be a fast and less cost-intensive alternative typing method for VREF. Ongoing studies investigate the performance in comparison to PFGE. ___________________________________________________ 19 DVV12 Identification of Chlamydia pneumoniae antigens and analysis of antibody response patterns using immunoproteomics S. Bunk1, I. Suznea2, J. Rupp3, M. Maass4, M. Przybylski2 A. Wendel1, C. Hermann1 1 University Konstanz, Biochemical Pharmacology, Konstanz Germany 2 University Konstanz, Analytical Pharmacology, Konstanz Germany 3 University Luebeck, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Luebeck, Germany 4 University Hospital Salzburg, Paracelsus Private Medical University, Salzburg, Germany The microimmunofluorescence test (MIF) is still the gold standard in C. pneumoniae serodiagnosis. The test is widely used, although differences in antigen preparation and subjectiveness in reading the results lead to intra- and interlaboratory variances. ELISAs, using single C. pneumoniae antigens or combinations of them for serodiagnosis, could overcome these problems. Since there is only limited knowledge about C. pneumoniae antigens and their diagnostic potential, our project aimed to identify C. pneumoniae antigens by an immunoproteomic approach to develop reliable serodiagnostics. C. pneumonia proteins were prepared from elementary bodies (EB), separated by 2D-gel electrophoresis and blotted to nitrocellulose membranes. The membranes were incubated with 39 human sera deriving from 28 seropositive and 11 seronegative donors, as determined by MIF, and bound IgG antibodies were quantitatively analysed by a LAS-3000 imaging system. Using high resolution MALDI-FTICR-MS, we identified 38 Chlamydia proteins originating from 33 genes which were frequently recognized among the 39 sera. About half of the proteins, including some with high antigenic potential, represent Chlamydia antigens not described before. Fifteen proteins, most of them EB-surface exposed, showed a significantly higher frequency and intensity of recognition by sera from donors with high titers of C. pneumoniae antibodies compared to sera with lower antibody titers, suggesting that they contribute to MIF reactivity. Since our proteomic approach allowed the quantitative analysis of sera reactivity towards particular antigens, we also investigated whether donors with evidence for persistent C. pneumoniae infection, determined by PCR analysis of monocytes and vascular samples, show a different pattern of antibody response compared to donors without any evidence for persistence. We found that twelve proteins were differentially recognized, which was in line with the altered protein expression of in vitro models of C.pneumoniae persistence. Taken together, these results provide the basis for the development of new serological testsbased on selected antigens, which might have the potential to determine the status of disease. ___________________________________________________ DVV13 Serological proteomic analysis for identification of immunogenic C. trachomatis proteins in severe female genital tract infection V. Forsbach-Birk1, U. Simnacher1, K. - I. Pfepper2 E. Soutschek2, E. Straube3, A. Essig1 1 University Hospital, Medical Microbiology, Ulm Germany 2 Mikrogen, Neuried, Germany 3 University Hospital, Medical Microbiology, Jena Germany Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common sexually transmitted infectious agent in Europe and in the United States. The infection markedly enhanceegnancy. Necessity of diagnostic laparascopies as part of infertility investigations might be reduced by less invasive methods of serological assays but reliable marker proteins for chronic infections like pelvic infls the risk for reproductive tract sequelae in women including tubal infertility and ectopic prammatory disease (PID) are not available. In order to characterize immunoreactive proteins in severe C. trachomatis infections we screened chlamydial proteins on a large scale separating proteins of elementary bodies from C. trachomatis serovar D by 2D gelelectrophoresis. The gels were blotted onto PVDF membranes and probed with sera of women suffering from chronic chlamydial infection of the upper genital tract. Immunoreactive proteins were identified by mass spectrometry based methods. This serological proteome analysis revealed a panel of thirteen chlamydial proteins recognized by PID sera. Seven of them have been previously described as immunodominant antigens during human infections (MOMP, HSP60, HSP70, pmpD, OMP2, EF-Tu and ‘ribosomal protein S1’). Another group of six immunoreactive chlamydial proteins could be identified as ‘Adenylate cyclase-like protein’, ‘TARP’, ‘ATP-dependent Clp protease proteolytic subunit 1’, ‘Thio-specific Antioxidant Peroxidase’, ‘50S ribosomal protein L1’ and ‘hypothetical protein’ (CT017). The identified chlamydial proteins may serve as new test antigens in the serodiagnosis of severe C. trachomatis infections and might be used in vaccine experiments. ___________________________________________________ DVV14 Genotyping of chlamydia trachomatis J. Rödel1, S. Eberhard1 1 University Jena, Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany Genital infections by Chlamydia trachomatis serovars D through K are frequent causes of sexually transmitted diseases. Since 2003 an ongoing epidemic of lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) that is caused by the C. trachomatis serovars L1-3 is observed in men who have sex with men in several European countries. Commercial nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) commonly used in routine diagnostics do not differentiate between LGV and non-LGV Chlamydia strains. Genotyping methods using restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and sequence analysis of PCR amplicons of variable domains of the omp1 gene coding for the C. trachomatis major outer membrane protein can be used to determine the distribution of C. trachomatis genotypes 20 according to different serovars and to accurately diagnose LGV infections. Moreover, mixed infections with different chlamydial strains and variants within a serovar can also be identified. Between 1999 and 2006 a total of 294 NAAT-positive samples were genotyped by RFLP and sequence analysis at the Consiliary Laboratory for Chlamydial Infections in Jena. Serotypes E (36.4%), F (19.4%), and D (9.8%) were most prevalent. Multiple infections with different serovars were only rarely observed (0.3%). The predominance of serovars E, F, and D may have impact on the development of improved serological tests for the diagnosis of C. trachomatis infections in the context of defining immunogenic antigens of these serovars. Since 2003, 12 probable LGV cases from different federal states were confirmed as infections with C. trachomatis L2. Since the epidemic of LGV infection reached Germany some years ago, we cannot be sure that these infections are restricted only to individuals of risk. Therefore, the genotyping of C. trachomatispositive NAAT-samples should be taken into consideration in general. ___________________________________________________ EKP01 Antibacterial Activity of K9 Yeast Killer toxin I. Ochigava1, W. Gräme M2 1 Biopharm-L, LtD, Tbilis, Georgia 2 Abertay University of Dundee, Biotechnology, Dundee United Kingdom The increasing incidence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections has made identification and characterization of new antibacterial therapies major goals of the pharmaceutical industrial sector. Our attention was drawn to the killer toxin of Williopsis saturnus var. mrakii K 9 (W. mrakii) because of its high theromstability (1000C, for 10 min) and activity retention at wide pH values (pH 2~11). This work describes the antibacterial spectrum of crude K9 killer toxin (KT) preparation against a range of Gram positive as Gram negative bacteria. The killer yeast, Williopsis saturnus var. mrakii - NCYC 500, was tested against the following bacterial cultures: E.coli – NCIMB 10000; Staphylococcus epidermidis – NCIMB 12721; Streptomyces griseus, Streptococcus pyogenes – NCIMB 8884; Bacillus subtilis – NCIMB 1043, NCIMB 6633. Agar diffusion assays were employed for killer toxin antibacterial activity using W. mrakii live cells. For more detailed assessment of antibacterial activity, we used a flow cytometric assay of crude K9 toxin preparation using a fluorescent viability probe, DiSBAC2(3). Both approaches confirmed W. mrakii and its K9 toxin exhibited antibacterial activity against Gram positive bacteria. Although the flow cytometric assay revealed high numbers of dead cells after the treatment with killer toxin, this activity was sensitive-strain dependent, particularly in the case of Bacillus spp. These results provide one of very few reports of effective killer yeast action against bacteria and form the basis of further development of stable yeast toxins as novel agents in the fight against drug resistant infections. ___________________________________________________ EKP02 Arthroderma benhamiae evades complement attack by binding host proteins S. Schindler1, P. Zipfel1, A. Brakhage2 1 Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Department of Infection Biology, Jena, Germany 2 Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Department of Applied und Molecular Mikrobiology Jena, Germany Dermatophytes mediate human cutaneous mycosis. The role of complement in immune evasion of dermatophytes is currently unknown. Therefore we analyze immune evasion of the human pathogenic dermatophyte Arthroderma benhamiae, a teleomorph form of Trichophyton mentagrophytes. We investigate binding of human proteins to the cell surface of this pathogen. We demonstrate that factor H and the factor H related protein 1 (FHR-1) bind to the cell surface of Arthroderma benhamiae as demonstrated by direct binding assays, immunostaining and ELISA. Human factor H is an important complement regulary protein of the alternative pathway of complement and FHR-1 is member of the factor H protein family. In addition we show binding of plasminogen, the key protease in fibrinolysis. Factor H and FHR-1 bind C3b, the central molecule of complement activation. We argue that factor H, bound to the surface of Arthroderma benhamiae is functionally active and mediates cofactor activity in cleavage of C3b. This leads to an inactivation of C3b and an inhibition of complement activation. Thus the dermatophyte Arthroderma benhamiae protects itself against complement attack by binding factor H, FHR-1 and plasminogen to the cell surface. ___________________________________________________ EKP03 CipC – an enigmatic fungal protein. B. Bauer1, F. Ebel1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute Munich, Germany Systemic fungal infections are a serious threat to severely immunocompromised patients, and their increasing number is an undesirable consequence of modern medicine. Invasive aspergillosis is a life-threatening mycosis and its high mortality is due to sub-optimal diagnostic and therapeutic options. The development of novel anti-fungal strategies and drugs is therefore an urgent need. Novel target structures should ideally fulfil two requirements: (i) they should be specific for fungi and (ii) they should be essentially required during infection. The cipC gene encodes for a small 15 kDa polypeptide that was originally described in Aspergillus nidulans as a concanamycin induced protein. The availability of genomic information for several fungi led to the identification of highly homologous proteins. Corresponding mRNAs were identified in several screens as strongly up regulated transcripts during symbiotic or pathogenic interactions between the respective fungi and their hosts. From these data we speculated that CipC could be a potential target for novel anti-fungal drugs. Analysis of the polypeptide sequence of CipC revealed no functional protein motifs, homologous domains or homologies to proteins of known function. However, all members of the 21 CipC family share a substantial homology and a conserved molecular structure. Using a proteomic approach we originally identified CipC as a major hyphal protein of Aspergillus fumigatus, a finding that we could later on confirm using a specific monoclonal antibody. Gel filtration and cross-linking experiments suggest that CipC is a monomeric cytoplasmic protein. To analyse the function of CipC we recently generated an Aspergillus fumigatus cipC null mutant that is currently under investigation. ___________________________________________________ EKP04 Clinical Candida species fail to produce the secondary metabolite gliotoxin in vitro C. Kupfahl1, T. Ruppert2, A. Dietz1, G. Geginat1, H. Hof1 1 University Heidelberg, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene Mannheim, Heidelberg, Germany 2 University Heidelberg, Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie Heidelberg, Germany Background: The secondary fungal metabolite gliotoxin exerts a board spectrum of immunosuppressive effects in vitro and a role of gliotoxin in the pathogenesis of invasive mycosis is discussed. As it was previously suggested that Candida spp. are also able to produce gliotoxin, we tested the frequency and species distribution of gliotoxin production among clinical relevant Candida spp.. Methods: A total of 100 clinical Candida isolates (40 C. albicans, 15 C. glabrata, 15 C. krusei, 15 C. tropicalis, 15 C. parapsilosis) were grown in liquid media and on agar plates for 7 days at 35°C. Yeast cells and culture supernatants were extracted for gliotoxin and analysed with HPLC and representative samples were further analysed with tandem mass spectrometry. Results: Gliotoxin was not detectable in any of the extracts analysed, despite the fact that various culture conditions were tested. The detection limit for gliotoxin of the HPLC was less than 10 ng/ml and with tandem mass spectrometry even 2 ng/ml were unequivocally identified. Conclusions: In contrast to previous reports, our data strongly suggest that clinical relevant Candida spp. are not able to produce the secondary fungal metabolite gliotoxin. ___________________________________________________ EKP05 Production of authentic prostaglandins and thromboxane by Aspergillus fumigatus in vitro C. Kupfahl1, D. Tsikas2, G. Geginat1, H. Hof1 1 University Heidelberg, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany 2 HanoverMedical School, Institute of Clinical Pharmacology Hanover, Germany Background: It has been described previously that some fungi, including Aspergillus spp., are able to produce prostaglandinlike compounds. We here investigated whether A. fumigatus, one of the most notorious fungal pathogens, produces authentic prostaglandins (PG) and thromboxane (Tx) and if PG and Tx biosynthesis can be inhibited by cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitors such as acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) or diclofenac. Methods: Four clinical A. fumigatus isolates were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium (fatty acid free) for 7 days. Subsequently the medium was supplemented with 10 µM arachidonic acid ethyl ester (AAE) and after an additional incubation period of two hours, culture supernatants were sterile-filtered and analysed for PGE2, PGD2, PGF2 , 6-keto-PGF1 , the stable analogue of prostacyclin (PGI2), and thromboxane B2 (TxB2) the stable analogue of TxA2, using a screening ELISA (covering PGE1, PGE2, PGF1 , PGF2 and showing cross reactivity to some other prostaglandins) and GC-MS/MS. Results: All four strains tested produced prostaglandins and thromboxane after 7 days of incubation and after feeding with AAE as verified by GC-MS/MS. The main prostaglandin produced was PGE2 (428±115 pg/ml). PGF2 , 6-keto-PGF1 , and TxB2 were also detected but at lower concentrations (42±30 pg/ml, 20±7 pg/ml, and 6±4 pg/ml, respectively). In contrast, PGD2 was not detected in any strain. Without feeding with AAE only PGF2 and 6-keto-PGF1 were detected at concentrations near the detection limit of the GC-MS/MS method (1 pg/ml). Prostaglandin production of AAE-feeded strains was not inhibited in a significant extent with relevant concentrations of acetylsalicylic acid (1 µM to 100 µM) or diclofenac (1 µM to 10 µM) as measured by ELISA. Conclusions: A. fumigatus is able to synthesize authentic prostaglandins and thromboxane from arachidonic acid in vitro. Synthesis of these potent mediators might play a role in the pathogenesis of clinical fungal disease. Fungal prostaglandin synthesis was not significantly inhibited by the COX inhibitors acetylsalicylic acid or diclofenac at concentrations inhibitory for the human COX isoforms 1 and 2. The possible involvement of fungal prostaglandins in fungal disease warrants the search for alternative inhibitors of the fungal prostaglandin and thromboxane synthesis pathway. Such a COX-independent inhibition may represent a possible new target for supplementary antifungal therapy. ___________________________________________________ EKP06 Systematic investigation of cell wall modulations in clinical Candida glabrata isolates O. Bader1, A. Schwarz1, M. Borg-von Zepelin1, U. Gross1 M. Weig1 1 Georg-August-University Goettingen, Medizinische Microbiology, Goettingen, Germany The cell wall of pathogenic fungi is the interface to the host during colonization and infection, mediating a multitude of interactive processes. Although it is known that bacterial cell walls can mediate drug resistance, this has not yet been investigated in fungi. To systematically identify resistance mechanisms in pathogenic Candida species, we established a collection (MycoLabNet-EU) containing over 400 fully or intermediate drug resistant clinical yeast isolates within the EURESFUN consortium. C. glabrata isolates were examined for drug efflux with Rhodamine 6G by FACS analysis as well as tolerance to several cell wall and other stresses. Azole crossresistant isolates generally displayed high efficiency drug efflux. Isolates with intermediate azole MIC90 values showed only low to medium drug efflux, but were more tolerant to cell wall stresses. These isolates also were less susceptible to the 22 echinocandin Caspofungin. This may point towards compensational modulations of the cell wall in response to azole treatment when increased drug efflux is not available. ___________________________________________________ EKP07 Toxoplasma gondii in skeletal muscle cells in vitro: spontaneous differentiation from the tachyzoite to the bradyzoite stage M. Ferreira da Silva1,2, H. Santos Barbosa1, U. Gross2 C. Lüder2 1 Oswaldo Cruz Institute - FIOCRUZ, Department of Ultrastructure and Cell Biology, Rio de janeiro, Brazil 2 Georg-August-University Goettingen , Medical Microbiology Institute, Goettingen, Germany Lifelong persistence of the protozoan T. gondii may rely on the conversion from the proliferative tachyzoite stage into quiescent encysted bradyzoites. Although persistence within muscle tissue is critical for parasite transmission to humans via raw or undercooked meat, to date, no attention has been paid to skeletal muscle cells (SMC) as a cell type to study Toxoplasma stage conversion. To investigate in vitro differentiation of Toxoplasma, primary murine SMC and L6C10, a rat myoblast cell line, were differentiated in vitro to mature myotubes as judged by fusion to multinucleated syncytial cells, expression of muscle cell-specific markers by immunofluorescent test, expression of specific genes by RT-PCR and regular contractions in vitro. When examined by immunofluorescence microscopy, at 4h of infection with T. gondii tachyzoites of the type II strain NTE, muscle cells harboured single parasites without any evidence of stage conversion. Stage differentiation started spontaneously at 1 day post infection (dpi), when parasites displayed proteins specific to the bradyzoite stage (14, 2 ± 0, 8 % in primary SMC, and 35, 2 ± 4, 6 % in L6C10). At 2 and 4 dpi, vacuoles containing bradyzoites and rosettes of Toxoplasma in asynchronous stage conversion were detected. Toxoplasma differentiation further increased until 6 dpi, when muscle cells harboured high percentages of bradyzoitecontaining vacuoles (38, 6 ± 1, 1 % in primary SMC, and 64 % in L6C10). In addition, when analysed by real time RT-PCR, total RNA from SMC primary cultures contained increasing amounts of bradyzoite-specific ENO1 transcripts until 6 dpi. Together, these data suggest that, without the need of an exogenous stress factor, T. gondii parasites readily convert from tachyzoites to bradyzoites in skeletal muscle cells. This work was supported by DAAD and CAPES. ___________________________________________________ EKV01 Characterisation of plasmodial threonine-peptidasecomplexes B. Mordmüller1,2, A. Kreidenweiss1,2, P. Kremsner1,2 1 Albert-Schweitzer-Hospital, Medical Research Unit Lambarene, Gabun 2 Eberhard-Karls-University, Parasitology, Tuebingen Germany Protein quality control mechanisms are particularly challenged in Plasmodia because: i) they synthesize proteins with a higher average size compared to other organisms, ii) essential proteins contain large unstructured sequences, and iii) proteins have to withstand temperature oscillations within their mammalian host as well as during their life-cycle. Interference with those mechanisms is therefore an attractive target for chemotherapeutic agents. Destruction of misfolded proteins is a key-determinant for the presence of a full set of functional proteins and is central for the maintenance of protein quality. Threonine-peptidases are the major enzyme-class responsible for protein degradation in eukaryotic cells. In almost all eukaryotic organisms threonine-peptidases are represented by the proteasome with its enzymatically active subunits 1, 2, and 5. In addition to the proteasome, plasmodia express another threonine-peptidase (PFL1465c or PfhslV) similar to prokaryotic proteasome progenitors. Our aim was to characterise plasmodial threonine-peptidase complexes functionally and structurally as well as to test existing and newly developed inhibitors against this class of enzymes. We cloned and expressed genes of the proteasome and PfhslV and analyzed their localisation as well as enzymatic activities. Subsequently, a naturally occurring epoxide-containing peptide (epoxomicin) and its synthetic derivatives were tested in laboratory and field isolates together with an array of other peptidase-inhibitors and antimalarial drugs. Most inhibitors showed moderate to high antiplasmodial activities and some were selected for further development of Plasmodium-specific candidate compounds. ___________________________________________________ EKV02 Toxoplasma gondii inhibits activation and oligomerisation of proapoptotic Bax during Bims-induced apoptosis D. Hippe1, A. Weber2, U. Gross1, G. Häcker2, C. Lüder1 1 Georg-August-University Goettingen, Medical Microbiology Goettingen, Germany 2 Technical University Munich, Medizinische Microbiology Immunologie und Hygiene, Munich, Germany The intrinsic pathway of apoptosis is an important mechanism of the innate immune response to eliminate pathogen-infected cells and to prevent propagation of obligate intracellular microorganisms. Although it has been firmly established that T .gondii inhibits the release of cytochrome c from host cell mitochondria into the cytosol, thereby downregulating activation of the caspase cascade, the detailed mechanisms of this interference have not yet been resolved. Herein, we investigated the effect of parasitic infection on apoptosis which had been induced in HeLa cells by the tetracycline-inducible expression of the BH3-only protein BimS. Inducible BimSexpression led to apoptosis in non-infected cells within 3 hours. However, concomitant infection with T. gondii protected these cells from undergoing apoptosis. The activity of caspase 3 and also of initiator caspase 9 was clearly reduced after parasitic infection. Furthermore, T. gondii led to an inhibition of cytochrome c release in BimS-expressing cells, indicating parasite interference at a step between Bim expression and cytochrome c release. Remarkably, the levels of cytosolic cytochrome c were also decreased after parasitic infection of host cells in which RNA synthesis was inhibited, indicating that host cell transcription is not required. Infection with T. gondii did not alter the protein levels of proapoptotic Bax and Bak. 23 However, T. gondii prevented Bax activation and consequently oligomerisation within the mitochondrial membrane. In conclusion, T. gondii blocks the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway via interference with the activation of the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bax. This may enable the parasite to effectively evade the innate immune response and further its propagation in the host. ___________________________________________________ EKV03 Induction of ERK kinase signalling triggers morphotype specific killing of Candida albicans filaments by human neutrophils I. Wozniok1, A. Hornbach2,1, C. Schmitt2, J. Loeffler1 O. Kurzai2 1 University of Wuerzburg, Medical Clinic II, Wuerzburg Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Institute of Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany Candida albicans is one of the most important fungal pathogens in humans. The morphological plasticity of this yeast has been linked to its pathogenic potential and filamentous forms of C. albicans are associated with tissue invasion and infection. Whereas a Th-1 based specific immune response has been shown to contribute to a protective immune response against C. albicans it is a well established concept, that neutrophils (PMN) are a major player in the anti-Candida immune response. Here we show that human neutrophils are capable of discriminating between yeast forms and filaments of a single C. albicans strain. Whereas filaments induced targeted motility, resulting in the establishment of close contact between neutrophils and fungal elements, yeast forms were largely ignored throughout the observation. In transwell chemotaxis assays, C. albicans filaments but not yeast forms induced migratory activity in human neutrophils. In addition filamentous forms triggered a higher oxidative burst than yeast forms of C. albicans. PMN motility based on actin rearrangement could be shown to be essential for inactivation of C. albicans filamentous forms. In contrast, the inhibition of actin reorganization did not impair the ability of human PMN to kill yeast cells. Using inhibitors for different MAP-kinase cascades, it could be shown, that recognition of C. albicans filaments by PMN is mediated via the MEK/ERK MAP-kinase cascade and independent of JNK or p38 MAPK activation. Inhibition of the ERK signalling pathway abolished not only neutrophil chemotaxis induced by C. albicans filaments but also the ability of human PMN to kill C. albicans filaments. In contrast, it did not affect PMN activity against yeast forms. Taken together, these data show that invasive filamentous forms of C. albicans trigger a morphotype specific activation of human neutrophils. Therefore these cells are capable of sensing C. albicans invasion and initiating an early immune response. ___________________________________________________ EKV04 Fungal carbohydrates and their role in the immune response to the pathogenic mould Aspergillus fumigatus – Pieces of an emerging puzzle F. Ebel1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Max-von-PettenkoferInstitute, Munich, Germany Cells of the innate immune system constitute the first line of defence that is responsible for the elimination of invading microbes. Detection of microbial challengers is mediated by a set of germ line encoded pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) which specifically recognize so-called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), structures that are essential for and highly-conserved within large groups of microorganisms. Due to their dynamic alteration, proteins are generally not well suited to function as targets for PRRs, which instead preferentially recognize lipids, carbohydrates or DNA-/RNA-molecules. In recent time it became increasingly apparent that cell-wall carbohydrates comprise major fungal PAMPs. The best characterized fungal PAMP so far is ß1-3 glucan which is recognized by the C-type lectin dectin-1. Signalling via this PRR triggers diverse cellular responses, e.g. phagocytosis, production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species. The morphological transition from resting conidia to swollen conidia, germlings and finally hyphae is a characteristic feature of infections by filamentous fungi and a challenge for the immune system. Aspergillus fumigatus is a prototypic example for this group of pathogens and we found that the surface exposure of ß1-3 glucan and galactomannan, two major constituents of the Aspergillus cell wall, shows striking variations not only between different morphotypes, but also between hyphae grown under different conditions. This differential display of proven or potential PAMPs is likely to have a strong impact on the anti-Aspergillus immune response. ___________________________________________________ EKV05 A novel iron source used by Candida albicans R. Almeida1, B. Hube1 1 Hans-Knoell-Institute, Microbial Pathogenicity Mechanisms Jena, Germany The iron sequestration by host iron-binding proteins provides a natural resistance to infections, known as “nutritional immunity”. Hence, the majority of iron in host niches such as the oral cavity is tighly bound to host proteins. Inside oral epithelial cellsI iron is stored in the iron-binding protein ferritin. Extracellular iron found in saliva is mostly bound to lactoferrin. Therefore, iron availability is extremely limited in the oral cavity. In this study, we aim to determine the natural iron sources for the human pathogenic fungus Candida albicans during oral infection. We demonstrated that this pathogen can grow on agar at physiological pH (pH 7.4) with ferritin as the sole source of iron while the non-pathogenic fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not. To obtain iron from ferritin in vitro, the fungus needs the iron reductive pathway and must acidify the medium. Additionally, we were able to show that hyphae, but not yeast cells of C. albicans can bind ferritin and 24 that this binding is necessary for the usage of iron from this protein. Immunocytochemical localization of ferritin in epithelial cells infected with C. albicans showed ferritin on the fungal surface during infection. To our knowledge, this is the first observation which suggests that ferritin can be used as an iron source by a pathogenic fungus during infection. Figure 1: EM picture showing ferritin (dark particles) localized on the cell wall of C. albicans. Figure 2: C. albicans hyphae can bind ferritin ___________________________________________________ EKV06 Complement degradation as immune evasion mechanism in cerebral aspergillosis C. Speth1, G. Rambach1, I. Mohsenipour2, M. P. Dierich1 1 Medical University Innsbruck, Hygiene, Microbiology and Social Medicine, Innsbruck, Austria 2 Medical University Innsbruck, Department of Neurosurgery Innsbruck, Austria The high lethality of cerebral aspergillosis of more than 90% indicates a profound failure of the local immune defence in the course of pathogenesis. In order to develop immune-supportive therapeutic strategies we investigated putative evasion strategies of Aspergillus against the cerebral immune system. Since the central nervous system is separated from the periphery by the blood-brain-barrier the complement system is a central part of the local innate immunity and therefore a main target of these fungal evasion mechanisms. Aspergillus sp was grown in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to simulate the conditions in the brain. Western Blot analysis showed that the fungus secreted proteolytic factors into the CSF which degraded various complement proteins. The extent of the proteolysis was dependent of the time period of fungal growth and of the Aspergillus species: whereas A. fumigatus, the predominant cause of cerebral aspergillosis, showed a rather quick and strong degradation, the proteolysis by A. terreus was weaker and rather slow. Fungal growth in Sabouraud medium instead of CSF abolished the production of complementdegrading proteases, indicating the influence of exact growth conditions. The addition of various nitrogen sources to CSF prevented the secretion of the proteases. The degradation of complement might represent an immune evasion mechanism of pathogenic Aspergillus species and thus contribute significantly to the pathogenesis of cerebral aspergillosis. In addition this newly defined escape mechanism of the fungus provides a new optional therapeutical target to support the established antifungal treatments. Defined nitrogen sources might prevent the secretion of proteolytic factors and specific protease inhibitors could support the attack of complement against the fungal pathogens. ___________________________________________________ EKV07 CaCRASP-1/Gpm1: a multifunctional protein of Candida albicans acting in complement escape, tissue invasion and glycolysis/gluconeogenesis. S. Poltermann1, M. von der Heide1, A. Kunert1, P. F. Zipfel1 1 Leibniz-Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Department of Infection Biology, Jena, Germany Candida albicans is the major fungal pathogen of humans causing life-threatening infections in immunocompromised patients as well as mucosal infections in healthy individuals. Immediately after infection the yeast is attacked by the human immune system and activates both the alternative and classical pathway of the complement system. In order to survive C. albicans controls complement activation at its surface and inactivates toxic complement activation products by binding the human fluid-phase complement regulators factor H, factor H like protein 1 (FHL-1) and C4BP. We have identified C. albicans phosphoglycerate mutase (CaGpm1) as a factor H and FHL-1 binding protein. The protein was cloned and recombinantly expressed. Purified CaGpm1 binds the host complement regulators factor H and FHL-1 but not C4BP. Based on these characteristics we propose to term this protein Candida albicans complement regulator-acquiring surface protein 1 CaCRASP-1. CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 binds also the human serum protein plasminogen. With a novel antiserum, CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 was localized in the cytoplasm and in the cell wall of C. albicans as demonstrated by flow cytometry, immuno fluorescence microscopy and Western blotting. In vitro analyses show that CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 bound host regulators factor H, FHL-1 and plasminogen are functionally active, and mediate fungal complement escape and degradation of extracellular matrix. To demonstrate in vivo relevance of CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 as a factor H/FHL-1 and plasminogen binding protein, a C. albicans CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 knock out strain (CAP3) was generated using the Ura-blaster method. The 25 capability of the mutant strains to bind factor H/FHL-1 and plasminogen was assayed in Candida-ELISAs and confirmed a role of CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 in factor H/FHL-1 and plasminogen binding. Furthermore CAP3 displays growth defects on various carbon sources highlighting the role of CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 in glycolysis/gluconeogenesis. In summary we identified CaCRASP-1/Gpm1 as a multifunctional protein that is expressed both on the cell surface and in the cytoplasm of C. albicans and that mediates complement escape, tissue invasion and glycolysis/gluconeogenesis. ___________________________________________________ EKV09 PbICP, a Plasmodium berghei inhibitor of cysteine proteases A. Rennenberg1, T. Witt1, K. Nagarajan2, T. Hogg2 C. L. Schmidt2, R. Hilgenfeld2, V. Heussler1 1 Bernhard-Nocht-Institute for Tropical Medicine, Department of Molecular Parasitology, Hamburg, Germany 2 University of Luebeck, Institute of Biochemistry, Center for Structural and Cell Biology in Medicine, Luebeck, Germany Cysteine proteases fulfill many essential functions throughout the life cycle of the malaria parasite Plasmodium. Apart from haemoglobin degradation, Plasmodium proteases are involved in parasite liberation and the ordered host cell death observed in late infected hepatocytes. Regulation of the activity of these cysteine proteases is essential for parasite survival. We identified a potent cysteine protease inhibitor from the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei termed PbICP (Plasmodium berghei inhibitor of cysteine proteases). PbICP has the potential to regulate the activity of the parasite as well as host cell cysteine proteases. PbICP consists of a chagasin-like C-terminal part (PbICP-C) and a non-homologous N-terminal extension. Western blot and immunofluorescence analysis suggested proteolytic processing of endogenous PbICP during blood and liver stages. Transgenic P. berghei parasites expressing a PbICP-GFP fusion protein confirmed processing of PbICP. Since PbICP-C but not the entire protein acts as a very potent inhibitor of falcipain-2 and other cysteine proteases, we hypothesize that the N-terminal extension interacts with the Cterminus to prevent protease binding and thus processing of PbICP is a prerequisite to yield an active inhibitor. Localisation studies in infected hepatocytes indicated that PbICP expression is restricted to the parasite during schizont development. However, upon merozoite formation PbICP was also found in the host cell cytoplasm where it may act as a regulator of parasite-dependent host cell death. Compared to other chagasin family members PbICP-C has additional features, which might be crucial for protease binding. The crystal structure determination of PbICP-C:falcipain-2 complex is in progress. The elucidation of this structure will allow the design of inhibitors specific for falcipain-2 and -3. This work was supported by the DFG program Life inside cells” grant numbers HE 4497/1-2 and Hi 611/5-1. ___________________________________________________ EKV10 The transcription factor Tec1p is a sequence-specific DNAbinding protein in Candida albicans M. Sehnal1, K. Schröppel2 1 Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch-Institute for Clinical Pharmacology, Stuttgart 2 Eberhard-Karls-University, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen Tec1p is a key regulator of the morphogenetic development of C. albicans. A tec1/tec1 mutant is avirulent and does no longer form hyphae under inducing conditions in vitro. Tec1p contains the highly conserved TEA-DNA-binding domain (TEAD) and is a member of the TEA/ATTS-transcription factor family. Previous studies showed that different TEA/ATTS-transcription factors recognize and bind to the conserved DNA sequence `CATTCY`. This motif has been termed TEA/ATTS consensus sequence, TCS. It was detected by in silico analysis in several promoters of hyphae regulated genes. However, other studies suggest that Tec1p does not directly bind to TCS DNA to exert its regulatory function, but rather induces developmentally regulated genes indirectly via the activation of downstream proteins including Bcr1p. We addressed this question by electromobility shift analysis (EMSA) of the interaction of recombinant rTec1p with the wildtype TCS probe and several modified DNA probes. We found a specific retardation of an EMSA-complex of a promoter fragment derived from a developmentally regulated proteinase gene. The DNA binding of rTec1p was specific, because addition of excess amounts of unlabeled promoter fragments completely inhibited the proteinDNA interaction. Furthermore, when we used double-stranded oligonucleotide containing a putative TCS derived from the same promoter, we observed specific binding of rTec1p. This suggests that rTec1p is a sequence-specific DNA binding protein. Surprisingly, this interaction was not highly stringent; the sequence of the competing unlabeled oligonucleotides could be modified to some extend without loosing its inhibitory activity on the EMSA-complex. This suggests that the individual nucleotides of the TCS have a differential impact on the affinity of the protein to the promoter. This is supported by data from the human TEA homolog TEF-1, where basepreference analysis of the protein-DNA complex supports the idea of variable and perhaps species-specific TCS sequences. DNA footprint analysis will resolve the actual interaction between rTec1p and its optimized TCS. In conclusion, rTec1p directly interacts with a phase-specific promoter, emphasizing its role as a trans-acting activator during hyphal development of C. albicans. Since the rTec1 binding motif seems to be relaxed, a computer-based search for Tec1p-responsive promoters might result in an incomplete set of potential target promoters. ___________________________________________________ 26 EKV11 Characterization of Pga29p, a cell wall protein of Candida albicans. A. de Bör1, P. W. de Groot2, M. Schaller3, G. Weindl3 J. Wagener3, F. Klis2, U. Gross1f, M. Weig1 1 University of Goettingen, Medical Micribiology, Goettingen Germany 2 University of Amsterdam, Microbiology, Amsterdam Netherlands 3 Eberhard-Karls-University, Dermatology, Tuebingen Germany Covalently linked cell wall proteins (CWPs) of the dimorphic human pathogenic fungus Candida albicans play an important role in host-pathogen interactions that may lead to fungal infections. Previously, we identified Pga29p/Rhd3p/orf19.5305, a small GPI-modified glycoprotein of about 30 kDa as one of the most abundant CWPs in the C. albicans yeast cell wall. However, Pga29p has no obvious homologs in other fungi, which urged us to further characterize this protein. In order to explore the function of Pga29p, we generated Dpga29/Dpga29 mutants and the respective reconstituted strains. Among these strains, no altered sensitivity to several cell wall stress conditions was observed, suggesting that Pga29p does not play a role in cell wall rigidity. However, in an in vitro model of oral candidosis, Dpga29/Dpga29 mutants showed a clear reduction in virulence. Additionally, we studied the immune response of the epithelial cells against our strains by quantifying mRNA levels for cytokines. Epithelial cells that were infected with the mutant strain showed significantly reduced expression levels of GMCSF, TNF-alpha and IL-8. Deletion of PGA29 resulted in an increased glucose/mannose ratio in the cell wall, which prompted us to investigate the expression of receptors that recognize pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). We stimulated a monolayer of the TR146 oral epithelial cell line with CWP extracts of the Dpga29/Dpga29 mutant, revertant and wild type. Stimulation with the Dpga29/Dpga29 CWP extract resulted in a reduced expression of the mannose receptor. Conclusively, our data suggest that Pga29p has an important role in mediating virulence. ___________________________________________________ ESV01 Subversion of vascular endothelial cell functions by translocated effector proteins of the vascular tumorinducing pathogen Bartonella henselae C. Dehio1 1 University of Basel, Focal area Infection Biology, Biology Center, Basel, Switzerland Bartonella henselae is an arthropod-borne zoonotic pathogen which causes a broad range of clinical manifestations in humans. Remarkably, B. henselae can chronically infect the human vascular endothelium, resulting in the formation of vasoproliferative lesions known as bacillary angiomatosis peliosis. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) provide an in vitro system to study various aspects of this intimate interaction of B. henselae with the vascular endothelium. We have shown that the type IV secretion system (T4SS) VirB/VirD4 is a major virulence factor of bartonellae. T4SS are multicomponent transporters that allow bacteria to transfer protein or DNA substrates to a wide array of target cell types. The VirB/VirD4 T4SS mediates most virulence attributes associated with the interaction of B. henselae with HUVEC. These include (i) massive rearrangements of the actin cytoskeleton, resulting in the internalization of large bacterial aggregates, (ii) nuclear factor kappa B-dependent proinflammatory activation, leading to cell adhesion molecule expression and chemokine secretion, and (iii) inhibition of apoptotic cell death, resulting in enhanced endothelial cell survival. These diverse cellular phenotypes were found to depend on the VirB/VirD4-mediated translocation of seven bacterial effector proteins termed BepA-BepG. BepA is sufficient to suppress apoptotic cell death of HUVEC, e.g. as triggered by activated cytotoxic T lymphocytes. BepG interferes with phagocytic uptake of individual bacteria resulting in bacterial invasion by an alternative route termed invasomemediated uptake. Further dissection of the molecular mechanisms by which Bep proteins subvert endothelial cell function should shed light on the process of chronic vascular infection. ___________________________________________________ ESV02 C. elegans as a model host for the study of host-pathogen interactions C. - L. Kurz1 1 C. I. M. L, Marseille, Spain Studies using the genetically tractable organism Caenorhabditis elegans have greatly contributed to advances in our understanding of biological processes such as development, cell death and RNA interference. Over the past ten years, this animal has been increasingly used as an alternative model to dissect host-pathogen interactions. Virulence mechanisms used by fungi, Gram-negative and Gram-postive bacteria, including important human pathogens, have been studied using this nematode. Significantly, many of the identified pathogenicity traits identified using C. elegans as a host are required for infection in mammals. Innovative in vivo approaches aiming at the discovery of molecules with antimicrobial activity using C. elegans have also been developed. In addition, the establishment of these infection systems has permitted the characterization of a complex host innate immune response that shows some interesting similarities with mammalian innate defense mechanisms. ___________________________________________________ ESV03 High throughput analysis of pathogenic activities of herpesvirus-8 encoded genes Hochdurchsatz-Analyse pathogener Eigenschaften Herpesvirus-8-kodierter Gene in Endothelzellen M. Stürzl1 1 Division of Molecular & Experimental Surgery, Department of Surgery, Erlangen, Germany 27 HHV-8 is the etiological agent of Kaposi’s sarcoma (KS) an endothelial cell-derived tumor with a high inflammatory component. NF- B is a key regulatory molecule in inflammation. Using reverse transfection array analysis as an unbiased systems biology approach the effects on NF- Bactivation of all HHV-8-encoded genes individually and of pairwise combinations of all K- and latent genes were investigated. More than 7,000 transfections were performed. The strongest activation of NF- B was observed in combinations of vFLIP, a known activator of NF- B, with the latent genes vCyc or LNA-1. Combined activities of these genes were clearly synergistic, could be abrogated by co-expression of a constitutively active I B molecule and could be confirmed in classical transfection experiments. In addition, in KS tissues a positive relation of NF- B p65 staining and latent HHV-8infection was detected by immunohistochemical staining. Our results indicate that co-operative effects of vFLIP, vCyc and LNA-1, which are all encoded within a tricistronic latencyassociated gene locus in the viral genome, are key to the robust NF- B-activation observed in HHV-8-infected cells. ___________________________________________________ ESV04 Anion, cation and osmolyte channels in malaria-infected erythrocytes 1 S. Huber 1 University of Tuebingen, Department of Physiology, Tuebingen Germany The intraerythrocytic amplification of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum induces new pathways of solute permeability in the host cell membrane. These pathways play a pivotal role for parasite development by supplying the parasite with nutrients, disposing of metabolic waste products, adapting the host’s electrolyte composition to the parasite’s needs, and preventing premature hemolysis of the host erythrocyte by exporting inorganic and organic osmolytes. The New Permeability Pathways allow the fast electrogenic diffusion of ions and thus can be analyzed by patch-clamp single channel and whole-cell recording. By employing these techniques, several ion channel types with different electrophysiological profiles have been identified in Plasmodium-infected but also in uninfected erythrocytes. Among those are ClC-2 Cl- channels, CFTR-dependent anion channels, organic osmolyte and anion channels, and Ca2 -permeable nonselective cation channels. The activation of these channels in uninfected cells involves PGE2 formation, Ca2 entry, ATP release, autocrine purinoceptor signaling, and activation of several kinases. Since erythrocytic PGE2 formation triggers the suicidal death program and autocrine purinoceptor signaling the ATP release function of human erythrocytes it is suggested that the intraerythrocytic parasites accomplish the increase in host cell membrane permeability by interfering with these two erythrocyte functions. ___________________________________________________ ESV05 Neisseria porin: Role in infection and host cell survival T. Rudel1, V. Koszjak-Pavlovic1, I. Herrmann1, O. Kepp1 1 Max-Planck-Institute for Infection Biology, Molecular Biology Berlin, Germany Obligate human pathogenic Neisseria gonorrhoeae (Ngo) cause the venereal disease gonorrhea. Gonococci attach to cells with the help of pili and outer membrane proteins. Attachment of bacteria results in the induction of host cell apoptosis which is mediated by the PorB porin, an ATP-binding -barrel protein of the outer bacterial membrane. PorB translocates to the host cells mitochondria during infection causing loss of membrane potential ( m) across the inner mitochondrial membrane and release of cytochrome c, which is required for activation of caspases and induction of apoptosis. When expressed in host cells, PorB translocates to mitochondria and efficiently causes breakdown of m, but fails to induce the release of cytochrome c. This suggested that PorB is required but not sufficient to induce apoptosis, and that a second signal is needed to induce cytochrome c release during infection. To understand the role of PorB for the dissipation of the m, and the induction of apoptosis, we analyzed the mitochondrial import of PorB in detail. A genetic system based on the inducible depletion of individual mitochondrial import factors by RNA interference has been established in host cells for gonococcal infection. Using this system we have delineated the import route of PorB into host cell mitochondria. Our current view of PorB functions in controlling host cell survival will be discussed. ___________________________________________________ ESV06 The type-III secretion injectisome G. R. Cornelis1 1 University Basel, Infection Biology, Biology Center, Basel Switzerland The type III secretion injectisome is a nanosyringe that injects bacterial effector proteins into the cytosol of eukaryotic cells. It is related to the flagellum, with which it shares structural and functional similarities. It consists of a basal body made of several rings spanning the bacterial membranes, connected by a central tube. On top of the basal body, comes a short stiff needle. The basal body contains the export apparatus, which serves first for the export of the needle subunits and later for effectors. This structure is sufficient for exporting effector proteins across the two bacterial membranes but not to inject them into the cytosol of target cells. In Yersinia, this translocation step requires three more proteins, LcrV, YopB and YopD, in the case of Yersinia. LcrV forms a structure at the tip of the needle and this structure is believed to act as a scaffold for the insertion of a pore made of YopB and YopD into the target cell membrane. LcrV is known since the mid nineteen fifties to be a protective antigen against plague. The length of the needle is controlled by a mechanism involving a protein thought to act both as a molecular ruler and a substrate specificity switch (YscP in Yersinia)). When assembly of the needle is complete, the molecular ruler changes the substrate specificity of the export apparatus, which becomes ready to export pore formers and the effectors. One protein from the export apparatus (YscU in Yersinia) seems to specifically recognize the various classes of export substrates. Export of the latter will only occur upon contact with a target cell. ___________________________________________________ 28 ESV07 Hypoxia responsive mechanisms in mucosal inflammation: implications for barrier integrity and host defense mechanisms J. Karhausen1, K. Jäckel1, I. Vollmer1, M. Faigle1, J. Kuhlicke1 S. P. Colgan2, H. E. Eltzschig1 1 University Hospital, Clinic for Anesthesiology and Intensive Medicine, Tuebingen, Germany 2 University of Colorado, Mucosal Inflammation Program Denver, CO, USA Recent work has demonstrated that the colonic mucosa is particularly challenged by low oxygen concentrations even under physiological conditions. More specifically in the colonic mucosa, the direct contact to the anoxic lumen of the gut and the dependence on a complex vascular bed, provide an anatomical setting in which further complicating factors invariably lead to significant disturbances in oxygen supply. Our previous work has revealed that the functional epithelial response to hypoxic conditions manifests as diminished epithelial barrier integrity via inflammatory pathways. However, tolerance to commensual bacteria and immunity against pathogenic bacteria require intact antigen uptake, recognition, processing and response mechanisms. As a consequence loss of selectivity of dynamic barrier function is associated with a variety of pathophysiologies including inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) and critical illness. In this context, the role of bacteria has been recognized as a more and more complex one. To exemplify this complexity, in IBD, both eradication of bacteria (e.g.antibiotic treatment) and introduction of certain strains of bacteria (e.g. E.coli Nissle 1918) are current therapeutic options. Data presented will focus on the relevance of adaptive responses that perpetuate barrier control1-3. A pivotal factor in this hypoxia sensitive, barrier-protective gene-expression is the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1). Based on experiments that had shown protection of barrier function by conditional HIF overexpression in a murine model of intestinal inflammation2, our ongoing efforts are aimed to characterize epithelial bacterial interactions and the significance of both hypoxia and hypoxiaregulated gene expression in controlling bacterial translocation. As such we have established models for bacterial translocation both in vitro and in vivo and have characterized mechanisms of bacterial translocation following epithelial hypoxic exposure. Aim of such work is to recognize exact mechanisms involved in the bacterial epithelial interaction leading to bacterial translocation and to identify possible modulating factors. 1. Synnestvedt K, Furuta GT, Comerford KM, Louis N, Karhausen J, Eltzschig HK, Hansen KR, Thompson LF, Colgan SP. J. Clin. Invest. 2002;110:9931002. 2. Karhausen J, Furuta GT, Tomaszewski JE, Johnson RS, Colgan CT, Haase VH. J. Clin. Invest. 2004;114:1098-1106. 3. Furuta GT, Turner JR, Taylor CT, Hershberg RM, Comerford K, Narravula S, Podolsky DK, Colgan SP. J. Exp. Med. 2001;193:1027-1034. ___________________________________________________ ESV08 Mycobacterium tuberculosis: Life and death in the phagosome D. Russell1 1 Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA Once across the barrier of the epithelium, macrophages constitute the primary defense against microbial invasion. For most microbes the acidic, hydrolytically-competent environment of the phagolysosome is sufficient to kill them. Despite our understanding of the trafficking events that regulate phagosome maturation our appreciation of the lumenal environment within the phagosome is only now becoming elucidated through realtime functional assays. The assays quantify pH change, phagosome/lysosome fusion, proteolysis, lipolysis and galactosidase activity. This information is particularly important for understanding pathogens that successfully parasitize the endosomal/lysosomal continuum. Mycobacterium tuberculosis infects macrophages through arresting the normal maturation process of the phagosome, retaining its vacuole at pH 6.4 with many of the characteristics of an early endosome. The success of the bacterium is dependent on its ability to modulate this compartment. Mutants defective in this behavior are avirulent, and macrophages activated by cytokines are able to overcome the phagosome maturation block and kill the infecting microbes. Current studies are focusing on the transcriptional response of the bacterium to the changing environment in the macrophage phagosome. Manipulation of these environmental cues, such as preventing the pH drop to pH 6.4 with Concanamycin A, abrogates the majority of the transcriptional response in the bacterium demonstrating that pH is the dominant signal that the bacterium senses and responds to. Temporal analysis of the changing transcriptional profile from 5 minutes post-infection to 14 days post-infection reveal distinct phases in the infection process as the bacterium establishes infection and transitions into growth phase. Our analyses focus on the changing metabolism of the bacterium particularly with respect to carbon acquisition and utilization and how the availability of nutrients are influenced by the intra-phagosomal environment. These approaches represent our ongoing attempts to unravel the discourse that takes place between the pathogen and its host cell. ___________________________________________________ ESV09 Host adaptation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa during chronic infection of the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung. 1 M. Hogardt 1 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute for Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich Munich, Germany Chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) pneumonia is still the major cause of morbidity and mortality among patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (CF). During the switch of P. aeruginosa from the ubiquitous free-living bacterium to a pulmonary pathogen, numerous cell-associated and secreted components are required to establish CF lung colonization. Once established PA colonization leads to initially intermittent and then chronic pulmonary infection. During this life cycle, PA is subjected to strong selective pressure resulting in the emergence of PA 29 variants with multi-resistent, mucoid and typically virulenceattenuated phenotypes. This apaptive process seems to be accelerated by the emergence of mutator strains with high mutation frequencies and subsequent co-selection of mutations that are beneficial for long-term persistence of PA in the CF lung but unfavorable for its capacity to reconquer environmental habitats and transmissibility. Several studies provide insights into the lifestyle of PA during chronic CF lung infection, however, the exact mechanisms allowing PA to persist are still unknown. Strikingly, the selection against invasive factors of PA relevant during early infection phase seems to be linked with the positive selection for persistence factors. Chronic infection of the CF lung by PA is thought to be a biofilm-like infection where most bacterial cells have no contact to host cells. Thus, it is reasonable that the expression of the type three secretion system is reduced in PA isolated from CF secretions. Defects of the quorum sensing regulator RhlR result in reduced elastase production but have been linked with a better fitness of PA to grow with phenylalanine. We found that during persistence in the CF lung, PA mutator strains remarkably dissimilar from their isogenic non-mutator ancestors, while end-stage PA mutator isolates exhibit profound alterations in metabolic pathways and redox active proteins with evidence for an adaptation to hypoxic and nutritional rich conditions of CF secretions that contain high concentrations of mucin, DNA, amino acids and lipids. These metabolic factors found to be hyperproduced in lung-adapted mutator isolates may be key participants in the biofilm-like survival, growth and redox homeostasis of P. aeruginosa during chronic infection of the CF lung. ___________________________________________________ ESV10 Genotypic characterisation of Staphylococcus aureus S. Monecke1, P. Slickers1, R. Ehricht1 1 Technical University Dresden, Institute for Med. Microbiology and Hygiene, Medical Fakulty C. G. Carus, Dresden Germany DNA microarray technology allows the simultaneous detection of a high number of targets. Staphylococcus aureus was selected as target organism, and a diagnostic microarray with 166 probes covering species-specific controls, agr allelic markers, virulence-associated genes and resistance determinants was constructed and evaluated testing several hundred reference strains and clinical isolates. It was shown to allow a rapid genotype-based assessment of the virulence of a given isolate and of its resistance properties. Presently, an expanded version of the array is under evaluation which carries additional 239 probes allowing to recognise SCCmec and capsule types as well as the presence of allelic variants of “MSCRAMMs”, i.e., microbial surface components recognising adhesive matrix molecules. The overall hybridisation profile of a given isolate leads to some kind of fingerprint, or dataset allowing to elucidate the relatedness between different isolates. Hybridisation profiles facilitate assignment of isolates to clonal groups, and there was a good correlation of hybridisation patterns and MLST/spa types resulting in stable hybridisation profiles for all isolates of a given type. These data allow to trace phylogenetic relations between clonal groups and evolution by acquisition of mobile genetic elements. Since the assay can be performed with high speed and throughput, it has great potential for the analysis of resistance and virulence genotypes, surveillance, and for typing purposes. Furthermore, an adaptation to different technological platforms, such as fully automated systems is underway. ___________________________________________________ ESV11 The Type III secretion system of phytopathogenic bacteria T. Nürnberger1 1 University of Tuebingen, Center for Plant Molecular Biology Tuebingen, Germany Many Gram-negative pathogens of plants and animals use type III protein secretion systems to infect eukaryotic hosts. Type III protein secretion systems (TTSS) are molecular syringes that inject bacterial effectors into eukaryotic host cells to modulate host physiology. TTSS from phytopathogenic and animal pathogenic bacteria are composed of similar components. However, plant pathogenic bacteria have to bridge the host cell wall before contacting the host membrane. Hollow pilus-like supramolecular structures are supposed to provide a conduit for effector translocation across this barrier and into the host cell. Evidence is accumulating that many type III effectors from plant pathogens target elements of host immunity in order to suppress antimicrobial responses during infection. This report summarizes our current knowledge on the unique architecture of phytopathogenic bacteria-derived TTSS and the molecular mode of action of bacterial effectors inside the plant cell. ___________________________________________________ ESV12 Adaptive strategies of C. pneumoniae to cope with hypoxia J. Rupp1 1 University of Luebeck, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Germany It has long been recognized that sites of inflammation present a hostile environment. Sites of bacterial infections in diseased tissues are often characterised by low levels of nutrients, high levels of reductive metabolites and distinct levels of hypoxia. Thus, it is known that oxygen tension is in the range of 3-6% in different human tissues even under physiological conditions. So far, properties of C. pneumoniae replication, growth and pathogenicity have invariably been investigated in atmospheric air containing 5% CO2 with an estimated oxygen concentration of 20%. Intracellular survival of chlamydiae strongly depends on energy supply and metabolic turnover of the infected host cell. However, in hypoxia host cell metabolism is inseparably coupled to oxygen availability in the environment and is regulated by the transcription factor “hypoxia-inducible factor1” (HIF-1). Recent studies could show that C. pneumoniae is able to efficiently replicate in oxygen concentrations between 25%, showing enlarged intracellular inclusions (IFT) and an intact developmental cycle (electron microscopy). Moreover, comparing replication efficiency by recovering infectious elementary bodies (EB) from epithelial cells cultured in normoxia (20% O2) and hypoxia (2% O2), a more than 3- fold 30 increase in C. pneumoniae infectivity (IFUs/ml) in hypoxia was observed. To adapt to low oxygen availability, host-cell metabolism is directly targeted by chlamydiae in the early phase of infection. C. pneumoniae induces eukaryotic HIF-1 stabilization and subsequently increases glucose uptake to maintain infectivity in hypoxia. Hypoxia is a common condition in healthy and diseased tissue and even more pronounced at sites of bacterial infections with an influx of inflammatory cells. Functional mechanisms of obligate intracellular bacteria to survive and to interfere with host cell metabolism in an environment of reduced oxygenation have not been studied in detail. The impact of hypoxia on persistence, antibiotic susceptibility and pathogenicity of C. pneumoniae is currently investigated. ___________________________________________________ ESV13 Microarray genotyping of Pseudomonas aeruginosa L. Wiehlmann1, N. Cramer1, B. Tümmler1 1 Medical University Hanover, Clinical Research Group Hanover, Germany A novel approach for the genotyping of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains was developed in collaboration with clondiag chip technologies, Jena. The probe is generated directly from the bacterial colony by linear asymmetric multiplex primer extension and then hybridized onto a microarray to yield an electronically portable 58-binary marker genotype. The lowresolution array tube types P. aeruginosa strains in SNPs of the core genome and variable elements of the accessory genome. Clones are defined by the 15-marker genotype of the core genome. Clonal variants are identical in SNP-genotype, but differ in the repertoire of the accessory genome. Typing of marker loci of the accessory genome allows to differentiate between nosocomial spread of the same strain and the casual presence of the same clone. All procedures are performed with basic laboratory equipment. The optimized protocol is easy, rapid and robust and can be carried out by non-experienced personnel. The protocol requires only five hours between colony picking and Web-based electronic evaluation of genotype so that for example the source of a nosocomial infection can be promptly identified to initiate appropriate hygienic measures. So far we typed more than 1500 P. aeruginosa isolates from diverse habitats and geographic origin to describe the global population structure of P. aeruginosa. The data indicates that the majority of P. aeruginosa strains belong to few dominant clones widespread in disease and environmental habitats. Most studied loci of the genome are freely recombining with each other, but some physically distant loci exist in fixed combinations of genotypes suggesting that the free flow of genes in the P. aeruginosa population is tolerated for most, but not all loci of the genome. The non-random associations between segments of the core and accessory genome indicate that genome evolution and speciation of lineages is driven by concerted diversifying selection at multiple unlinked loci. Wiehlmann, L., Wagner, G., Cramer, N., Siebert, B., Gudowius, P., Morales, G., Köhler, T., van Delden, C., Weinel, C., Slickers, P., Tümmler, B. (2007): Population structure of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 104: 8101-6. __________________________________________ ESV14 The scaling laws of human travel – the spread of epidemics in a globalized world D. Brockmann1 1 Max-Planck-Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization Goettingen, Germany The dynamic spatial redistribution of individuals is a key driving force of various spatiotemporal phenomena on geographical scales. It can synchronize populations of interacting species, stabilize them, and diversify gene pools. Human travel, for example, is responsible for the geographical spread of human infectious disease. In the light of increasing international trade, intensified human mobility and the imminent threat of an influenza A epidemic, the knowledge of dynamical and statistical properties of human travel is of fundamental importance. Despite its crucial role, a quantitative assessment of these properties on geographical scales remains elusive, and the assumption that humans disperse diffusively still prevails in models. I will report on the first global, quantitative assessment of human travelling statistics (Brockmann et al., Nature 2006) by analysing the circulation of bank notes in the United States. Using a comprehensive data set of over a million individual displacements, I will show that universal scaling laws underly global human movement patterns and present a theory which mathematically accounts for human travel. ___________________________________________________ ESV15 Vaccines in the 21st century: Perspectives for new developments and strategies J. Vollmar1 1 GlaxoSmithKline GmbH, Munich, Germany Vaccines have contributed substantially to the fight against infectious diseases in the last century. Vaccination has succeeded in the eradication of smallpox and is likely to eliminate polio and measles from this planet in the foreseeable future. This success was achieved with vaccines which were based on randomly attenuated live viruses. At the end of the last century additional insight in immunology initiated the development of innovative technologies. These technologies allow tailoring vaccines to certain infections, enhancing and directing the immune response and thus also targeting diseases which have been traditionally difficult for vaccine development such as HIV, TB or Malaria. Furthermore it has been shown for various cancers to be related to infectious diseases, e.g. Human Papilloma Virus was identified as causative agent for the development of cervical cancer and Helicobacter Pylori for stomach cancer. Vaccines for those diseases are either under development or have the just become available. New developments even raise hope that in the future vaccination cannot just prevent but treat infectious diseases, cancer or other conditions such as allergies. In addition preventive measures against diseases which are currently neither existing nor relevant have become an important public health topic given the impact 31 and extremely grave threat of bioterrorism or pandemic influenza. Vaccines play a pivotal role in the preparedness plans for such public health emergencies. In summary a better understanding of immunology, pathogenesis and etiology of diseases together with new technologies enable vaccine researchers to focus on new indications and targets. Specific examples of technology and immunological advances will be given for selected vaccine developments. Footnote Conflict of interests: Employee of GlaxoSmithKline and former employee of Bavarian Nordic; both are vaccine manufacturers. ___________________________________________________ ESV16 Diagnostics using the SmartCycler – drawbacks and opportunities C. Wendt1 1 Hygiene-Institute, Heidelberg, Germany The SmartCycler® System is a real-time thermal cycler used for identifying DNA/RNA from prepared samples. It was developed as a transportable system that can be used in the field, i.e. for detection of Bacillus anthracis or poxvirus. The System enables the detection of up to four targets within a single sample (multiplex assays) by using multiple fluorescent dyes and detecting the fluorescent signal in four channels. Up to 96 reaction sites are independently programmable, thus allowing the simultaneous run of multiple experiments with different protocols and at different starting times. The device is capable to perform extremely rapid heating and cooling cycles, by using specially designed sealable reaction tubes that optimize rapid thermal transfer and optical sensitivity. Thus results can be delivered in as little as 20 minutes, but mostly in an hour. In our laboratory we have used the SmartCycler to detect quantitatively Pneumocystis jerovecii, and qualitatively Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydophila pneumoniae from respiratory specimens. vanA and vanB as well as mecA, femB and PVL are detected from positive blood cultures, from enrichment broths and from colonies. All of these are in-house tests. The BD GeneOhm MRSA test is a customized test to detect MRSA directly from nasal swabs that is performed on the SmartCycler once or twice daily including the weekends. The different tests are run simultaneously without causing problems. However, pipetting of samples in the reaction tubes is more labour intensive than pipetting in plates or in conical tubes. The device is predisposed for analysis of specimens in small quantities or specimens for which results are needed promptly possibly several times a day. __________________________________________ ESV17 SeptiFast: A new real-time PCR-based assay for rapid molecular detection of pathogens in patients with clinical sepsis. K. - P: Hunfeld1 1 University Hospital of Frankfurt, Institute of Medical Microbiology & Infection Control, Frankfurt am Main Germany Blood culture (BC), which currently remains the gold standard in the microbiological diagnosis of bacterial or fungal bloodstream infections (BSI), typically becomes positive 8-36 hours after sampling, and therapy can then be adapted based on presumptive bacterial identification suggested by Gram-stain characteristics. A more precise pathogen identification and susceptibility profile, however, is not available until up to 24 to 48 hours later. For a large proportion of patients with clinically apparent sepsis, the BC is negative, making the optimum antimicrobial therapy empiric. As revealed by clinical studies, early detection and adequate treatment of causative pathogens within the first 6-12 hours, however, is critical for a favorable outcome in patients with BSI. The development of rapid diagnostic methods for BSI, therefore, has been identified as an important medical need to supplement conventional BC diagnostics and molecular techniques have potential to fulfill this need. Nucleic acid based diagnostic systems, including polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods as well as the application of DNA and RNA probes are well known sensitive techniques prone for a more rapid detection and the specific identification of pathogens involved in BSI.To date, however, mainly PCR-based methods designed to specifically detect single pathogens have been widely adopted in the routine clinical laboratory. Here, potentials and limitations of a recently introduced multiplex real-time PCR-based assay designed for rapid detection of 25 clinically important pathogens including fungal agents directly from whole blood are presented. The test specifically targets the ITS-region of bacteria and fungi and can be completed in less than 6 hours from K-EDTA blood. Upon clinical evaluation the test holds promise for a much shorter average time-to-report compared to conventional BC while PCR detection rate for various microorganisms appears to be significantly higher compared to BC. Reflecting on the currently available study data, this new technology will be discussed and commented on from the perspective of a clinical microbiologist in the context of additional clinical and microbiological information __________________________________________ FEMS-P01 Bacterial in Paramecium H. - D. Görtz1 1 University of Stuttgart, Department of Zoology, Stuttgart, Germany Paramecia like other protozoa are hosts of various intracellular bacteria in the cytoplasm or even in the nuclei. The bacteria are belonging to different higher taxa of Eubacteria. Bacteria of the genus Holospora are highly infectious and specifically invade the nuclei - either micro- or macronucleus. During invasion the bacteria release a number of proteins from their periplasm. Holospora-bacteria multiply in the nuclei exclusively. For their transportwithin the host cell the bacteria interact with the host cytoskeleton.The infectious forms of the bacteria can leave the cell without destroying it. Bacteria of the genus Caedibacter and others are known as killer-symbionts. The bacteria produce toxins of unknown nature that are toxic for paramecia that do not host killer-symbionts. The toxicity is related to so-called Rbodies in the bacteria. The proteins of R-bodies are encoded on plasmid or phage genom. Other intracellular bacteria in 32 paramecia are neither toxic do they seem to be favorable for the host cell. At the time being about 2 to 5 new bacteria per year are found in paramecia from natural water samples. The presentation is thought to give a short overview about the diversity of intracellular bacteria in Paramecium. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P02 Identification of a novel adhesion-promoting virulence factor from Legionella pneumophila S. Klar1, A. Flieger1, R. Schade2, S. Volkmar1, M. Broich1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Research Group 5, Berlin, Germany 2 CCM/CBF Charité, Insitute for Pharmavology, Berlin Germany Legionella pneumophila infects humans by entering, surviving and even replicating in lung macrophages and epithelial cells and thereby causes a severe pneumonia, Legionnaires`disease. In order to screen for L. pneumophila hydrolases, we identified a novel secreted protein, designated p50, in the culture supernatant by N-terminal sequencing. The amino acid sequence of p50 showed a minor homology to nucleotidases and suggested a potential phosphodiesterase activity. But assaying a L. pneumophila p50 knock-out mutant did not confirm this assumption. For further characterization of p50, we expressed the protein in E.coli and generated a polyclonal p50-antibody. Western Blot analysis confirmed the localization of p50 in the culture supernatants as well as in the cell lysates. Interestingly, the molecular size of the endogenous p50 is shifted from 50 kDa to a smaller secreted 45 kDa form suggesting processing during or after secretion. Analysis of a L. pneumophila proA mutant, deficient in the major secreted protease, also showed the processed extracellular p50 form (45 kDa) and therefore indicated restriction by another yet unknown protease. To uncover the export mechanism for p50, we tested several mutants defective in the known type I, II or IVB protein secretion systems for presence of p50 in their culture supernatants. Western Blot analysis showed that none of the mentioned systems was responsible for p50 secretion and therefore the p50 export mechanism still remains unknown. For determination of p50 functions, we examined the mutant in infection assays. Interestingly, the p50 mutant did not replicate in human U937 macrophages and Acanthamoeba castelanii amoebae. We furthermore found that compared to the wild type adhesion and invasion of the mutant was strongly reduced in human lung macrophages and epithelial cells. In summary, our experiments showed that p50 is a novel secreted protein, which is processed during or after export into the culture supernatant, and is involved in L. pneumophila adhesion to and invasion of mammalian cells. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P03 Analysis of SseF- an effector protein translocated by the SPI2-encoded T3SS of Salmonella enterica Typhimurium P. Müller1, M. Hensel1 1 University Hospital Erlangen, Institute of Microbiology Erlangen, Germany Salmonella enterica is a facultative intracellular pathogen that resides in a membrane-bound compartment referred to as Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) following invasion of the host cell. The intracellular survival and replication is dependent on the activity of the type three secretion system encoded by the Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2). Effector proteins translocated by this system have a crucial role in the modification of host cell processes, such as intracellular vesicle transport and the integrity of the host cell microtubule cytoskeleton. The contribution of the various effector proteins to these host cell modifications is only partially understood. SseF is a SPI2 encoded effector protein that is required for replication in HeLa cells and associates with endosomal/ lysosomal membranes and microtubules. Salmonella strains deficient in sseF showed reduced endosome aggregation and decreased microtubule bundling (1,2). Thus SseF seems to play a critical role in Salmonella pathogenicity. In this study we investigated the molecular function of SseF in more detail. Topological properties were studied by the detection of epitope-tagged SseF after selective permeabilization in immunfluorescence assays as well as by Western blot analyses of subcellular fractionated infected HeLa cells with subsequent alkaline or high salt precipitation. In addition, deletional analyses were performed. The data indicate that the region contributing to the phenotype of SseF can be restricted to a short amino acid motif. 1 Abrahams et al, Cellular Microbiology 2006; 8(5): 728-37 2 Abrahams et al, Traffic 2006; 7(8):950-65 ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P04 Genomics of the intracellular endosymbiont Blattabacterium from cockroaches G. Tokuda1, N. Lo2, A. Yamada3, H. Watanabe4 1 University of the Ryukyus, Center of Molecular Biosciences, Nishihara, Japan 2 University of Sydney, School of Biological Sciences Sydney, Australia 3 Kyoto University, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto Japan 4 National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Tsukuba, Japan Blattabacterium cuenoti is an endocytosymbiotic bacterium inhabiting the mycetocytes present in the fat bodies of almost all cockroachs. Due to the difficulties associated with culturing and purifying this bacterium, its exact role remains to be clarified. In the present study, B. cuenoti was collected from fat bodies of the wood-feeding cockroach Panesthia angustipennis, and successfully purified for the first time. Pulse-field gel electrophoresis was performed on the purified bacterial cells, and the size of the B. cuenoti genome was estimated to be 650 kb. This represents the first time the genome size of an endosymbiont outside the proteobacteria has been determined, and is in agreement with the pattern of endosymbiont genome reduction across members of that phylum. We are currently performing genomic sequence analyses to help reveal the nature of the symbiosis between this bacterium and its cockroach hosts, and will report on recent progress. ___________________________________________________ 33 FEMS-P05 “Host-pathogen interactions”: the difficult way of chlamydia and mollicutes into culture collections S. Gronow1, C. Uphoff2, H.G. Drexler2 1 DSMZ; Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen, Microbiology, Brunswich, Germany 2 DSMZ; Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen, Human and Animal Cell Lines, Brunswich, Germany It often is a necessity for researchers to obtain reference material for the evaluation of results. Such material can be a closely related species, a type strain or a strain with known characteristics. In general, culture collections provide this reference material and make it accessible to the scientific community. However, in case of Chlamydia and Mollicutes the supply is rather limited. Another aspect is that researchers isolating new Chlamydia and Mollicute species have difficulties to deposit their cultures in a collection, a step that is necessary for publication. Only very few culture collections are willing to accept Chlamydia and Mollicutes. Therefore, the German Culture Collection of Microorganims and Cell Cultures (DSMZ) decided to start collecting and distributing strains of both groups (up to biosafety level 2) in 2007. Mollicutes are cultivated using liquid or solid media or – when necessary – co-cultured with appropriate cell-cultures. Identity is confirmed by sequence analysis. The control of human and animal cell cultures regarding their infection with Mycoplasma is another important aspect. Research results may be falsified or misinterpreted due to the presence of mycoplasmas. At the DSMZ, a modified fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique is used for monitoring each cell culture deposited. Chlamydia are cultivated in appropriate cell cultures and infections are determined by immunofluorescence methods. Identity is confirmed by sequence analysis. All preparations are mycoplasma-free. A modified FISH-technique will be established now for Chlamydia with the aim to differentiate serovars directly in cell culture and first results will be presented. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P06 Low-molecular-weight inhibitors of falcipain-2 from plasmodium falciparum H. Li1, L. Chen1, J. Tan2, K. Nagarajan2, K. Pumpor2, T. Hogg2 C. L. Schmidt2, H. Jiang1, X. Shen1, R. Hilgenfeld2 1 Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Drug Discovery and Design Center, Shanghai, China 2 University of Luebeck, Institute of Biochemistry, Luebeck Germany The erythrocyte life cycle of the malarial plasmodium parasites depends on a number of proteases, especially cysteine proteases. These proteases are involved in various cellular processes: During the merozoite stage, they facilitate escape from the erythrocyte and subsequent reinvasion. In the trophozoite stage, these enzymes are critical for the degradation of hemoglobin. Regulation of the activity of these cysteine proteases is essential for parasite survival. We recently determined the crystal structure of falcipain-2 (Hogg et al., 2006) and have used this structure in virtual screening of chemical libraries, including a library of compounds from Traditional Chinese Medicine. Several dozens of hit molecules and derivatives thereof have been synthesized and tested for binding to the target by applying surface plasmon resonance. Some of them showed good inhibitory activity against falcipain-2, as far as inhibition of the hydrolysis of ZPhe-Arg-pNA or related substrates was concerned. This is remarkable because it is far from trivial to discover lowmolecular-weight inhibitors that block cysteine proteases through non-covalent, competitive binding. Currently, we are optimizing these compounds so that they will also strongly block the degradation of hemoglobin by falcipain-2. Reference: T. Hogg, K. Nagarajan, S. Herzberg, L. Chen, X. Shen, H. Jiang, M. Wecke, C.J. Blohmke, R. Hilgenfeld & C.L. Schmidt (2006): Structural and functional characterization of falcipain-2, a hemoglobinase from the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum. J. Biol. Chem.. 281, 25425-25437. This work was supported by the DFG program Intracellular Forms of Life under grant no. Hi 611/5-1. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P07 Intracellular feeding: Investigation of hemoglobin and myoglobin degradation by Plasmodium falciparum proteases - key to antimalarial drug design K. Nagarajan1, V. Alterio1, T. Hogg1, C. L. Schmidt1 R. Hilgenfeld1 1 University of Luebeck, Institute of Biochemistry, Luebeck Germany Plasmodium falciparum is the most dangerous of all human malaria parasites, accounting for 80% of malaria-related deaths. During the parasite’s intraerythrocyte life cycle, it degrades host cell hemoglobin within an acidic organelle termed the food vacuole, in a process which is essential for parasite growth and development. This process involves malarial aspartic-, cysteine-, serine- and metallo-proteases present during the various stages of the intraerythrocyte life cycle. The aspartic proteases (plasmepsins) are believed to be responsible for the initial cleavage of native hemoglobin, and cysteine proteases (falcipains) are thought to further process cleaved hemoglobin into smaller fragments. Interference with hemoglobin degradation holds great promise as a new mode of chemotherapy. Falcipain-2 belongs to the classical papain-like cysteine proteases (C1A). It is multifunctional, cleaving hemoglobin at acidic pH within the food vacuole and also the cytoskeletal proteins ankyrin and band 4.1 at neutral pH, and it can also selfprocess its pro-domain at neutral pH. We recently determined the crystal structure of falcipain-2 (Hogg et al., 2006). The structure revealed the presence of a unique hairpin motif located between the active-site residues His174 and Asn204. It is believed to be responsible for the binding of hemoglobin. To study the importance of this loop, we constructed a number of mutants and carried out various biochemical analyses. Interestingly, we found that falcipain-2 is also active against myoglobin, the oxygen-carrier protein for muscle tissue. 34 Moreover, myoglobin, which is structurally related to the betachain of hemoglobin, is cleaved in an ordered and specific pattern similar to hemoglobin. Surface plasmon resonance studies were carried out for both the substrates with an inactive mutant of falcipain-2, revealing a low micromolar binding affinity. Interaction between the enzyme and its substrates, its binding sites, the cleavage products and additional experimental data on substrate binding and specificity will be presented. Mapping of this degradation pathway will pave the way for understanding enzyme-substrate interactions and will support the design of antimalarial drugs targeted at falcipain-2. Reference: T. Hogg, K. Nagarajan, S. Herzberg, L. Chen, X. Shen, H. Jiang, M. Wecke, C.J. Blohmke, R. Hilgenfeld & C.L. Schmidt (2006): J. Biol. Chem.. 281, 25425-25437. This work was supported by the DFG program Intracellular Forms of Life under grant no. Hi 611/5-1. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P08 Coxiella burnetii inside its host cell E. Schröpfer1, H. Meyer1, D. Frangoulidis1 1 Institute for Microbiology, Munich, Germany Coxiella burnetii (C.b.) the pathogen of Q fever is an obligate intracellular g - proteobacterium. Because of its high infectious potential, its stability to environmental conditions and its infectivity as an aerosol C.b. is to be handled in BSL3 laboratories and is considered to be a potential bio terror agent. C.b. is also the only known bacterial pathogen that can survive permanently in host cell phagolysosomes. This feature results in permanent vacuoles within infected cells. Rather big vacuoles appear in cell lines derived from the kidney of African Green monkeys, like Vero E6 or BGM cells. Vero E6 cells show a similar course of infection as BGM cells do, but in contrast to BGM cells they tend to detach upon prolonged infection. Maybe this effect can be explained by differences in structure of the actin cytoskeleton. The Hoffman modulation contrast and the Phase contrast microscopy were used to examine unstained C. b.-infected cell preparationsp while filamentous actin was visualised with fluorescence labelled phalloidine and DNA with either DAPI or propidium jodide. To locate C.b. within the cells a monoclonal antibody either conjugated with Oregon green or a secondary antibody with FITC was used. Promising results were discussed. In addition these different techniques and methods are suitable to study structural and functional features of different pathogens in cell-based systems. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P09 Disassembling membrane traffic - phagolysosome formation in a test tube U. Becken1, A. Haas1 1 University of Bonn, Cell Biology, Bonn, Germany Microbes that invade the sterile part of the human body can be internalized by professional phagocytic cells like macrophages. The newly formed organelle, the phagosome, matures by sequential fusion with early endosomes and subsequently late endosomes and lysosomes. Some pathogenic microorganisms reprogramme the development of a phagolysosome which, in many cases, increases their virulence. We established a novel microscopic assay to reconstitute fusion between phagocytic and endocytic compartments in a cell-free system. As a first model, we analysed fusion of phagosomes containing non-pathogenic, IgG-opsonized E.coli with lysosomes. To prepare organelles for the fusion experiment, a green fluorescent dye is covalently coupled to the bacterial surface and a red fluorescent, membrane-impermeant dye is pulse-chased into lysosomes. Fusion of the purified organelles presents itself as a colocalisation of the two fluorophors in one compartment. In our assay phagosome-lysosome-fusion showed known characteristics of organelle fusion in vitro, like dependency on time, physiological temperature, ATP or cytosolic proteins. Furthermore, we started to analyse the influence of agents that chelate calcium or alter organelle pH and the involvement of different proteins like SNARE- or Rab-proteins in organelle fusion. The described assay is in principle applicable to any phagocytic particle and to endocytic-/phagocytic compartments of any maturation stage and will therefore be a useful tool to analyse phagosome maturation in general and traffic alterations by pathogens. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-P10 No detour required — trafficking of the horse pathogen Rhodococcus equi within activated macrophages K. von Bargen1, U. Becken1, T. Dykstra1, A. Haas1 1 University of Bonn, Institute for Cell Biology, Bonn, Germany Rhodococcus equi is a gram-positive soil bacterium closely related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Being an facultative intracellular pathogen it can cause severe bronchopneumonia in young horses and AIDS patients. When ingested by resting macrophages, it arrests phagosome maturation in-between the stages of an early and a late compartment. The bacteria multiply within their host cell which is finally destroyed. However, immunologically activated macrophages control rhodococcal multiplication and the bacteria are killed by the microbicidal effects of peroxynitrite. Since it has been shown that the activation of macrophages reroutes the vacuole of M. tuberculosis into the degradative pathway, we analyzed the compartmentation of R. equi within the activated macrophage. We find that the trafficking of R. equi does not differ from that in resting macrophages with respect to inhibition of fusion with lysosomes or accessibility to fluorescent liquid phase markers up to 5 hours post infection. The pH of R. equi containing phagosomes in resting macrophages is characterized by an initial drop to about 6, followed by a complete neutralization of pH. This unusual development of phagosome pH is barely affected by activation of macrophages prior to infection. At the same time, activation of macrophages does not seem to change the ultrastructural appearance of R. equi phagosomes compared to those in resting macrophages. However, at 24 hours post infection rhodococci in activated host cells show a loss of structural integrity. Multiplication within macrophages is most efficiently inhibited 35 by stimulation with interferon- and lipopolysaccharide before infection, but can still be controlled significantly by addition of activating compounds when the infection has already been established. These data indicate that infection control by activated macrophages does not necessarily depend on a change of the trafficking of intracellular pathogens. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-V01 The mitochondrion-invading bacterium Midichloria mitochondrii. T. Beninati1, D. Sassera2, C. Bandi2, S. Epis2, L. Sacchi3, N. Lo4 1 University of Sydney, Faculty of Veterinary Science Sydney, Australia 2 University of Milan, Veterinary Parasitology, Milan, Italy 3 University of Pavia, Biology, Pavia, Italy 4 University of Sydney, Biological Sciences, Sydney, Australia We have characterized and named Midichloria mitochondrii, the only known bacterium to invade the mitochondria of any animal. M. mitochondrii is found in the ovarian cells of the European tick Ixodes ricinus, and represents a novel lineage within the Rickettsiales (an order of the alpha-proteobacteria). Within ovarian cells, M. mitochondrii penetrates the outer mitochondrial membrane and colonizes the periplasmic space between the two membranes. As the mitochondrial matrix is degraded, the bacterium multiplies within the empty shell of the organelle. Over 20 bacteria have been observed within a single mitochondrion. PCR screening studies show that the bacterium is found in 100% of I. ricinus females across its distribution, and also within a number of other tick species. The functional significance of the M. mitochondrii-tick association is unclear. Even though the bacterium seems to behave as a ?predator? towards the host mitochondria, this does not interfere with egg development, thus ensuring its vertical transmission to the progeny. We are currently using quantitative PCR to examine how numbers of M. midichlorii and mitochondria change throughout the life cycle of the tick. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-V02 Protein transport across the parasitophorous vacuolar membrane in malaria parasite infected erythrocytes K. Lingelbach1, S. Charpian1, N. Gehde1, J. Przyborski1 1 Philipps-University, Department of Biology, Marburg Germany The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum invades red blood cells where it develops within a parasitophorous vacuole, the vacuolar membrane thereby acting as a barrier and an interface between the parasite and the host cell. During parasite development, a number of parasite encoded proteins are transported to specific destinations within the host cell, where they play roles as pathogenicity factors and/or are involved in physiological alterations of the erythrocyte required for parasite growth. These proteins are synthesized within the parasite, secreted into the parasitophorous vacuole, and subsequently translocated across the vacuolar membrane, by a yet unknown mechanism To address this, we have begun to define the molecular requirements for the transit of parasite proteins through the parasitophorous vacuole, and for their subsequent translocation across the vacuolar membrane. Using parasites transfected with various reporter constructs we show that protein unfolding within the vacuole is required for translocation across the vacuolar membrane. Furthermore, to investigate the requirements on the erythrocytic site of the vacuolar membrane, infected cells were permeabilized with streptolysin O, which allows the extraction of the erythrocyte cytosol whilst maintaining the integrity of the vacuole, thus allowing access of externally added proteins to the outer face of the vacuolar membrane. This experimental approach enables reconstitution of protein translocation across this membrane. Treatment of permeabilized cells with low concentrations of trypsin blocked protein translocation, and re-addition of erythrocyte cytosol restored translocation activity. Harsher protease treatment resulted in an irreversible loss of translocation activity, indicating that two proteinaceous components, differing in their protease sensitivities, are involved in the translocation process. Further work identified human Hsp70 as a possible mediator in this process, as this protein was found to be present on the erythrocytic face of the vacuolar membrane, was trypsin sensitive and was replenishable by the addition of erythrocyte cytosol. Taken together, our data is consistent with a protein pore within the membrane of the parasitophorous vacuole being involved in the translocation of parasite proteins into the cytosol of the host erythrocyte. ___________________________________________________ FEMS-V03 Live and let die - rhodococcus equi infection of macrophages A. Haas1, T. Sydor1, K. von Bargen1, M. Polidori1, U. Becken1 1 Cell Biology Institute, Bonn, Germany Rhodococcus equi is a Gram-positive bacterium that causes severe bronchopneumonia in AIDS patients and in very young horses where bacteria mostly localize to alveolar macrophages in which they multiply and finally produce necrosis of lung tissue. Virulence depends on the presence of a virulence plasmid. We have previously shown that we can reproduce in a mouse macrophage model some of the pathogenic events seen in foals: Only plasmid-containing, virulent bacteria multiply in murine macrophages, they are cytotoxic and establish an unusual, arrested early-to-late endocytic compartment while avirulent bacteria localize to phagolysosomes and are killed. How do rhodococci establish their unusual compartment, how can they multiply and, eventually, lyse the infected host cell? Data are presented on the pH profiles of phagosomes containing wild type or mutant bacteria, on interaction of phagosomes with the endocytic system, their permissiveness for bacterial multiplication and on the cytotoxic effects of bacterial mutants. ___________________________________________________ 36 FEMS-V04 The parasitophorous vacuole membrane of the microsporidian pathogen Encephalitozoon cuniculi possesses pores for metabolite exchange K. Rönnebäumer1, U. Gross1, W. Bohne1 1 University of Goettingen, Medical Microbiology, Goettingen Germany Microsporidia are obligate intracellular organisms of increasing importance as pathogens in immunocompromised patients. The model organism Encephalitozoon cuniculi is extremely well adapted on intracellular parasitism and possesses one of the most compact eukaryotic genomes (3x106 bp), which predicts the loss of certain biosynthetic pathways. To characterize the nutrient requirements of this organism, we cultivated E. cuniculi in tissue culture medium lacking individual amino acids and determined the growth rate by a newly developed cell ELISA. E. cuniculi was found to be auxotroph for most of the investigated amino acids, which emphasizes the extensive participation of this parasite on the host cell metabolite pool. Since E. cuniculi resides inside a parasitophorous vacuole, it is separated from the host cell cytoplasm by a membrane and nutrients have to cross this barrier to become available. To investigate the presence of pores in the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) membrane, we microinjected fluorescent dyes into infected host cells. A 0,5 kDa molecule could rapidly enter the PV while a 10 kDa molecule was stably excluded from the PV lumen. These experiments indicate that the PV membrane possesses pores with an exclusion size of 10 kDa or less and functions like a molecular sieve, which should allow exchange of smaller molecules like amino acids. Along with our recent finding, that the PV membrane of E. cuniculi lacks host cell membrane proteins, this observation raises the interesting question on the origin and biogenesis of the PV membrane as an important host cell-parasite interface. ___________________________________________________ FTP01 A review in health economics. Is psychological stress the cause or the consequence of a mental disorder? Inflammations and infections could be possible causes. Psychosomatic diagnoses are depending on the actual accuracy in diagnostics.An urgent plea for basic research in microbiology and diagnostics, encouraging a billion investment in cause study instead of billion spending for combating symptoms. E. Feldmeier1 1 HAW Hamburg, Health, Hamburg, Germany Mental disorders are on a rise - worldwide. The WHO expects, that depression will be the second most disease in 2020 - and one of the most expensive. The core statements of the BMBF-documentation „Like being ill in one' s soul“ (2007) are: 1. „Despite intensive [neuro]research the causes of depression are still not clear“ 2. Moreover, as in any report about mental disorder, „anyone can get a depression“, from ' welfare case'to professor. There are innumerable descriptions, like:„All of a sudden, people loose pleasure in life, falling in deep melancholy. Some people are getting ill „apparently without any reason“, others survive a war staying healthy...“, supporting the view that unknown parasites could likely be the reason, too. Maybe there are 2 different types of depression: a)a disorder of neurotransmitter, harming the vegetative nervous system AND / OR b)psychosomatic cause: actual or childhood traumas cause a depression Is the so called mental disorder the cause or the consequence? The confusion of cause and impact has an important consequence. Psycho-therapy is a common, nearly inevitable treatment for mental sick patients (long lasting & expensive). MO are persistently inert to psychological therapy. Bacteria are changing their surface. For that, diagnostics as well as therapy are unsure. Diagnostics: MOs cheat the immune system, e.g. in biofilms and by linking factor H. The common used CRP-parameter could be a non-reliable indicator (wrong negative). Therapy: Wrong presuppositions lead to non-effective, nonsystematical antibiotics treatment, leading to resistances or pseudo-resistances and chronic manifestation. Scientific history shows that ' still-unknown' parasites were common for centuries. MOs could also be responsible for other widespread diseases, i.e. colitis ulcerosa, asthma, rheumatism and ' paroxysmal'heart rhythm disorders (in customer language: appearing sometimes, without any known reason). Abundant literature available. ___________________________________________________ FTP02 Antimicrobial susceptibility of coagulase-positive and coagulase-variable Staphylococci from various indications of swine, dogs and cats as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 S. Schwarz1, C. Werckenthin2, E. Aleík, M. Grobbel3 A. Lübke-Becker3, L. H. Wieler3, J. Wallmann4 1 Institute forAnimal Breed (FAL), Molekulare Microbiology and Diagnostic, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infektions- and Epidemic Medicine, Munich Germany 3 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany The BfT-GermVet monitoring program is a complementary program to the national resistance monitoring program GERMVet. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle, were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. A total of 248 coagulase-positive and coagulase-variable staphylococci from two indications of swine (infections of the skin and infections of the urinary/genital tract including strains from the mastitis metritis agalactia syndrome) as well as two indications of dogs/cats (respiratory tract infections and infections of skin/ear/mouth) were analysed. The staphylococcal 37 isolates investigated in the BfT-GermVet program revealed a rather uniform susceptibility status. Independently of the animal origin and indication, the most frequently detected resistance properties were resistances against penicillin G (53-77%) and ampicillin (42-75%), tetracyclines (33-52%), as well as erythromycin (13-27%). Oxacillin-resistant or gentamicinresistant staphylococci were detected in 1-9% or 2-9% of the isolates, respectively. Evenlower prevalences of resistance of 02% were detected for amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, cephalothin, and cefazolin. Animal-specific differences were observed with regard to sulfonamide resistance (2% of the porcine staphylococci versus 28-30% of the canine/feline staphylococci). In addition, 22% of the canine/feline staphylococci from infections of skin/ear/mouth were chloramphenicol-resistant, whereas chloramphenicol resistance was detectedin only 4-7% of the strains from the remaining three indications. The results of this study provide for the first time a representative overview of the susceptibility status of staphylococci from selected indications of swine, dogs and cats in Germany. ___________________________________________________ FTP03 Molecular basis of resistance to macrolides and lincosamides among staphylococci and streptococci from various animal sources collected in the resistance monitoring program BfTGermVet P. Lüthje1, S. Schwarz1 1 Institute forAnimal Breed (FAL), Molekulare Microbiology and Diagnostic, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany In this study, the erythromycin- and/or clindamycin-resistant isolates among 248 coagulase-positive and coagulase-variable staphylococci and 500 streptococci, collected all over Germany during 2004–2006 in the resistance monitoring program BfTGermVet, were investigated for the genetic basis of macrolide and/or lincosamide resistance. The staphylococci were sampled from different disease conditions of dogs/cats (respiratory tract infections, infections of skin/ear/mouth) or pigs (infections of the skin, infections of the urinary/genital tract including strains from the mastitis metritis agalactia syndrome). The streptococci tested were -haemolytic streptococci from respiratory tract infections, infections of skin/ear/mouth, and infections of the urinary/genital tract of dogs/cats as well as from urinary-genital tract/MMA of pigs or horses. Moreover, Streptococcus suis from infections of the central nervous system and from cases of arthritis in pigs as well as Streptococcus equi from infections of the respiratory tract of horses were investigated. A total of 57 resistant staphylococci and 65 resistant streptococci were identified, differentiated biochemically to the species/subspecies level, and tested by PCR for the resistance genes erm(A), erm(B), erm(C), erm(TR), msr(A), msr(D), mef(A), mph(C), lnu(A), lnu(B), and lnu(C). The methylase genes erm(A), erm(B), and erm(C) were detected in staphylococci, alone or in different combinations. The erm(B) gene was the predominant gene in Staphylococcus intermedius and streptococci. The efflux gene msr(A) as well as the genes mph(C) and lnu(A) coding for inactivating enzymes were detected in single staphylococcal isolates. The efflux genes mef(A) and msr(D) were detected in three streptococci, in one of them together with the gene erm(B). The gene lnu(B) was detected for the first time in streptococci of animal origin, namely in seven porcine S. dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis isolates with clindamycin MICs of 4 µg/ml. In this study, a large number of staphylococci and streptococci from different animal sources, including pets and companion animals, has been investigated for their macrolide-lincosamide resistance genotype. The data obtained confirm that high-level resistance to erythromycin and clindamycin in staphylococci and streptococci was most frequently detected and mainly due to rRNA methylases, whereas inactivating enzymes and exporters were prevalent at distinctly lower frequencies. ___________________________________________________ FTP04 Antimicrobial susceptibility of streptococci from various indications of swine, horses, dogs and cats as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 S. Schwarz1, E. Aleík2, M. Grobbel3, A. Luebke-Becker3 C. Werckenthin2, L.H. Wieler3, J. Wallmann4 1 Institute forAnimal Breed (FAL), Molekulare Microbiology and Diagnostic, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infektions- and Epidemic Medicine, Munich Germany 3 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany The BfT-GermVet monitoring program is a complementary program to the national resistance monitoring program GERMVet. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. A total of 500 streptococci from two indications of swine ( haemolytic streptococci from infections of the urinary/genital tract including isolates from the mastitis metritis agalactia syndrome as well as S. suis from infections of the central nervous system and the musculoskeletal system), two indications of horses (S. equi from respiratory tract infections and -haemolytic streptococci from infections of the genital tract), as well as three indications of dogs and cats ( haemolytic streptococci from infections of the respiratory tract, the urinary/genital tract, and skin/ear/mouth) were analysed. Independently of their origin (animal species and disease condition), the streptococcal isolates investigated in the BfTGermVet program revealed an overall similar susceptibility status. The most frequently detected resistance properties were resistances against sulfamethoxazole (20-78%), tetracycline (1793%), gentamicin (14-79%) as well as erythromycin (0-33%). All isolates, except a single penicillin-resistant isolate (MIC of 0.25 µg/ml) and two ceftiofur-resistant isolates (MIC of 0.5 g/ml), were susceptible to penicillins and cephalosporins. Animal-specific differences were observed for erythromycin resistance (0-1% of the equine isolates, 10-14% of the canine/feline isolates, 26-33% of the porcine isolates) and tetracycline resistance (17-26% of the equine isolates, 27-43% 38 of the canine/feline isolates, 70-93% of the porcine isolates). In contrast, low-level gentamicin resistance (MICs of 16-32 µg/ml) was seen most frequently among equine streptococci (62-79%), while porcine and canine/feline streptococci exhibited this resistance property at 17-35% and 14-48%, respectively. The results of this study provide for the first time a representative overview of the susceptibility status of streptococci from selected indications of horses, swine, dogs and cats in Germany. ___________________________________________________ multocida and B. bronchisepticaisolates from selected indications of dogs and cats in Germany. ___________________________________________________ FTP05 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Pasteurella multocida and Bordetella bronchiseptica from dogs and cats as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 S. Schwarz1, E. Aleík2, M. Grobbel3, A. Lübke-Becker3 C. Werckenthin2, L. H. Wieler3, J. Wallmann4 1 Institute forAnimal Breed (FAL), Molekulare Microbiology and Diagnostic, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infektions- and Epidemic Medicine, Munich Germany 3 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany Introduction: Antimicrobial resistance in Escherichia coli isolates has emerged as a major problem of health care in Germany. For instance, according to data from the Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Programme of the PaulEhrlich-Society for Chemotherapy, which monitors the spread of resistance in frequently encountered nosocomial pathogens, resistance to fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin) in E. coli increased from 5% in 1995 to 22% in 2004. In addition, the proportion of strains producing extended-spectrum betalactamases (ESBL) among E. coli isolates raised from <1% to 5%. Alternative options for treatment are needed to control antimicrobial resistance. Fosfomycin (FOS) is a bactericidal broad-spectrum antibiotic that is not structurally related to other classes of antimicrobial agents. The objective of this study was to determine the in vitro activity of FOS against CIP-resistant andESBL-producing E. coli strains. Methods: Among the 33 isolates tested, 11 were resistant to CIP, 16 were ESBL producers, and six had both resistance determinants. Eighteen strains were clinical isolates randomly collected from a recent multi-Center study in Germany. The remaining 15 strains producing known ESBLs were taken from the stock culture collection. The in vitro activity of FOS was compared with that of ceftazidime (CAZ), meropenem (MEM) and piperacillin/tazobactam (P/T). MICs were determined using the broth microdilution procedure according to the DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung) 58940 guidelines. Breakpoints (bp) were those approved by DIN. However, as DINbp for FOS do not exist, those recommended by the French Society of Microbiology (SFM) were applied: susceptible 32 mg/l, resistant >32 mg/l. Results: Based on DIN breakpoints, all isolates were susceptible to MEM, whereas 48.5% and 18.2% were intermediate or resistant to CAZ and P/T, respectively. FOS inhibited all isolates at 32 mg/l and 94% at 4 mg/l, with MIC50 and MIC90 values of 1 and 4 mg/l, respectively. Using CASFM bp, all isolates weresusceptible to FOS. Conclusion: FOS showed excellent in vitro activity against fluoroquinolone-resistant and ESBL-producing E. coli isolates. It is, therefore, potentiallyuseful for the treatment ofinfections caused by E. coli strains resistant to first-line antibiotics. ___________________________________________________ The BfT-GermVet monitoring program is a complementary program to the national resistance monitoring program GERMVet. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. In dogs and cats, Pasteurella multocida is a commensal in the oropharynx, but may also be involved in respiratory tract infections. Canine and feline P. multocida isolates, however, play an important role in infections of humans following a cat or dog bite. Bordetella bronchiseptica is frequently associated with canine infectious tracheobronchitis, also known as kennel cough, and feline infectious upper respiratory tract disease. A total of 92 canine/feline P. multocidaisolates from respiratory tract infections or infections of skin/ear/mouth as well as 42 canine/feline B. bronchisepticaisolates from respiratory tract infections were analysed. The P. multocida isolates were susceptible to all antimicrobial agents tested, except sulfamethoxazole to which prevalences of resistance of 43-45% were recorded. In contrast, the B. bronchiseptica isolates were resistant at high frequenciesagainsta number of antimicrobial agents, including cefazolin (100%), sulfamethoxazole (81%), and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (81%). Moreover,all isolatesexhibited high MIC values against a number of antimicrobial agents for which no approved breakpoints applicable to B. bronchiseptica are currently available: penicillin G ( 32 µg/ml), oxacillin ( 32 µg/ml), ceftiofur ( 32 µg/ml), cefquinome (8 32 µg/ml), cephalothin (8 - 64 µg/ml), spectinomycin ( 1024 µg/ml), clindamycin ( 32 µg/ml), and spiramycin (16 - 128 µg/ml). The results of this study provide for the first time a representative overview of the susceptibility status of P. FTP06 In-vitro-activity of fosfomycin against fluoroquinoloneresistant and extended-spectrum beta-lactamse-producing isolates of Escherichia coli M. Kresken1, J. Brauers1, B. Körber-Irrgang1 1 Antiinfectives-Intelligence GmbH, Rheinbach, Germany 39 FTP07 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Pseudomonas aeruginosa from dogs and cats and Arcanobacterium pyogenes from cattle and swine as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 C. Werckenthin1, E. Aleík1, M. Grobbel2, A. Lübke-Becker2 S. Schwarz3, L. H. Wieler2, J. Wallmann4 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infection- and Epidemic Medicine, Veterinary Faculty, Munich, Germany 2 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin, Germany 3 Institute for Animal Breed, Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany The BfT-GermVet monitoring program is a complementary program to the national veterinary resistance monitoring program GERM-Vet. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. In small animal medicine, Pseudomonas aeruginosa is mainly involved in otitis externa, infections of the respiratory and urogenital tract as well as nosocomial infections. As many of the antimicrobial agents commonly used in veterinary medicine are not active against P. aeruginosa and most modern antipseudomonal agents are not approved for veterinary use, the options for an antibiotic therapeutic intervention are very limited. In the BfT-GermVet program, a total of 99 P. aeruginosa isolates from infections of the skin, ear and mouth as well as the urinary/genital tract of dogs and cats have been investigated. Resistance against gentamicin (specific breakpoints for canine isolates, susceptible 2 µg/ml, resistant 8 µg/ml) was observed in 27 % of the isolates from skin, ear and mouth and 11 % of isolates from the urinary/genital tract (intermediate isolates 29 % and 39 %, respectively). For the fluoroquinolone enrofloxacin (specific breakpoints for canine/feline isolates, susceptible 0.5 µg/ml, resistant 4 µg/ml), resistance was detected in 24 % (skin/ear/mouth) and 11 % (urinary/genital tract) with intermediate isolates in 49 % and 61 %, respectively. Arcanobacterium pyogenes is an important pathogen of purulent infections in veterinary medicine, especially in food-producing animals. However, the species is, in contrast to A. haemolyticum, seldom involved in human infections. In the BfTGermVet program, 90 strains from cattle and swine were investigated, using a slightly modified method for susceptibility testing, as published standardized methods are not applicable to this species. Animal-specific breakpoints are not available. Resistance to penicillins was not observed, as was expected from previous data. The most prevalent resistance traits were tetracycline resistance (33-56 %, bovine and porcine isolates) and sulfonamide resistance (26-40 %, bovine isolates). The results of this study provide for the first time minimum inhibitory concentrations of representative P. aeruginosa and A. pyogenes strains from selected indications of animals in Germany. ___________________________________________________ FTP08 Environmental sampling of particulate matter and fungal spores during demolition of a building on a hospital area D. Hansen1, B. Blahout1, D. Benner1, W. Popp1 1 University Hospital Essen, Hospital Hygiene, Essen, Germany Demolition or renovation works adjacent to hospitals pose risks of airborne infections especially aspergillosis. During November 2005 and March 2006 an old building with 3 floors was demolished on the area of university hospital of Essen. To determine if there were any infectious risks for patients from emissions from the demolition work we monitored particle and fungal concentration of the air before and during demolition. During the extensive demolition activity air sampling was carried out biweekly, otherwise weekly or every two weeks. Air sampling was conducted at 7 positions around the building. The weather conditions were monitored at the time of sampling, too. Concentrations of ultra fine particles, particles 0.3 µm, particles 0.5 µm and particles 1 µm were significantly higher during demolition than before. Concentration of moulds, which could be cultured at 37° C, did not differ between the two periods. Concentration of moulds which grew at 22° C correlated significantly with temperature and humidity and was significantly higher before than during demolition period. We conclude that infectious risks for patients during demolition work in hospital areas may be lower than generally assumed. ___________________________________________________ FTP09 Identification and characterization of class 1 and class 2 integrons among Escherichia coli isolates from farm animals and companion animals collected in the BfT-GermVet monitoring study K. Kadlec1, S. Schwarz1 1 Institute for Animal Breed (FAL), Neustadt-Mariensee Germany In the BfT-GermVet monitoring study, 417 Escherichia coli isolates collected in 2004-2006 all over Germany from various disease conditions of pigs (n=87), horses (n=102) or cats/dogs (n=228) were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 different antimicrobial agents or combinations of agents. This study dealt with the identification of integron-associated resistance genes among multiresistant E. coli isolates. Class 1 and class 2 integrons were detected by previously described PCR assays. Amplicons of the variable parts of the integrons were compared by restriction analysis and at least one representative of each type of amplicon was cloned and sequenced. Transformation and conjugation experiments were conducted to confirm a plasmid location of the integrons. Class 1 and class 2 integrons were detected in 74 isolates. Nine isolates harboured both types of integrons, one isolate harboured two different class 1 integrons, 45 a single class 1 integron, and 19 isolates a single class 2 integron. Within these integrons, four different trimethoprim resistance genes (dfrA1, dfrA12, dfrA14, dfrA17), four streptomycin/spectinomycin resistance genes (aadA1, aadA2, aadA5, aadA6/aadA10), two streptothricin resistance genes (estX, sat2), and one gentamicin/tobramycin/kanamycin resistance gene (aadB) were detected. Six different cassette arrangements were identified 40 within class 1 integrons: aadA1 (21 isolates), dfrA1 + aadA1 (16 isolates), dfrA17 + aadA5 (9 isolates), dfrA12 + orfE + aadA2 (7 isolates), dfrA14 + recombined aadA6/aadA10 (1 isolate), and aadB + aadA1 (1 isolate). Two different cassette arrangements in class 2 integrons, dfrA1 + sat2 + aadA1 or estX + sat2 + aadA1, were identified in 23 and 5 isolates, respectively. Sequencing of the resistance genes revealed the presence of novel aadA1, aadA5, dfrA1 and dfrA17 variants. Plasmid location of the integrons was confirmed in 32 isolates. One isolate harbouring a class 2 integron and six isolates with a class 1 integron were plasmid free. Class 1 and/or class 2 integrons carrying resistance genes were detected in 17.7 % of the isolates tested. In contrast to all other types, the class 2 integron estX + sat2 + aadA1 was seen only in porcine isolates. This molecular analysis complements the phenotypic susceptibility testing conducted in the BfT-GermVet monitoring study and also helps to explain the persistence of resistance genes without direct selective pressure. ___________________________________________________ 3 FTP10 Molecular characterization of Yersinia strains harbouring a type IV secretion system B. Kraushaar1, D. Knabner1, A. Konietzny1, B. Appel1 B. Guerra Roman1, E. Strauch1 1 Bundesinstitut für Risikobewertung, Molekulare Diagnostik und Genetik, Berlin, Germany FTP12 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Klebsiella spp. and Proteus spp. from horses and small animals as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 M. Grobbel1, A. Lübke-Becker1, E. Aleík2, S. Schwarz3 J. Wallmann4, C. Werckenthin2, L. Wieler1 1 Freien University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infektions- and Epidemic Medicine, Munich Germany 3 Institut für Tierzucht der Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft (FAL), Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany In Yersinia enterocolitica 29930 (O:7,8; biotype 1A) a plasmid encoded type IV secretion system was discovered. To investigate the distribution of this system in the genus of Yersinia a multiplex PCR was developed to screen our strain collection. We detected 24 out of 483 strains so far carrying the transfer system. To elucidate the genetic relatedness among the strains belonging to Yersinia enterocolitica, Y. frederiksenii and Y. kristensenii we performed pulse field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis. Furthermore amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) was employed for genotyping and the results were compared to PFGE analysis.In all Yersinia strains the type IV system is located on plasmids with a size ranging from 36 to 48 kb. A recombinant plasmid carrying the system is transferable between E. coli and different Yersinia strains with high efficiency. The type IV conjugation system consists of a transfer region encoding a mating pair formation system (Mpf) and a DNA transfer and replication system (Dtr). By subcloning experiments the origin of transfer (oriT) was identified. An entry exclusion function of the type IV system is encoded by the eex gene located in the mpf region. Eex excludes the transfer of the recombinant plasmid with high efficiency whereas the transfer of unrelated plasmids is nearly unaffected. ___________________________________________________ FTP11 DRG 2007/2008 - 5 Jahre DRG-AG - ein ZwischenberichtDRG 2007/2008 - 5 years DRG-AG - a summary L. Leitritz1, E. Kniehl2, T. Pietzcker3, B. Gaertner4, E. Straube5 H. Mauch6 1 Bioscientia, Microbiology, Ingelheim, Germany 2 Clinic Karlsruhe, Microbiology, Karlsruhe, Germany University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany University Homburg, Virologie, Homburg, Germany 5 University Jena, Microbiology, Jena, Germany 6 Helios Clinic Berlin, Microbiology, Berlin, Germany 4 1998 wurde ein Fallpauschalensystem zur Finanzierung deutscher Krankenhaeuser beschlossen. 2002 hat sich die DRGAG der DGHM gegruendet und ihre Arbeit aufgenommen. Durch eine Reihe von Maßnahmen der DRG-AG konnte das DRG-System an spezielle deutsche Verhaeltnisse angepasst und veraendert werden. Die Maßnahmen und Veraenderungen werden dargestellt. In 1998 a Fallpauschalensystem was decided upon for reimbursement of Geramanys hospitals. In 2002 the DRG-WG of the GSHM was founded and immediatly took up action. Due to a couple of actions the DRG-WG was able to amend and fit the DRG-system to specific german needs. These actions and amendments are presented. ___________________________________________________ The BfT-GermVet monitoring is a complementary program to the national veterinary resistance monitoring GERM-Vet of the BVL. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. Multiresistant strains of Klebsiellaspp. are known to cause severe nosocomial infections, and production of extended spectrum -lactamases (ESBL) is commonly reported in human medicine. Also Proteus spp. are a frequent cause of hospital acquired infections in humans and usually exhibit unfavourable resistance patterns. To date, there are only few studies in veterinary medicine dealing with resistance in this species. The present study comprised Klebsiellaspp. from infections of the genital tract (GT) of horses (n=36) and the urinary/genital tract (UGT) of dogs and cats (n=17) were included. Proteus spp. were isolated from infections of the UGT (n=37) and the skin (incl. ear/mouth) (n=30) of small animal (dogs and cats). Klebsiellaspp. are part of the normal vaginal flora in horses and dogs, but can also cause infections in this organ system. In horses, clinical inapparent infections of the genital tract are a frequent cause of infertility or abortion. Among the Klebsiella isolates, resistance appeared most frequently against ampicillin (53-67%), sulfamethoxazole (19-29%), and potentiated 41 sulfonamides (19-24%). A considerable percentage (29%) of enrofloxacin resistant isolates was detected among the UGT isolates of small animals. Proteusspp. are frequently isolated from infections of the urogenital tract in animals. Even though these bacteria are part of the normal skin flora, they can also cause serious infections, particularly otitis externa in dogs. Amont the Proteus isolates, highest percentages of resistance were seen against tetracycline (90-92%). More than 20% of the isolates exhibited resistances to potentiated sulfonamides (27-37%), sulfamethoxazole (2437%), and chloramphenicol (24-37%). The results of this study provide for the first time minimum inhibitory concentrations of representative Klebsiella spp. and Proteus spp. strains of horses, dogs and cats from selected indications of animals in Germany. ___________________________________________________ FTP13 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Escherichia coli from swine, horses, dogs and cats as determined in the BfT-GermVet monitoring program 2004-2006 M. Grobbel1, A. Lübke-Becker1, E. Aleík2, S. Schwarz3 J. Wallmann4, C. Werckenthin2, L. Wieler1 1 Free University Berlin, Instituet for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Department Veterinary Medicine, Berlin Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Infektions- and Epidemic Medicine, Munich, Germany 3 Institute for Animal Breed of Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft (FAL), Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 4 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Berlin, Germany The BfT-GermVet monitoring is a complementary program to the national veterinary resistance monitoring GERM-Vet of the BVL. In the BfT-GermVet program, bacteria from selected indications of cats, dogs, swine, horses and cattle were investigated for their susceptibility to 24 antimicrobial agents by broth microdilution according to CLSI standards. Escherichia coli is part of the commensal microflora of the gastrointestinal tract, but pathogenic strains can also cause infections in this organ system. Additionally, pathogenic E. coli are the most frequently isolated bacteria from urinary tract infections in humans and animals, and a possible cause of severe infections of other organ systems including the central nervous system, the respiratory tract, and the skin. Therefore, E. coli isolates from infections of the urinary/genital tract from swine (n=87), horses (n=102) and small animals (n=100) as well as of the gastrointestinal tract (n=100) and the respiratory tract (n=17) from small animals were included in this study. Regardless of the animal species, resistance was detected most frequently against sulfamethoxazole (18-59 %), tetracycline (14-54 %), and ampicillin (14-39 %). Additionally, high percentages of intermediate isolates were observed for cephalothin (39-46 %). In general, low prevalences of resistance were detected for amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (1-4 %), gentamicin (1-9 %), and cefazolin (0-11 %). In general, highest percentages of resistant isolates occurred in pigs, followed by horses and small animals. E. coli from the urinary/genital tract of small animals showed in comparison with isolates from the gastrointestinal tract a higher prevalence of resistance for ampicillin (24 % vs. 14 %) and more isolates with MIC values 2 µg/ml for enrofloxacin (7 % vs. 2 %). The results of this study provide for the first time minimum inhibitory concentrations of representative E. coli strains of horses, dogs and cats from selected indications of animals in Germany, determined by an internationally accepted methodology. Furthermore, susceptibility data of E. coli from indications of swine not yet tested in the GERM-Vet program were provided. ___________________________________________________ FTP14 First tigecycline-resistant Enterococcus strain isolated from a german ICU patient G. Werner1, S. Gfrörer2, C. Konstabel1, W. Witte1, I. Klare1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute Wernigerode Branch, Wernigerode Germany 2 Marienhospital, Institute for Laboratory Medicine, Stuttgart Germany Tigecycline is a promising new antibiotic of last resort active against many bacteria including Enterococcus spp. Enterococcal isolates displaying minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of 0.25 mg/L are considered susceptible. The epidemiological cut-off value (breakpoint) for tigecycline is > 0.5 mg/L for enterococci. We received the first tigecycline-resistant Enterococcus (strain UW6940) from an urine sample of an ICU patient from a German hospital. The patient had severe underlying diseases and received intensive care treatment, several courses of antibiotics that included tigecycline treatment for several weeks. Species identification revealed Enterococcus faecalis. Initial Etest for tigecycline resulted in 6 mg/L. The strain was sent to us for further characterizations. Resistance to tigecycline was confirmed with E-test revealing 2 mg/L. MIC in broth media was 1 mg/L. Tigecycline MICs for susceptible reference strains E. faecium ATCC19434 and E. faecalis ATCC29212 were between 0.047 and 0.125 mg/L. Non-susceptibility to tigecycline is associated with expression of efflux porters in Acinetobacter baumanii or via mutations in Tet(A) mediating tetracycline efflux, e.g. in E. coli. We tested MICs for tigecycline in the presence and absence of several efflux pump inhibitors, such as reserpin, verapamil, omeprazol, and prochlorperazine. Concentrations were chosen as given in the literature (20 - 60 mg/L) and 2 mg/L for prochlorperazine. In all but one cases addition of inhibitor substances did not show any effect, except with omeprazol where addition of it resulted in a several-fold increased MIC. A single tetracycline resistance gene, tetX, encodes an oxygen-dependent monooxygenase conferring tigecycline resistance. MICs for tigecycline were not influenced by aerobic or anaerobic growth conditions. In addition, we failed to amplify a specific PCR product for tetX with DNA from strain UW6940. We grew the strain for two weeks (ca. 400-500 generations) on agar plates and in liquid broth in absence of any selective pressure to test for stability of resistance. MICs for tigecycline for all tested progenies remained stable at 1 mg/L. The resistance trait was not 42 transferable in filter-mating experiments using tigecyclinesusceptible E. faecalis recipient strains JH2-2 and OG1X. Preliminary results show stable tigecycline resistance in an E. faecalis isolate from an ICU patient after prolonged tigecycline therapy. The basis of tigecycline resistance is obviously not efflux-driven and could not been identified so far. ___________________________________________________ FTP15 Antimicrobial effects of different essential sandalwood oils on Airborne microbes M. Wosny1, S. Krist1, G. Buchbauer1 1 University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria The antimicrobial potential of essential oils is a long known fact [1,2]. As airborne microbes represent a constant challenge to the human immunic system, we aimed to investigate the effect of essential sandalwood oils on airborne microbes. Therefor we determined the total air count in an exactly defined testing room before and after application of different dilutions ( 1:100, 1:200, 1:350, 1:1000, 1:5000) of essential oils of Santalum album, L. ( Santalaceae), Santalum spicatum, R.Br. ( Santalaceae), and Amyris balsamifera, L. (Rutaceae). The total microbial count in the testing rooms was determined with an RCS Air Sampler ( Biotest). After vaporizing of each essential oil, the total air count was determined again 15 min. later. In our study all tested essential oils showed significant reduction of airborne microbes. Especially effective was Australian Sandalwood oil in the dilution of 1:200. It reduced the totalcount of airborne microbes about 67.11%. The other tested essential sandalwood oils showed a reduction ranging between 32.32% and 64.46%. Concluding from these results it can be stated that the essential oils of different sandalwood types can be useful for reduction of airborne microbes. ___________________________________________________ FTP16 Cost-effectiveness of tigecycline in the treatment of complicated intra-abdominal infections in Germany U. Kuchenbecker1, C. Runge1, W. A. Krüger2 1 Wyeth Pharma GmbH, Health Economics, Muenster, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karls-University , Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Tuebingen, Germany Background: Increasing rates of resistance to antimicrobial therapy increase the risk of therapeutic failure and impose a challenge on therapy of infections. Thereby, resistant microorganisms lead to a significant increase in patient morbidity, mortality, and health care costs. Tigecycline, a glycylcycline, offers a broad-spectrum of activity including resistant pathogens such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). In order to assess the cost-effectiveness of Tigecycline vs. selected standard antibiotics, we modeled its use in the treatment of complicated intra-abdominal infections (cIAI). Methods: A decision-analytic model was developed and adapted to estimate expected outcomes and costs of initial antibiotic therapy. Tigecycline therapy was compared with ceftriaxone/metronidazole, ciprofloxacin/metronidazole, imipenem/cilastatin and levofloxacin/metronidazole. We used published data on pathogen prevalence, in-vitro eradication rates, length of stay (LOS), failure rates and mortality in order to populate the model. Information on inpatient costs and drug costs were derived from official databases. Results: Overall success rate of initial tigecycline therapy was 89%. Ceftriaxone/metronidazole (71%), ciprofloxacin/metronidazole (70%), imipenem (82%), levofloxacin/metronidazol (76%) showed lower success rates. LOS was shortest with tigecycline therapy (13.8 d vs. 15.1, 15.1, 14.3, 14.7 respectively). Cost-effectiveness of tigecycline was better than for all comparators (6631.76 vs. 8542.42 , 9200.67 , 7251.55 and 7925.48 per treatment success). Tigecycline therapy was dominant, e.g. it was more effective than all other regimens at lower total costs. Conclusions: The model indicates that empirical therapy with tigecycline is more cost-effective than standard antibiotic regimens. ___________________________________________________ FTP17 Antimicrobial effects of jasmine absolute and the essential Oils of clove leaf, palmarosa grass and siberian fir needles on airborne microbes P. Pasierb1, S. Krist1, G. Buchbauer1 1 University Vienna, Department for Clinical Pharmacy and Diagnostic, Vienna, Austria Airborne microbes surround us all day long and are partly able to represent a danger for human beings. Therefore, in this study we examined natural products with known anti-microbial potential [1-4] for their possible use as air-disinfectants. First of all the total germ count in the testing room was determined with an RCS Air Sampler. Then the dilutions of Jasmine Absolute, Clove Leaf-, Palmarosa Grass- and Siberian Fir Needles Essential Oil, respectively were vaporized in five different concentrations (1:100, 1:200, 1:350, 1:1000 and 1:5000). After 15 minutes the total microbial count was measured again, using the air sampler. All tested dilutions were able to reduce the airborne microbes in the testing room. The essential oil of Siberian Fir Needles in a concentration of 1:100 (51.60 % reduction) was the most effective one. The average reduce of germ count of Jasmine Absolute was 45.39 % (1:1000), of Clove Leaf essential oil 42.38 % (1:100) and of Palmarosa Grass essential oil 43.52 % (1:100). According to this results it can be stated that the tested absolute and the three essential oils could possibly be used as an alternative to established air disinfectants. References: 1 Jirovetz, L.; Buchbauer, G.; Schweiger, T.; Denkova, Z.; Slavchev, A.; Stoyanova, A.; Schmidt, E.; Geissler, M.; Natural Product Communications 2007; 2 (4); 407-412 2 Jirovetz, L.; Eller, G.; Buchbauer, G.; Schmidt, E.; Denkova, Z.; Stoyanova, A.S.; Nikolova, R.; Geissler, M.; Recent Research Developments in Agronomy and Horticulture 2006; 2; 1-12 3 Donaldson, J.R.; Warner, S.L.; Cates, R.G.; Young, D.G.; Pharmaceutical Biology 2005; 3 (8); 687-695 43 4 Lopez, P.; Sanchez, C.; Batlle, R.; Nerin, C.; Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2005; 53 (17); 6939-6946 ___________________________________________________ FTP18 Molecular and functional analysis of the trimeric autotransporter Adhesin Yersinia Adhesin A (YadA) M. Schütz1, U. Grosskinsky1, D. Linke2, I. B. Autenrieth1 1 University Hospital Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Max-Planck-Institute for Development Biology, Department Proteinevolution, Tuebingen, Germany Yersinia adhesin A (YadA) is a non-fimbrial adhesin which is essential for the pathogenicity of Yersinia enterocolitica. YadA mediates binding to eukaryotic extracellular matrix proteins and host cells, triggers host cell responses, and protects Yersinia from phagocytosis and killing by human serum. We have focused on the membrane anchor of YadA particularly with regard to the highly conserved glycine at position 389 (G389). The corresponding amino acid residue is conserved in nearly all related trimeric autotransporters (TAAs) including, e.g. H. influenzae Hia (G1064). The YadA membrane anchor is a trimeric b-barrel with each monomer contributing 4 b-strands to the structure. G389 is supposed to be located in the inner luminal part of the pore. The fact that G389 is strikingly conserved suggests that this amino acid residue is important for the biologic function of YadA. Consequently, our hypothesis was that a mutation of G389 would disturb the transport of YadA to the bacterial membrane. We constructed an inducible expression vector for analysis of YadA function in E. coli. By means of site directed mutagenesis we then created G389A, G389S, G389T, G389N and G389H mutants. Protein expression in E. coli was analysed by western blot. Surface exposure and time course of YadA exposure were investigated by immunofluorescence (IF) staining and flow cytometry (FACS) analysis with specific antibodies. Adhesive and invasive properties of E. coli expressing YadAwt or mutant YadA were analysed by adhesion assays with collagen coated coverslips, monolayer cells and gentamicin killing assays. Western Blot analysis revealed that YadA mutant G389A retained the ability to form stable trimers under denaturing conditions, whereas the mutants G389S, G389T, G389N and G389H were detected as monomers only. IF- and FACSanalysis indicated that even YadA mutants with clearly impaired trimer stability present some YadA protein on the bacterial surface. Nevertheless, serum resistance and autoagglutination was significantly reduced in some of the YadA mutants compared to YadAwt. Therefore we conclude that G389 is essential for proper export and trimerisation of YadA. ___________________________________________________ FTP19 Bifidobacterial adhesion to intestinal epithelial cells correlates strongly with anti-inflammatory effects on intestinal epithelial cells H. Wei1, U. M. Samen1, B.J. Eikmanns1, C. U. Riedel1 1 University of Ulm, Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology, Ulm, Germany Bifidobacteria are Gram-positive, anaerobic microorganisms that used in probiotic intervention in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). IBDs are multifactorial disorders characterized by chronic inflammation of the intestinal epithelium. Probiotics containing bifidobacteria have been shown to be effective in reducing the severity of inflammation in several rodent models and patients of IBD. LPS induces inflammatory events through toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and its co-receptor CD14. There is increasing evidence that in chronic intestinal inflammation, expression of TLR4 and CD14 on intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) is abnormal. We established in vitro models for LPS-induced inflammation in cultured Caco-2 and T84 IECs. Using these models, we were able to demonstrate that under normal conditions cultured IECs are specifically unresponsive to challenge with LPS alone. By contrast, when challenged with a combination of LPS and CD14, IECs showed a dramatic increase in NF- B activation and IL-8 secretion. Pre-treatment of IECs with different strains of bifidobacteria revealed the same strain-dependent inhibition of LPS-induced inflammatory events in both cell lines confirming previous studies on bifidobacterial inhibition of LPS-induced inflammation in HT-29 cells (Riedel et al., 2006). Additionally, the same 10 strains of bifidobacteria were tested for adhesion to cultured Caco-2 and T84 cells which revealed the same strain-specific pattern of adhesion to both cell lines. Interestingly, those strains that showed the highest levels of adhesion were also those that performed best in inhibiting LPSinduced NF- B activation. Statistical analysis indicates a strong correlation of adhesion with inhibitory activity for both cell lines (Caco-2: r =0.97, p<0.0001; T84: r= 0.91, p = 0.0021). Thus, direct or indirect blocking of LPS-induced inflammation as a consequence of bifidobacterial adhesion could be a possible mechanism by which bifidobacteria exert their antiinflammatory effects in probiotic intervention in IBD. ___________________________________________________ FTP20 Quantitative resistance level of Pasteurella multocida isolates from respiratory tract infections of cattle: Current results of the national resistance monitoring by the BVL 2005/2006 U. Schröer1, H. Kaspar1, J. Wallmann1 1 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit (BVL), Referat Biologische Untersuchungen Antibiotikaresistenz, Berlin, Germany In 2001 the representative national resistance monitoring was put into service by the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL). The results made it possible to evaluate the resistance situation, development and spread in pathogens from food producing animals. As part of the monitoring programme Pasteurella (P.) multocida is included in the investigations, because P. multocida plays an important role as a pathogen in a wide variety of animals, including pneumonia in cattle. During the monitoring study 2005/2006 a total of 188 bovine P. multocida-strains originating from cattle sufferingfrom respiratory tract infections were tested with the brothmicrodilution method as given in the CLSI document M31-S1 to 44 determine the in vitro susceptibility (minimum inhibitory concentration) to 24 antimicrobial agents. 95 strains were collected from calves, 64 strains from young cattle and 29 strains from diary cows. The P. multocida strains were susceptible to the most antimicrobial agents tested. Low to moderate resistance rates were determined against nine agents tested (cephalothin, enrofloxacin, gentamicin, nalidixic acid, spectinomycin, tetracycline, trimethoprim, chloramphenicole, the combination trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole). Differences could be noted regarding the production levels: the strains from calves showed resistance against eight, the strains from young cattle against seven and the strains from diary cows only against three of these antimicrobial agents. The highest resistance rates for all strains were detected against spectinomycin (up to 20%). The presented results show that it is crucial to analyse resistance data according to the various cattle production levels. The data of this study help to identify trends in resistance rates, to deduce appropriate therapeutic management measures and provide practising veterinary surgeons with valuable information for establishing empirical therapy. ___________________________________________________ FTP21 Pharmacoepidemiologic study in primary dysmenorrhea M. Ostin1, T. Liliana1, M. Cosmina1, S. Mircea Gabriel1 1 "Gr.T.Popa" University of Medicine and Pharmacy Pharmacology Department, Iasi, Rumania Aim: Pharmacoepidemiologic investigation regarding the intensity of pain, the associate symptoms, and the management in primary dysmenorrhea. Dysmenorrhea is described as menstrual pain that is severe enough to limit a woman’s normal activities and is requiring medical attention. This study is a part of a larger study that deals with prevalence and symptomatology of dysmenorrhea in Iasi. This exploratory study was performed on 266 volunteer females, with a ages between 19 and more than 40, employed in some factories, which completed a questionnaire consisting of 21 questions about intensity of menstrual-related distress, measured with the visual analogue scale (range=0-10), systemic symptoms, medical adresability and the drugs used to reduce pelvic pain. In summary, in this study the prevalence of dysmenorrhea was reported by 61% of the study subjects. Drug therapy plays an important role in pain management. Analgesic therapy was realized especially by selfmedication (33%) or according to pharmacist’s recommendation (28%). ___________________________________________________ FTP22 Regulation of the expression of the Lantbiotic mersacidin structural gene in different genetic backgrounds C. Szekat1, A. Hoffmann1, S. Schmitz1, G. Bierbaum1 1 University Bonn, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Parasitology, Bonn, Germany The lantibiotic (lanthionine-containing antibiotic) mersacidin is an antimicrobial peptide that consists of 20 amino acids. The producer strain of mersacidin is Bacillus sp. strain HIL Y85,54728. The structural gene (mrsA) and the genes for modification enzymes, transporters, and producer self-protection are encoded on a 12.3 kb biosynthetic gene cluster on the chromosome of the producer strain. Moreover, three regulatory genes are encoded on the gene cluster (1). The two component system MrsR2/K2 is mainly involved in immunity and induction of mersacidin biosynthesis in the presence of mersacidin by a quorum sensing mechanism. A single regulatory protein MrsR1 is encoded downstream of mrsA. Mersacidin inhibits the growth of gram-positive bacteria by binding to the cell wall precursor lipid II and inhibiting cell wall biosynthesis. It shows good activity against Gram-positive bacteria, especially staphylococci. Mersacidin production is strongly influenced by the growth phase and composition of the culture medium, e. g. good production yields are obtained in synthetic media, whereas in LB or TSB no production of mersacidin is observed. Correspondingly, in the presence of the putative operator structure and mrsR1, transcription of mrsA was high in synthetic media and low in complex media. Surprisingly, heterologous expression of mrsA and mrsR1 in B. subtilis 168 yielded different results: Here, transcription was high in complex media and repressed in synthetic media. In the absence of the putative operator and/or the regulator MrsR1, the repression was abolished in B. subtilis 168. Furthermore, an in silico analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the upstream sequences of mrsA indicated a putative ScoC (hpr) binding motif that is present in the promoter region. ScoC was detected as a regulator of protease production in Bacillus, however the ScoC regulon comprises at least 560 genes (2). Deletion of scoC in B. subtilis 168 resulted in complete loss of mersacidin transcription in synthetic as well as in complex media, indicating that ScoC (hpr) is involved in the regulation of mersacidin transcription in this strain. The role of ScoC in the original host of mersacidin production is currently under investigation. (1) Altena K., Guder A., Cramer C., Bierbaum G., Appl Environ Microbiol. 2000; 66 : 2565-71 (2) Caldwell R., Sapolsky R., Weyler W., Maile R.R., Causey S. C., Ferrari E., J. Bacteriol. 2001 ; 183 : 7329-40 ___________________________________________________ FTP23 Cell-cell communication in spatially structured microbial communities: The privacy of a microcolony A. Dötsch1,2, L. Lardon3, B. A. Hense4, S. Häußler1 J. - U. Kreft2 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, CPI, Brunswich Germany 2 University of Bonn, Theoretical Biology, IZMB, Bonn Germany 3 E&R DTU, Microbial Ecology Research Group, Lyngby Denmark 4 GSF - National Research Center for Environment and Health Institute of Biomathematics and Biometry, Neuherberg/Munich Germany Bacteria use autoinducers (diffusible signal molecules) to regulate their gene expression, including genes involved in the production of exoenzymes, antibiotics, and virulence factors. Autoinducer (AI) signalling has been extensively studied in well-mixed liquid cultures of single species. Under these 45 conditions, AI concentration depends primarily on cell density. This is commonly known as Quorum Sensing. But since bacteria only measure AI concentration rather than really counting their fellows the question is: Which factors actually influence this concentration in a structured, more natural environment? Nacyl homoserine lactones (AHL) are common AI signals in gram-negative bacteria like Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Because of the limited chemical diversity of AHLs, identical molecules are often used by different species. Thus another question arises: How could signalling be kept intraspecific in an environment like soil where neighbouring colonies are likely to be unrelated?In this work mathematical modelling is applied to demonstrate how AI signalling is influenced by cell density, mass transfer and spatial distribution and to evaluate the extent of interspecific communication in a spatially structured environment. We developed a simple mathematical model of autoinducer signalling. In this model cells are positioned in two-dimensional space and produce a diffusible AI signal. The AI is produced at a low basal rate and at a higher rate when cells are induced by high AI concentration. Simulations were run on iDynoMiCs, a newly developed software platform for individual-based modelling of the dynamics of microbial communities. Our results show that besides cell density and diffusibility of AI molecules the spatial distribution of cells has a strong impact on the AI concentration that a single cell experiences. Within and around cell clusters - naturally arising as clonal microcolonies from cell division - the concentration of AI is much higher than in regions with more loosely distributed cells. Due to the combined effect of clustering and positive feedback cells are synchronously upregulated in microcolonies and their close vicinity. In conclusion, intercellular communication in structured microbial communities is primarily within rather than between microcolonies and the potential for cross-talk between species is reduced if the bacteria are not located randomly but clustered. Clustering and positive feedback enable a synchronized response of microcolonies promoting intraspecific cooperative behaviour. ___________________________________________________ FTP24 On the way towards the entire proteome of Staphylococcus aureus K. Hempel1, S. Wolff1, C. Kohler1, K. Rogasch1, S. Engelmann1 D. Becher1, M. Hecker1 1 University of Greifswald, Institute for Microbiology Greifswald, Germany Staphylococcus aureus is a prevalent component of the human microbial flora that can turn into a dangerous human pathogen causing diseases ranging from wound infection to endocarditis, osteomyelitis, and sepsis. For investigation of the entire proteome of this organism we combined several analytical stateof-the-art tools, viz. gelbased and gelfree approaches in combination with MALDI-ToF or ESI-FTICR mass spectrometry resulting in a comprehensive description of the proteome of exponentially growing S. aureus COL cells. Analysis of the cytoplasmic proteome with a combination of 2D-PAGE and the gel-free approaches resulted in the identification of 1123 cytoplasmic proteins representing twothirds of the predicted cytoplasmic proteome of S. aureus COL. Six hundred fifty additional proteins were identified by the gelfree MDLC-MS/MS approach covering proteins undetectable in a 2D gel such as alkaline and hydrophobic proteins (Kohler et al., 2005). Because of their special relevance for host-pathogen interaction, extra cytoplasmic proteins were prepared from the supernatant and analysed by 2D-PAGE. This resulted in the identification of 42 proteins (Rogasch et al., 2006). To gain access to the hydrophobic membrane proteins, membranes of S. aureus COL cells were purified and analysed by 1D-gel-LCMS/MS as well as 2D-LC-MS/MS. In summary 432 proteins were identified by these two methods. Among them 204 proteins possess transmembrane domains (TMDs), representing about 30 % of all theoretical proteins carrying TMDs. For analysis of the pathogenicity relevant cell surface associated proteins intact S. aureus cells were biotinylated with Sulfo-NHS-SS-Biotin (Pierce) and the proteins enriched by affinity chromatography. Subsequent 1D-gel-LC-MS/MS resulted in the identification of 70 proteins including 34 proteins known to be cell surface associated. Our investigation made clear that gel-based and gel-free methods are highly complementary and that the combination increases the amount of accessible proteins of different subproteomes significantly (Wolff et al., 2006). In the study presented here the identification of almost 50 % of the approximately 2600 proteins encoded in the genome of S. aureus COL is described in detail. ___________________________________________________ FTP25 HCMV enters endothelial cells by macropinocytosis N. Ettischer1, Y.-D. Stierhof2, D. Ripper2, K. Laib Sampaio1 C. Sinzger1 1 University Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Virology Tuebingen, Germany 2 University Tuebingen, ZMBP, Tuebingen, Germany Based on findings in fibroblast cultures, HCMV is supposed to enter its target cells through fusion of the viral envelope with the cell membrane. In contrast, electron microscopic analysis of infected endothelial cells (EC) showed endotheliotropic HCMV strains in vesicular structures. The aim of this work was to prove that uptake of HCMV in endothelial cells occurs by endocytosis, to test the relevance of this pathway for infection efficiency and to identify the underlying mechanism. The role of clathrin-, caveolin- and actin-dependent pathways was determined quantitatively by inhibitor studies. A new improved in-situ embedding method for the ultrastructural analyses allowed identifying the virion-containing structures as vesicles by their localisation in the cytoplasm and by serial sections. The relevance of endocytosis for infection of EC was proven by inhibitor studies with methyl-ß-cyclodextrin, latrunculin A, chlorpromazine and bafilomycin A1. Colocalisation with marker proteins of the most common endocytic pathways, caveolin-1 and clathrin, was also investigated. In ultrastructural analyses at 10 minutes after penetration all internalized particles were found within vesicular structures in endothelial cells. Therefore, a direct fusion with the cellular membrane as known from fibroblasts can be excluded. Methyl46 ß-cyclodextrin and latrunculin A reduced infection efficiency from 80 % to 0-2 %. In contrast, chlorpromazine and bafilomycin A1 had no influence on the infection efficiency of HCMV in EC. Therefore, a role of clathrin- and pH-dependent endocytosis of HCMV in EC was excluded. These findings rather indicated the endocytic pathway used by HCMV is actinand cholesterol-dependent. The absence of colocalisation with clathrin and caveolin during entry confirmed this result and also excluded a contribution of caveolin-dependent endocytosis. Remarkably, cellular protrusions were found close to virions in further ultrastructural analyses. Taken together, these results consistently indicated that HCMV infects endothelial cells by using an actin- and cholesterol-dependent endocytic pathway which resembles macropinocytosis. ___________________________________________________ FTP26 Identification of functional sites in pUL128 of human cytomegalovirus by Charge-cluster-to-Alanine-Scanning A. Schüßler1, K. Laib Sampaio1, N. Ettischer1, B. Adler2 C. Sinzger1 1 University of Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Virology Tuebingen, Germany 2 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich, Germany The UL128 protein has been shown to be essential for endothelial cell tropism of HCMV by generation of deletion mutants. The functional sites within the protein however, have not yet been identified because it was impossible to generate single amino acid mutations in an intact viral genome with conventional mutagenesis techniques. In this work, we aimed to develop a method for the identification of functional sites within HCMV proteins and apply it to pUL128. Charge-cluster-toalanine-scanning provides an approach to specifically identify putative protein-protein interaction sites. The innovative “en passant” mutagenesis technique allows the introduction of single base pair exchanges without remaining marker sequences. This method was applied for the mutation of the C-terminal part of pUL128 in a highly endotheliotropic BACmid of HCMV. Several charge clusters were mutated and the phenotype of the resulting mutant viruses was characterized with regard to endothelial cell tropism. Cell-free infectivity, cell-associated spread in a monolayer and virus release from infected endothelial cells were quantified. Two pentapeptide sequences relevant for endothelial cell infection were identified. Mutation of the amino acids HSLTR82-86 reduced endothelial cell tropism to almost 0%, mutation of KKHKR155-159 reduced endothelial cell tropism to under 10%. The mean focus expansion value was reduced from 55 to only single infected cells or 18 infected cells per focus, respectively. A third examined amino acid sequence (EYDK137-140) had no influence on endothelial cell tropism, proving the specificity of the method. A revertant virus for the KKHKR-mutant showed the same phenotype as the wildtype, thus excluding any phenotypic changes due to second site mutations. This method can be used to examine other HCMV proteins relevant for endothelial cell tropism. Based on the identified amino acid sequences it is possible to design peptides and test them for their inhibitory potential for HCMV infection. ___________________________________________________ FTP27 Revision of the International Health Regulations (IHR 2005) of the WHO-challenges for infectious diseases epidemiology and medical care D. Matysiak-Klose1, I. Mücke1, T. Eckmanns2 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany 2 Robert-Koch-Institute, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany Background: In June 2005, the World Health Assembly of the WHO adopted the revision of the International Health Regulations (IHR) which will be legally effective for Germany as of June 2007. After erroneous decisions and missing communication had an impact on the rapid spread of the SARS virus in 2003, and in expectation of a highly pathogenic human influenza virus, the WHO decided to accelerate a revision of the 1969 version of the International Health Regulations. The 1969 version was no adequate instrument for public health emergencies of international concern such as those caused by new and re-emerging diseases with epidemic potential. Objectives and contents of the IHR 2005 are introduced and challenges discussed. Objectives and Contents of the IHR 2005: Main objective of the IHR (2005) is to prevent, protect against, control and respond to the international spread of diseases, irrespective of their sources, while avoiding unnecessary interference with international traffic and trade. IHR 2005 are applicable on any natural as well as intended incident. The IHR 2005 contain more notifiable issues than the German Protection Against Infection Act in 2001. Concerning notifiable biological events, the IHR differentiate between specific pathogens and infections caused by unknown pathogens. Annex 2 provides a decision instrument with uniform limited criteria for the evaluation of events. For this evaluation it is substantial to assess the event’s impact on the international level. Events that may pose public health emergencies of international concern have to be notified to the WHO via a nominated national focal point within 24 hours after evaluation. Consequences for the Public Health Service and Medical Care It is necessary to revise the German Protection Against Infection Act to accommodate to the IHR 2005. The usefulness of the surveillance system is determined by its potential to locally detect known pathogens as well as emerging ones in a timely manner. This enables control in parallel to routine surveillance. Prerequisites are a high sensitivity in the clinical area for particular infection events and rapid and continuous reporting to the Public Health Service. Specific communication structures have to be available to allow for efficient crisis communication and to provide all parties involved with non-formal data rapidly. Regular further trainings are also prerequisites for the successful processing. To implement the International Health Regulations the necessary structures must be in place by the year 2012. ___________________________________________________ 47 FTP28 Functional domains of the Candida albicans Efg1 regulator D. Kurtz1 1 Heinrich-Heine-University, Institute for Microbiology Duesseldorf, Germany Efg1 is a central transcriptional regulator in Candida albicans, which controls multiple aspects of morphogenesis and metabolism. It contains a central bHLH domain, flanked by sequences conserved in fungal APSES proteins, as well as polyglutamine (polyQ) stretches at the N- and C-terminal ends. We performed a systematic deletion approach to specify functional domains of Efg1p. The bHLH/APSES domain was required for morphogenesis of the normal yeast and true hyphal cell forms. Hypha formation on solid medium and chlamydospore formation also required the C-terminal polyQstretch; chlamydospore formation, in addition, depended on the presence of the entire N-terminal end. Pseudohypha formation induced by overexpression of EFG1 only occurred if the bHLH/APSES domain was intact and an EFG1 overexpressionforced switch from the opaque to the white cell type, in addition, depended on the presence of specific N- and C-terminal segments. Efg1p repressor activity in C. albicans required two specific sequences outside of an bHLH/APSES domain, while the APSES domain was responsible for Efg1p-phosphorylation and for binding to a MCB cell cycle-box. These results suggest that Efg1p has a dual specificity for binding to E- and MCB-box sequences and reveal domain-specific functions of Efg1p, providing a framework for detailed structure-function analyses. ___________________________________________________ FTP29 Transcriptional and physiological adaptation to defective protein-O-mannosylation in Candida albicans P. Cantero1 1 Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf, Institute for Microbiology, Duesseldorf, Germany Five Pmt isoforms O-mannosylate secretory proteins in Candida albicans. Comparisons of genome-wide transcript patterns of each pmt mutant revealed commonly downregulated genes involved in glycolysis and glycerol production. Increased phosphorylation of the Cek1p- but not the Mkc1p-MAP kinase, as well as increased transcript levels for stress-related genes were detected in the pmt1 strain but not in the other pmt mutants. The transcriptomal pattern after short term-inhibition of Pmt1p-activity confirmed such stress responses, but did not indicate an alteration of glycolytic flow. Short- but not longterm adaptation to Pmt1p inhibition required signaling components Cek1p, Mkc1p, Efg1p and Tpk1p, while lack of Cna1p (calcineurin) was essential for survival during Pmt1pinhibition; accordingly, cyclosporin A strongly inhibited growth of the pmt1 mutant. The lack of Pmt isoforms influenced transcript levels for the remaining isoforms both positively and negatively, suggesting complex cross-regulation among PMT genes. These results confirm individual functions of Pmt isoforms but indicate also a common biphasic adaptation response to Pmt deficiency. While known signaling pathways modulate or, in the case of calcineurin, are essential for shortterm adaptation, long-term adaptation likely occurs independently of stress pathways but may require adjustments of remaining Pmt activities and of glycolytic flow. ___________________________________________________ FTP30 Antimicrobial peptides from insects and vertebrates Chemical modification and activity against multi-drug resistant bacteria D. Knappe1, A. Nimptsch1, C. Stegemann1, M. Cassone2 L. Otvos Jr.2, A. Kolobov Jr.3,4, E. Korableva3,4, O. Shamova3 V. N. Kokryakov3,4, R. Hoffmann1 1 University of Leipzig, Faculty of Chemistry and Mineralogy Institute of Bioanalytical Chemistry, Center for Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Leipzig, Germany 2 Temple University, Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, Philadelphia, USA 3 Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Saint-Petersburg, Russia 4 Saint-Petersburg State University, Saint-Petersburg, Russia The presence of antimicrobial substances in secretions, blood and leukocytes has been known since the end of the 19th century. Later different classes of antimicrobial peptides (AMP) with specific activities against bacteria, fungi and viruses were isolated from vertebrates as well as from invertebrates and proved to activate the innate immune system of the hosts [1,2]. These gene-encoded peptides differ in length from about 10 to more than 100 amino acid residues showing a great variety in structure and antimicrobial modes of action. The emergence of bacterial and fungal pathogens resistant to small molecule antimicrobial drugs demands the development of new antibiotics with novel modes of action. Native antimicrobial peptides kill bacteria by mechanisms different than those employed by quinolones and tetracyclines. Short, proline-rich AMPs, e.g., were isolated from various insects during recent years possessing significant sequence homologies and targeting similar intracellular proteins. We synthesized several short proline-rich AMPs including drosocin (Drosophila melanogaster), formaecin (Myrmercia gulosa), metalnikowin (Palomena prasina), and heliocin (Heliothis virescens) as well as mutated analogs. These modifications were introduced to improve the pharmacological profile of the native sequences, including strain specificity and mammalian protease resistance. In broth microdilution efficacy assays the minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) for Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Micrococcus luteus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Staphylococcus saprophyticus strains were determined. Remarkably, drosocin derivatives with unnatural amino acid substitutions showed improved serum stabilities and significantly lower MIC values compared to the native peptide. The in vitro activity of peptides isolated from the European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis) and dog (Canis familiaris) was also investigated. Some of these new peptides were also active against all three clinical pathogen classes, e.g., the Grampositive Listeria monocytogenes, the Gram-negative Escherichia coli and the fungus Candida albicans. 1) Bulet P., Stoecklin R., Menin L., Immunol Rev., 198 (2004) 169-184; 2)Ganz T., Lehrer R.I., Innate Immunity ed. Ezekowitz 48 R. A. B., Hoffmann J. A. (2002) 287-303, Humana Press, Totowa, NJ ___________________________________________________ FTP31 Inhibition of proliferation of superficial bladder cancer cell after infection with mycobacterium BCG by cell cycle arrest and apoptosis K. Schwarzer1,2, A. Eitner3, M. Förster4, E. Straube1 1 FSU-University, Medical Microbiolgy, Jena, Germany 2 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany 3 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute of Anatomy II Jena, Germany 4 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Department of Internal Medicine I, Division of Pneumology Medical Center, Jena Germany Intravesical instillation with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG), an attenuated strain of Mycobacterium bovis (M. bovis) used for anti tuberculosis immunization, is a clinically well-recognized therapy for superficial bladder cancer and recurrence prophylaxis. The underlying mechanisms have not yet been fully elucidated. It is not clear why BCG induces inhibition of proliferation in some bladder cell lines and not in others we tested. In this study we evaluated if inhibition of proliferation is mediated by cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Five permanent cell lines gained from different patients were cocultured either with viable or with heat-inactivated BCG (S4Jena-strain). Proliferation was tested by cell proliferation reagent WST-1. Cell cycle arrest (propidium iodide DNA staining) and apoptosis (annexin V/propidium iodide staining) were analyzed by flow cytometry. Additionally, annexin V binding and activation of caspases 8/7/3 as well as morphological hallmarks of apoptosis were shown by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Three of five bladder cancer cell lines tested showed cell cycle arrest and features typical of apoptosis (such as annexin V binding, caspase-activation) after incubation with BCG. In contrast to viable BCG inactivated bacteria induced cell cycle arrest but no apoptosis. Furthermore we showed that the two cell lines which were not inhibited in their proliferation after infection with BCG, exhibited no or only slight features of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. These results show that BCG infection has a direct effect on the cell cycle and viability of bladder cancer cells. We conclude that BCG infection leads to cell cycle arrest followed by apoptosis and finally results in cell death.Future studies will concentrate on why some bladder cancer cells lines are resistent to BCGmediated cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. ___________________________________________________ FTP32 Monitoring of nosocomial bacteremia/device-related infection: How relevant are the data of the G-DRG-system? E. Kniehl1, B. Gärtner2, L. Leitritz3, H. Mauch4, T. Pietzcker5 E. Straube6 1 Clinic Karlsruhe, ZLMT – Department of Microbiology and Hygiene, Karlsruhe, Germany 2 University Hospital Saarland, Institute for Virology Homburg, Germany 3 bioscientia Labor Ingelheim, Ingelheim, Germany 4 HELIOS Clinic Emil-von-Behring, Institute for Microbiology, Immunology and Laboratory Medicine, Berlin 5 University Hospital, Ulm, Germany 6 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany ICD-codes were introduced for coding death causes (WHO) and reimbursement-relevant diagnoses (G-DRG). However, there is a trend to use the data of the G-DRG-system like "medical documentation"; f.e., some benchmark-projects compare the use of selected ICD-codes (as T82.7 device-associated infection) between hospitals. For nosocomial bacteremia and device-related infection, we compared data of the G-DRG-system with data of infection control surveillance and with data of the microbiology lab. The encoded G-DRG-data have very low "sensitivity"; in this study, less than 30% of cases documented by the surveillance system were encoded with the corresponding ICD-code. The main reasons for this difference may be: that the additional code was not reimbursement relevant in this case or that "over-coding" is feared. The use of such data of the G-DRG-system in QM-benchmarkprojects may be misleading and should be regarded with caution. ___________________________________________________ FTP33 Homologous high-throughput expression and purification of highly conserved E. coli proteins A. Ergin1, K. Büssow2, J. Sieper1, A. Thiel3, R. Duchmann1 T. Adam1 1 University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany 2 MPI Mol Genetik, Berlin, Germany 3 German Rheuma Research Center, Berlin, Germany Background Genetic factors and a dysregulated immune response towards commensal bacteria contribute to the pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). Animal models demonstrated that the normal intestinal flora is crucial for the development of intestinal inflammation. However, due to the complexity of the intestinal flora, it has been difficult to design experiments for detection of proinflammatory bacterial antigen(s) involved in the pathogenesis of the disease. Several studies indicated a potential association of E. coli with IBD. In addition, T cell clones of IBD patients were shown to cross react towards antigens from different enteric bacterial species and thus likely responded to conserved bacterial antigens. We therefore chose highly conserved E. coli proteins as candidate antigens for abnormal T cell responses in IBD and used highthroughput techniques for cloning, expression and purification under native conditions of a set of 271 conserved E. coli proteins for downstream immunologic studies. Results As a standardized procedure, genes were PCR amplified and cloned into the expression vector pQTEV2 in order to express proteins N-terminally fused to a seven-histidine-tag. Initial small-scale expression and purification under native conditions by metal chelate affinity chromatography indicated 49 that the vast majority of target proteins were purified in high yields. Targets that revealed low yields after purification probably due to weak solubility were shuttled into Gateway (Invitrogen) destination vectors in order to enhance solubility by N-terminal fusion of maltose binding protein (MBP), N-utilizing substance A (NusA), or glutathione S-transferase (GST) to the target protein. In addition, recombinant proteins were treated with polymyxin B coated magnetic beads in order to remove lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Thus, 73% of the targeted proteins could be expressed and purified in large-scale to give soluble proteins in the range of 500 µg. Conclusions Here, we report a cost-efficient procedure to produce around 200 soluble recombinant E. coli proteins in large-scale, including removal of LPS by polymyxin B coated beads for subsequent use of the proteins in downstream immunological studies. ___________________________________________________ FTP34 Carbohydrate - Protein Interaction and antibody engineering: Mutations in the primary structure of single chain FV and their effect on binding properties S. Gerstenbruch1, L. Brade1, P. Kosma2, R. MacKenzie3 S. Evans4, H. Brade1, S. Müller-Lönnies1 1 Research Center Borstel, Borstel, Germany 2 University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences Vienna, Austria 3 National Research Council, Ottawa, Canada 4 University of Victoria, Victoria, Italy Lipopolysaccharide from Chlamydia contains a 3-deoxy- -Dmanno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo) trisaccharide of the sequence Kdo(2 8)Kdo(2 4)Kdo. In C. psittaci additionally a linear Kdo(2 4)Kdo(2 4)Kdo trisaccharide and a branched Kdo(2 8)[Kdo-(2 4)]Kdo(2 4)Kdo tetrasaccharide is synthesized. The immunization of mice with the branched structure led to the generation of antibodies which are crossreactive with the linear trisaccharide. After chemical synthesis of the terminal branched trisaccharide Kdo(2 8)[Kdo(2 4)]Kdo and immunization we were able to isolate antibodies by phage-display which bind with high affinity to LPS oligosaccharides containing the branched structure and with lower affinity to the linear trisaccharide. We have biochemically characterized these antibodies in binding assays with several natural and synthetic oligosaccharides. Furthermore, we have generated mutant proteins in which amino acid residues were altered which are important for high affinity and specific binding as deduced from the previously reported cocrystal structures of mAb S45-18 [1]. This mAb has been shown to bind the Kdo(2 4)Kdo(2 4)Kdo epitope in the linear and the branched structure. By a combination of amino acid residues from the CDR3 VH of the high affinity mAb S4518 and the low affinity mAb S69-4, two highly homologues antibodies, we were able to improve the affinity of the latter considerably. The mutated residues were not suspected to be directly involved in binding [1] and thus can only be explained by an indirect conformational effect. Several of these antibodies can be used for the serological diagnosis of C. psittaci infections. Funding by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) grant SFB470-C1 is acknowledged. [1] Nguyen HP, Seto NO, MacKenzie CR, Brade L, Kosma P, Brade H, Evans SV., 2003, Nat Struct Biol., 10, 1019-25. ___________________________________________________ FTP35 Influence of the Lipid A Phosphorylation on the recognition of enterobacterial LPS by the neutralizing monoclonal antibody WN1 222-5 L. Heinbockel1, L. Brade1, B. Lindner1, H. Brade1 S. Müller-Lönnies1 1 Research Center Borstel, Medical And Biochemical Microbiology, Borstel, Germany Lipopolysaccharide (LPS, Endotoxin) elicit an immune reaction which is responsible for many of the effects seen in Gramnegative septic shock. The LPS from Enterobacteriaceae can be structurally subdivided into the O?polysaccharide (O-PS), the outer and inner core regions and the lipid A. The latter is the endotoxic principle of LPS. The mAb WN1 222-5 has been shown to cross-react with LPS from E. coli and Salmonella enterica, despite different O-PS and outer core structures. Importantly, mAb WN1 222-5 has been shown to neutralize LPS in different in-vivo models of Gram-negative sepsis. As a prerequisite for the development of a carbohydrate based vaccine, we have characterized the epitope of mAb WN1 222-5 and showed that the side-chain heptose and the phosphate on the branched heptose of the LPS inner core are main antigenic determinants (Fig. 1). Mild acid treatment, however, which cleaves the ketosidic linkages of Kdo residues leads to a loss of binding [1]. To investigate whether phosphates of the lipid A are important for the recog-nition of the epitope by mAb WN1 222-5, which is located distal to the lipid A, we have isolated LPS coreoligosaccharides from an RcP+ mutant of S. enterica sv Typhimurium, which differed in their glycosylation and phosphorylation. We have determined their structures by mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. ELISA inhibition studies using these oligosaccharides revealed unexpectedly that the lack of the 4’-phosphate in the lipid A improved binding considerably. This can only be explained by a long-range conformational effect on the LPS structure. [1] Müller-Loennies,S., Brade,L., MacKenzie,C.R., Di Padova,F., Brade,H., 2003. J. Biol. Chem., 278, 25618-25627 Funding by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) grant SFB470-C1 is acknowledged Figure 1: ___________________________________________________ 50 FTP36 Mats of Antibacterial Nanofibers by Electrospinning A. Greiner1,T. Röcker1, M. Distler1, J. Hehl1 1 Philipps-University Marburg, Department Chemistry, Marburg Germany Mats of antibacterial nanofibers were obtained by electrospinning of polymers doped with silver nanoparticles, quaternized polyethylene imine nanoparticles, or Maluka honey. Antibacterial activity was probed against Escherichia coli and Micrococcus luteus. Short term, instant antibacterial activity as well as long term antibacterial activity over a prolonged period of time was obtained. ___________________________________________________ FTP37 Extraordinary endocytobionts in free-living amoebae isolated from the contact lens storage cases of patients with keratitis P. Scheid1, L. Zöller1, R. Michel1 1 Zentrales Institut des Sanitaetsdienstes der Bundeswehr Koblenz, Labor für Med. Parasitologie, Koblenz, Germany Introduction:Free-living amoebae (FLA) occur ubiquitously in many aquatic habitats and humid soils. In addition to their role as pathogens, e.g. as infectious agent of „Acanthamoeba keratitis“, FLA are known to serve as natural hosts and vehicles of various intracellular organisms (bacteria, viruses and eucaryonts). Our FLA strains were recently isolated from the contact lens storage cases of two different female patients with keratitis. FLA as hosts of intracellularly replicating organisms play also a role in both of the cases. Materials and methods: Fluid from the storage case was transferred to non-nutrient agar (NNA) plates and incubated at 29° and 35°C. The FLA strains harboring endocytobionts were maintained on NNA. For electron microscopical investigations amoebae were harvested from 3-5 days old NN agarplates and from 5 to 7 days old Agar-culture and pelleted by centrifugation. Results: Within a period of three days of incubation of the sample, FLA could be detected by light microscopy at 100x magnification. Some trophozoites appeared to harbor small bacteria-like organisms of round-oval shape which replicated intracellularly within the border of the shape of the disintegrated amoeba. Both distinct endocytobionts appeared contained by a massive electron-dense outer wall – distinct structures characteristic for eucaryonts could be distinguished with the help of electron – microscopy. One of theses endocytobionts could be morphologically classified as a microsporidan-like organisms due to the clear electron microscopic results. Discussion: The detection of different FLA and other accompanying organisms, especially endocytobionts, is limited to culture methods. Whereas synergistic effects between amoebae and bacterial contaminants as factors for corneal infections have been described, the meaning of these endoparasitic organisms with respect to the pathogenesis of keratitis remains unresolved. As shown by morphology the present isolats were different from many other endocytobionts reported as yet, and identification on the genetic level is needed. ___________________________________________________ FTP38 SERION MultianalytTM Diphtheria / Tetanus / Pertussis Toxin IgG - A new multiplex immunoassay for vaccination control R. Skopek1, A. Schmiedl1, S. Reder1, I. Kühlmann1 G. Hermann1 1 Institute Virion/Serion GmbH, Wuerzburg, Germany The SERION Multianalyt™ technology is based on the principle of flow cytometry and allows the simultaneous quantification of several analytes in a small liquid sample volume. The new SERION Multianalyt™ DIPHTHERIA / TETANUS / BORDETELLA PERTUSSIS TOXIN IgG allows the simultaneous quantification of human IgG class antibodies against the toxoids of diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis. The particle-based immunoassay is recommended to be used as a vaccination control and for the determination of the current immune status in order to avoid hyperimmune reactions. The application of the test is not limited to one cytometer platform but can be achieved on all common flow cytometers. The different antibody titers are quickly and easily calculated from the raw data by using the SERION Multianalyt™ evaluation software. The test principle opens up new possibilities for the generation of innovative bioanalytical microarrays. ___________________________________________________ GIP01 Identification of genetic difference between strains of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli by polymerase chains reaction F. M. Bin jasass1, S. F. Park2 1 King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Riyadh Saudi Arabiaf 2 University of Surrey, School of Biomedical and Molecular Science, Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom The objectives of this study were to extract DNA from different strains of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli and the use of PCR assay for concurrent detection of Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11168, Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11322, Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11828, Campylobacter coli NCTC 12110, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11437, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11350, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11366, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11438, and Campylobacter coli UA585 using probes derived from the genes SADC1, SADC2, VAC1, VAC2, PPK1, and HEL2. Nine (9) bacterial strains representing species of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli were lysed with guanidium thiocyanate. Electrophoresis in agarose gels showed that the DNA obtained was of a high molecular mass. PCR amplification of Campylobacter coli UA585 DNA yielded one band of ~705 bp while it did not succeed in the specific amplification of Campylobacter coli NCTC 12110, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11437, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11350, Campylobacter coli NCTC 11366, and Campylobacter coli NCTC 11438. Also, PCR amplification of Campylobacter jejuni 11168 and Campylobacter jejuni 11828 DNA yielded one band of ~1750 bp while it did not succeed in the specific amplification for 51 Campylobacter jejuni 11322. The primers of PPK1, and HEL2 were not successful in the specific amplification for Campylobacter jejuni. ___________________________________________________ GIP02 Early steps in intestinal infection by enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) leading to barrier disruption: Esp-independent functional integration of translocated intimin receptor (Tir) of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) into host cell membranes C. Rüter1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Infectiology, ZMBE Muenster, Germany The pathogenesis of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is characterized by the type III secretion system-dependent exploitation of target cells that results in attaching and affacing (A/E) lesions, actin rearrangements, pedestal formation and a breach in gastrointestinal barrier integrity. This pathology is mediated by effector proteins, such as the translocated intimin receptor (Tir) and several E. coli secreted proteins (Esp), that are translocated by the type III secretion system into the host cell. Secretion of virulence proteins of EPEC is tightly regulated. In response to low Ca2+, Esp-secretion is drastically reduced, whereas secretion of Tir is increased. Under these conditions the membrane insertion of Tir is independent of Esps. Furthermore, espB and espD mutant strains of EPEC, unable to form the translocation pore, still translocate Tir into host cells membranes. This autointegrated Tir is functional, as it is able to complement a tir mutant strain in recruiting actin to bacterial contact sites. The uptake of Tir into the host cell appears to be dependent on the C-terminal part of the protein, as deletions in this part of Tir prevent autointegration. Taken together our results suggest, that under conditions of limited Ca2+ an alternative mechanism of functional Tir integration might trigger the first steps in infection resulting in the induction of A/E-lesions and barrier disruption. ___________________________________________________ GIP03 Molecular subdifferentiation of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli isolates from Bavaria, 2006 U. Busch1, C. Schreiber1, M. Garcia Diez1, I. Huber1 S. Hörmansdorfer1, A. Sing1 1 Bavarian Health and Food Safety Authority, Oberschleissheim Germany Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) cause diarrhea, hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) in humans. HUS is defined by a triad of features: acute renal failure, thrombocytopenia and microangiopathic haemolytic anemia. It is a leading reason for acute renal failure in childhood. Shigatoxins (Stx) are regarded to be the cardinal virulence factors of EHEC. They can be divided into two groups, Stx1 and Stx2. Subtypes are known from each group, so Stx1, Stx1c, Stx1d, Stx2, Stx2c, Stx2d, Stx2e and Stx2f. Stx2-variants, expecially Stx2 and Stx2c, are considered to be more often associated with clinical symptoms in human as Stx1subtypes. Besides the Stx, EHEC often carry the eae-gene, which encodes for intimin, an important virulence factor for severe illness in humans. Other virulence factors are EHECenterohemolysin encoded by the hly-gene and the novel subtilase cytotoxin (SubAB). SubAB was first describes from an Australien non-O157- STEC-strain linked to an outbreak of HUS. In mice it causes microangiopathy, suggesting a direct role in endothelial damage. In the year 2006 stool samples of 154 persons were tested positive for stx1 and/or stx2 by real-time-PCR (LightCycler®, Roche Diagnostics) after growing up on ENDO-agar-plates (37°C, 18h) and suspending in sterile NaCl. These probes were investigated for further virulence factors: for the eae- and hlygene also by real- time-PCR (LightCycler®, Roche Diagnostics) and for the subAB-gene by PCR. This method was described by Paton and Paton (2005) (1). Furthermore a subtyping was done by melting-curve analyses, as first described by Reischl et al. (2002) (2). We found 77 samples (50%) positive for stx1 only, 56 (36%) positive for stx2 only and 21 samples positive for stx1 and stx2 (14%). 4 samples were subAB positive. (1) Paton AW, Paton JC (2005). Multiplex PCR for Direct Detection of Shiga Toxigenic Escherichia coli Strains Producing the Novel Subtilase Cytotoxin. J Clin Microbiol 43 (6), 29442947. (2) Reischl U, Youssef MT, Kiliwinski J, Lehn N, Zhang WL, Karch H, Stockbine NA (2002). Real- Time Fluorescence PCR Assays for Detection and Charakterization of Shiga Toxin, Intimin, and Enterohemolysin Genes from Shiga Toxin- Producing Escherichia coli. J Ciln Microbiol 40 (7), 2555- 2565. ___________________________________________________ GIP04 Immunization with H. pylori lysate in combination with CpG-ODN and cholera toxin in the Mongolian Gerbil model of H. pylori-infection S. Denk1, N. Lehn1, A. Hartmann2, Schneider-Brachert1 1 University Ratisbon, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Ratisbon, Germany 2 University Ratisbon, Institute for Pathology, Germany CpG oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) stimulate Th1-type immune responses and activate the innate immune system to produce proinflammatory cytokines. In contrast, cholera toxin (CT) is a potent mucosal adjuvant to co-administered antigens resulting in a Th-2 immune response. A combination of H. pylori lysate, CpG-ODN and CT has been shown to result in sterile immunity towards H. pylori infection in mice. We examined the immunostimulatory effects of both adjuvants in combination with H. pylori lysate in the Mongolian Gerbil model of H. pylori-infection. Starting ten weeks before infection with H. pylori all gerbils received five i.n. immunizations at intervals of two weeks with CpG and/ or CT all in combination with H. pylori lysate. After four weeks and after eight weeks animals were killed, blood was collected for antibody titer determination and the stomachs were removed for analysis of cytokine and chemokine response, histology and mucosal colonisation. All infected gerbils showed increased antibody titers against H. pylori compared to non-infected animals, but those treated with 52 lysate, CpG-ODN and/or CT had even higher titers. Histological signs of inflammation could be seen in all infected animals however gerbils treated with cholera toxin showed more severe histopathological changes in the gastric antrum. The mucosal colonisation in the stomach decreased significantly after four weeks in those animals who received the combination of lysate, CpG-ODN and CT which was not observable after eight weeks of infection. Expression of cytokines and chemokines was analysed by quantitative PCR (TaqMan). After four weeks of infection the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1 beta, TNF, IL-6, the regulatory cytokine IL-10 and the chemokines MIF, KC, Mip-2 showed elevated secretion especially in those animals treated with lysate, CpG-ODN or CT. The combination of lysate, CpG-ODN and CT resulted in an additional increase in expression levels. This effect was only transient and could not be detected after eight weeks of infection. The combination of lysate, CpG-ODN and CT in the Mongolian Gerbil model of H. pylori-infection resulted in a transient immunostimulatory effect which did not result in sterile immunity as has been shown in mice. However we observed a longer period of infection. Although CT is known as a potent mucosal Th-2 adjuvant, it was able to increase all cytokine and chemokine expression levels and leading to more severe histological changes in the gastric mucosa. But despite the enhanced inflammation it does not seem to clear H. pylori infection. ___________________________________________________ GIP05 Genetic background and mobility of the non-LEE encoded effector a of pathogenic E. coli S. Stingel1, K. Creuzburg1, H. Schmidt1 1 University of Hohenheim, Institute of Food Sciences and Biotechnology, Stuttgart, Germany Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) can damage epithelial cells by injecting type III effector proteins through a type III secretion system (T3SS) into the cytoplasm of their host cell. The T3SS and some effector proteins are encoded within a chromosomal pathogenicity island termed the “locus of enterocyte effacement” (LEE). It was shown, that genes of other type III effector proteins are localized outside the LEE in the genome of cryptic or intact prophages. One of these effector proteins is NleA (“Non-LEE encoded Effector A”), the function of which is still unknown. We detected nleA in 150 out of 170 EHEC and enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) strains. Up to now 15 different nleA-variants are known, which show between 71% to 96% identity at the deduced amino acid level. Plaque-hybridization was used to prove the hypothesis, that nleA-variants are generally encoded within inducible prophages. Moreover, we investigated the linkage of nleA and Shiga Toxin (stx). We could detect three of the nleA-variants in the genome of inducible bacteriophages. In addition, all stx2-positive isolates carried stx2 on an inducible phage, whereas Stx1-converting phages were just partly inducible. The already characterized prophage BP-4795 of E. coli O84:H4 strain 4795/97 harbors beside nleA also stx1. In contrast, the genes nleA and stx are encoded in the genome of different phages in the so far tested strains. The nleA-variants are located downstream of the tail fiber genes in the already sequenced prophages. In the majority of cases, ISelements and genes of further type III effector proteins are located in the neighborhood of nleA. Among these, nleH occurred most frequently. This study supports the assumption, that bacteriophages contribute essentially to the evolution of virulence factors of pathogenic E. coli. ___________________________________________________ GIP06 Leucine-responsive regulatory protein (Lrp) is involved in transcriptional regulation of the adherence/lymphocyte inhibitory factor gene efa/lifA in EHEC strain RW1374 (O103:H2) L. H. Wieler1, U. Böhnke1, J. Jores1, K. Tedin1 1 Free University Berlin, Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany EHEC are the most common cause of hemorrhagic colitis, haemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS), a leading cause of acute renal failure in children [1]. Ruminants, especially cattle, are the main transient reservoir of EHEC, which are transmitted to humans primarily via contaminated food and water [2, 3, 4]. In addition to the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE), Shigatoxin and haemolysin, these pathotypes may express several other potential virulence genes. One of these virulenceassociated genes, the EHEC factor for adherence/lymphocyte inhibitory factor (efa1/lifA), was described as part of the LEE pathogenicity islands of the bovine O103:H2 EHEC strain RW1374 (PAI IRW1374); [5]. Although efa1/lifA is the largest virulence-associated E. coli gene known so far, its function and regulation are currently not studied well. Here we identified the transcriptional start site of the efa1/lifA gene and determined the promoter activities of an efa1/lifA promoter-lacZ fusion in E. coli K-12. While the strongest promoter activity was observed in complex medium, the promoter was most active during the early logarithmic phase in all media tested. This regulation parallels the expression patterns of two global regulatory proteins, Leucine-responsive regulatory protein (Lrp) and Factor for inversion stimulation (Fis), suggesting either regulation by these factors or a similar growth phase control. We therefore examined the effects on efa1/lifA expression in lrp and fis mutant strain backgrounds as well as the influence of different growth media. The results suggest that Lrp plays a role in the regulation of efa1/lifA expression, possibly in a complex with Fis. 1. Karch, H. et al. 2005. Int J Med Microbiol 295:405-18. 2. Karch, H., et al. (1999) Infect. Immun. 67:5994-6001. 3. Wieler, L. H. et al. (1998) J. Clin. Microbiol. 36, 1604-1607 4. Wieler, L. H. et al. (2007) Berl. Muench. Tieraerztl. Wochenschr. (im Druck). 5. Jores, J. et al. (2005) Int. J. Med. Microbiol. 294, 417-425 ___________________________________________________ 53 GIP07 E. coli Nissle 1917 inhibits EPEC infection by its adherence via F1C fimbria S. Kleta1, M. Nordhoff1, K. Tedin2, L. H. Wieler2, S. Oswald3 T. Ölschläger3, W. Bleiß4, G. Holland5, P. Schierack1 1 Free University Berlin, Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany 2 Free University Berlin, Institute of Microbiology and Berlin, Germany 3 University Wuerzburg, IMIB, Wuerzburg, Germany 4 Humboldt-University, LMP, Berlin, Germany 5 Robert-Koch-Institute, Berlin, Germany The probiotic E. coli strain Nissle 1917 (EcN) is thought to be effective in the treatment of chronic inflammatory intestinal diseases and shows strong inhibitory effects on adherent and invasive intestinal bacterial pathogens in in vitro studies. In this study we determined the ability of EcN to influence host cell infection by enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), an important diarrheogenic pathogen in humans and animals, in an in vitro porcine intestinal epithelial cell model (IPEC-J2). Preincubation of IPEC-J2 with EcN was found to drastically reduce the infection efficiency of EPEC in a concentration dependent manner, suggesting EcN interferes with early interactions of EPEC with host cells. While attachment and formation of microcolonies was reduced, adherent bacteria still formed attaching and effacing lesions. Further studies revealed that EcN adherence to porcine epithelial cells is largely mediated via F1C fimbria. This adhesion mediates the probiotic effect since a non-adherent EcN foc mutant did not reduce EPEC infection. A commensal E. coli wild type strain lacking F1C fimbriae with low adherence and no probiotic effect showed strong adhesion and an inhibitory effect on EPEC infection after introduction of a complementing plasmid harbouring the foc gene cluster. In addition to F1C fimbriae, we also show that EcN flagellae are also involved in the adhesion process and probiotic action. The H1 flagellae of EcN forms a bacterial network on the host cell surface. A nonflagellated EcN fliA mutant showed reduced adhesion and a reduced capacity to inhibit EPEC infection. In conclusion, the inhibitory effect of EcN on the infection of porcine intestinal epithelial cells with EPEC is mediated by its adherence via F1C fimbriae and H1 flagellae. ___________________________________________________ GIP09 Escherichia coli O26 strains: influence of geography, host animal and stx gene on virulence characteristics I. Aktan1, B. Carter1, H. Wilking2, R. M. La Ragione1 M. J. Woodward1, L. H. Wieler3, M. F. Anjum1 1 Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Department of Food and Environmental Safety, Weybridge, United Kingdom 2 Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute, Institute for Epidemiology Wusterhausen, Germany 3 Free University Berlin, Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany In this study, the influence of geography, host animal and presence of the stx gene on the virulence characteristics of Escherichia coli O26 strains was determined. A clear association was found between the virulence profile and geographic origin of shiga-toxigenic E. coli (STEC) O26 strains, with UK STEC O26 strains harbouring virtually identical profiles whilst central European strains showing considerable heterogeneity in plasmid encoded genes. The former group were also more likely to be non-motile and katP gene positive. Comparison of UK STEC and aEPEC O26 strains showed presence of the stx1 gene was positively correlated with presence of espP and katP genes, and negatively associated with presence of the yagP-yagT region and rhamnose fermentation. In contrast to the uniform profiles of STEC O26 strains from the UK, aEPEC O26 strains of bovine and ovine origin showed very diverse profiles both within and between groups, and could not be separated into discrete groups. Therefore this study has shown the characteristics of UK O26 isolates are distinct from O26 strains from other regions in Central Europe, arguing for a recent clonal spread of O26 (or: emerging O26 clone) in the UK. Such differences are expected to influence the zoonotic potential of this pathogen and the incidence of O26 associated human disease ___________________________________________________ GIP10 Role of protein kinase C in Helicobacter pylori-induced actin cytoskeletal rearrangements. S. Brandt1, S. Wessler2, R. Hartig3, W. König1, S. Backert1 1 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Department of Medical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany 2 Paul-Ehrlich-Institute, Junior Research Group, Langen Germany 3 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Department of Immunology Magdeburg, Germany Helicobacter pylori translocates the CagA effector protein through type IV secretion system (T4SS) into AGS gastric epithelial cells. Tyrosine phosphorylation of CagA by Src and Abl family kinases triggers global changes in the actin cytoskeleton leading to the ‘scattering’ phenotype and AGS cell elongation but the signalling events involved are not fully understood. Time-lapse video microscopy revealed that AGS cells infected by CagA-positive H. pylori become elongated because they fail to release their back ends during cell locomotion due to a retraction defect. Consistent with a model in which CagA causes host cell elongation by inhibiting the disassembly of adhesive cell contacts at migrating cells lagging ends, immunohistochemical analysis revealed that focal adhesions complexes persist at the distal tips of elongated cell projections. Thus, our data implicate a different set of signaling molecules in the elongation phenotype than those previously suspected. We found that protein kinase C (PKC) is another crucial mediator essential of the H. pylori-induced elongation phenotype. PKC comprises a large family of serine/threonine kinases which are activated by many extracellular signals. To gain insights into the role of PKC during H. pylori infection we evaluated in a time course of infection the activation-dependent phosphorylation state of individual PKC members and compared our data with PMA (phorbol myristate acetate), a common cell-permeable activator of PKCs. Finally, we used specific siRNA and a set of at least 10 pharmacological inhibitors to analyze the effect of the individual PKC family 54 isoforms on the H. pylori- induced actin-cytoskeletal rearrangements involved in the elongation phenotype. ___________________________________________________ GIP11 Characterization of the genes associated with motility of Campylobacter jejuni. J. I. Dasti1, V. Simon1, R. Lugert1, R. Schmidt-Ott1, U. Gross1 1 University of Goettingen, Medical Microbiology, Goettingen Germany Campylobacter jejuni is known as the most frequent bacterial cause of foodborne-illness in the developed world including Germany, where the reported number is more than 60,000 cases in a year. Despite the recent completion of its genome sequence, little is known about the pathogenesis of the disease caused by this bacterium. Different factors are reported to be contributing in this lack of understanding of the pathogenesis of campylobacteriosis, likewise, the unavailability of an efficient system of experimental genetics, the lack of appropriate animal models for the disease, and the genetic diversity of C. jejuni strains. By considering all these factors we collected lab strains, NCTC11168, NCTC11828, 81-176 and eighty-three clinical isolates and more precisely determined them by combining biochemical and molecular markers. Transposon mutagenesis of C. jejuni chromosomal DNA was performed by using the in-vivo transposition method, which produced a random transposon mutant library consisting of 660 individual mutants. The BALB/c mouse model was optimized for an in-vivo genetic screen of the random mutants. The genetic screen of C. jejuni mutant library identified 3 mutants defective for their flagellar motility, an important virulence determinant of C. jejuni. In addition, electron microscope analysis revealed flagellated and non-flagellated non-motile mutants of C. jejuni. ___________________________________________________ GIP12 Irritable bowel syndrome - A pharmacoepidemiologic investigation M. Ostin1, T. Liliana1, S. Mircea Gabriel1, M. Cosmina1 1 "Gr.T.Popa" University of Medicine and Pharmacy Pharmacology Department, Iasi, Romania This article presents a pharmacoepidemiologic investigation in patients suffering from irritable bowel syndrome. The study was carried on 25 patients with irritable bowel syndrome using an questionaire about abdominal pain, other symptoms and the pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment. From analysis and statistical processing of data results that a half of patients presents abdominal pain with medium intensity, according to a visual analog scale. The results of the study shows that pharmacological treatment consists especially of using metoclopramide and anticolinergic drugs. ___________________________________________________ GIP13 Probiotic Therapy of Prolonged Non-specific Diarrhoea in Infants and Toddlers by Treatment with E. coli Nissle 1917 J. Henker1, B. M. Blokhin2, Y. K. Bolbot3, V. G. Maydannik4 C. Wolff5, J. Schulze5, U. Sonnenborn5 1 University Hospital Carl-Gustav-Carus, Department of Paediatrics, Dresden, Germany 2 Russian State Medical University, Moscow, Russia 3 Dnepropetrovsk State Medical Academy, Dnepropetrovsk 4 National Medical University, Ukraina 5 Ardeypharm GmbH, Herdecke, Germany Background: Infants and toddlers with prolonged diarrhoea are in danger of developing dehydration and a rapid deterioration of their general state of health. Since no effective causal therapy exists so far, the efficacy of the probiotic E. coli strain Nissle 1917 (EcN) for the treatment of prolonged diarrhoea was compared to placebo in a confirmatory, randomized, doubleblind clinical trial. Patients and Methods: 151 children aged 1 to 47 months (mean: 25 months) with prolonged non-specific diarrhoea (>3 watery or loose stools without blood in 24 hours of a diarrhoeal episode, persisting for more than 4 consecutive days but not longer than 14 days) were randomized in a double-blind design to receive either the probiotic EcN suspension (n = 75) or placebo (n = 76). All children were slightly dehydrated (5 - 10% loss of body weight) and received oral rehydration (according to WHO) once at the beginning of the study. Then, depending on the age of the infants, 1 to 3 ml verum (containing 108 viable EcN bacteria/ml) or placebo suspension were given orally per day for 21 days. Results: The response rate (number of patients showing a decrease of stool frequency to less than 3 watery or loose stools in 24 hours over a period of at least 4 consecutive days) was higher in the EcN group than in the placebo group and increased continuously from day 7 (EcN 78.7%, placebo 59.2%) and day 14 (EcN 93.3%, placebo 65.8%) to day 21 (EcN 98.7%, placebo 71.1%). Therapeutical superiority for EcN compared to placebo was statistically significant on days 14 (p=0.0017) and 21 (p<0.0001). The duration of diarrhoea was shortened by 3.3 days. Treatment with EcN was very well tolerated by the children. Conclusion: Due to its clinical efficacy and its excellent tolerability the probiotic EcN is a suitable remedy for the treatment of prolonged non-specific diarrhoea. ___________________________________________________ GIP14 Effects of different commensal bacteria on the repopulation of donor T cells in an adoptive T cell transfer model K. Fink1, F. Leithäuser2, M. Müller1, F. Kahl1, J. Reimann3 I. B. Autenrieth1, J. - S. Frick1 1 University Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology, Tuebingen Germany 2 University Ulm, Pathology, Ulm, Germany 3 University Ulm, Internal Medicine I, Ulm, Germany The adoptive transfer of CD4+ T cells into immuno-deficient hosts is a well known model of inflammatory bowel disease. The development of colitis in this model is associated with the accumulation of activated CD4+ T cells of the Th1 phenotype in 55 the colonic lamina propria and results in severe colitis within 46 weeks. Factors driving the Th1-biased T cell responses like for example the CD4+ T cell subset and the bacterial antigen inducing inflammatory responses, as well as the APC stimulating the response are still not defined. We monocolonized germfree RAG1-/- with either B. vulgatus or E. coli mpk. In previous studies B. vulgatus revealed in the IBD model of IL-2 deficient mice a protective, E. coli mpk a colitogenic potential. The RAG1-/- mice were transplanted with CD4+ T cells from healthy BL/6 donor mice and monitored for signs of intestinal inflammation. Furthermore histopathological changes and the phenotype of T cells and DCs from spleen, MLN and cLP of monocolonized transplanted RAG1-/- mice were analysed. Surprisingly, only mice colonized with E. coli mpk showed a repopulation and accumulation of donor T cells in spleen, MLN and cLP. However no symptoms of colitis were observable in E. coli colonized mice. This might be due to the fact that the repopulated T cells showed enhanced expression of CD103, suggesting that colonization with E. coli mpk promotes proliferation of Tregs which might contribute to the maintenance of immune homeostasis in the intestine thereby preventing inflammatory bowel disease. This data indicate that certain bacterial strains might account for repopulation of donor T cells but further additional colitogenic stimuli are necessary for the induction of inflammatory bowel disease. ___________________________________________________ GIP15 Functional characterization and mutagenesis of the Helicobacter hepaticus motility regulator FliA T. Sterzenbach1, J. Schulze1, W. Behrens1, B. Brenneke1 E. Katzowitsch1, S. Sürbaum1, C. Josenhans1 1 Hanover Medical University, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Hanover, Germany The enterohepatic Helicobacter species Helicobacter hepaticus is a model organism belonging to the large group of enterohepatic Helicobacters which persistently colonize the intestinal tract of humans and various animals including mice. H. hepaticus has originally been identified as a cause of liver cancer in wild type mice, and naturally colonizes the upper bowel of mice. It is a quite prevalent infectious agent in research laboratory mouse colonies. In several strains of immunocompromised mice, it may also cause chronic inflammation of the intestinal tract, similar to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in humans, colitis and colon carcinoma, and therefore is used as a natural model for possible infectious causes of these diseases. Properties of immune evasion by H. hepaticus have been implicated in persistent colonization and in the diseases that those bacteria may trigger, but little is known about the natural requirements for the bacteria to persistently colonize their intestinal niche. Specific factors of host susceptibility for infection, or bacterial properties which may aid to establish the infection or be essential for persistence, except for the toxin CDT, have not been investigated. According to the published genome sequence of H. hepaticus, the motility system of H. hepaticus is quite similar to the one of Helicobacter pylori, which has been studied in some detail. A central regulator of late motility genes, FliA, is also present in H. hepaticus. The aim of the present study was to characterize the function of FliA in H. hepaticus in vitro and in vivo for its role in mouse colonization. Results: A mutant in H. hepaticus fliA was successfully constructed by allelic exchange mutagenesis. The mutant was non-motile, but displayed truncated flagella and a slightly altered cellular morphology. H. hepaticus fliA mutants did not express the flagellin FlaA, which is the main flagellin protein of the bacterium and expressed by two identical gene loci. H. hepaticus mutants deficient in fliA were assayed in a noncompetitive mouse model for their colonization ability in comparison to wild type-infected mice. FliA mutants showed a strongly diminished ability to initially colonize mice compared to wild type. Regulatory features of the fliA mutant in vitro were studied by H. hepaticus whole genome microarray and will be discussed. In conclusion, this study established FliA of H. hepaticus as a central motility regulator and as an essential factor to establish initial colonization. ___________________________________________________ GIP16 Characterization of Shiga toxin 1 receptors by mass spectrometry C. H. Schweppe1, M. Bielaszewska1, H. Karch1 J. Peter-Katalinic2, J. Müthing2 1 University of Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany 2 University of Muenster, Institute for Medical Physics and Biophysics, Muenster, Germany The combination of mass spectrometry with immunochemical overlay detection is a convenient tool for the full structural characterization of glycosphingolipids (GSLs). Sugar-binding proteins such as GSL-specific antibodies or toxins give structural information about the oligosaccharide type. Mass spectrometry provides detailed information about the type and sequence of the monosaccharides and the ceramide moiety consisting of sphingosine and a fatty acid of variable chain length. GSLs of the globo-series separated by high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) are detected with an immunoassay comparable to an ELISA using Shiga toxin (Stx) 1, anti-Stx1 antibodies and alkaline phosphatase conjugated secondary antibodies. GSLs are extracted from Stx1-positive HPTLC-bands and applied to mass spectrometry. GSLs were isolated from mammalian cells which express the ?high-affinity? Stx1-receptor globotriaosylceramide (Gb3Cer/CD77). After HPTLC-separation and immunodetection, Gb3Cer species were extracted from the silica gel and applied to mass spectrometry. Substitution of the constant sphingosine moiety of Gb3Cer with dominating short and long chain fatty acids results in a double band on the HPTLC-plate. This ceramide heterogeneity is shown for various Stx1-detected Gb3Cer species permitting their full structural characterization. The mass spectra obtained revealed full series of Y- and Z-type and B- and C-type fragment ions, indicating the sequential loss of the three hexose moieties from the Gb3Cer molecules. Thus, the MS data together with the overlay assay of Gb3Cer-specific Stx1 provide the complete receptor structures. ___________________________________________________ 56 GIP17 Interaction of EHEC-Hemolysin with endothelial and intestinal epithelial cells T. Aldick1, M. Bielaszewska1, W. Zhang1, J. Brockmeyer1 A. W. Friedrich1, K. S. Kim2, M. A. Schmidt3, H. Karch1 1 University Muenster, Institute of Hygiene, Muenster, Germany 2 John-Hopkins-University School of Medicine, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Baltimore, MD, USA 3 University Muenster, Institute of Infectiology, Center for Molecular Biology of Inflammation (ZMBE), Muenster Germany Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) cause hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) which is the leading cause of acute renal failure in children. In the pathogenesis of HUS a microvascular endothelial damage, in particular in renal glomeruli, plays the central role. Stxs are believed to be the major precipitants of this vascular injury. Recently, we isolated from patients with HUS E. coli strains of serotype O26:H11 which contained no stx-genes; the patients had no other evidence of STEC infection. Because this finding was unexpected, further investigation of these strains for other potential virulence markers and their interaction with human intestinal epithelial cells and endothelial cells was performed. We could demonstrate that all isolates possessed several genes (eae, efa1, iha) coding for adhesins. These strains adhered efficiently to HCT-8, Caco-2 and T84 intestinal epithelial cell lines. Furthermore, all isolates harboured the operon (EHEChlyCABD) encoding for EHEC hemolysin (EHEC-Hly) and displayed the corresponding enterohemolytic phenotype. They caused a time- and dose-dependent cytotoxicity to human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC) and the human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC)-derived cell line EA.hy926. A spontaneous EHEC-hly negative derivate of one of these strains displayed a non-toxic pattern. Therefore we assessed the ability of recombinant EHEC-Hly cloned from an E. coli O26 strain to cause LDH-release as an overt marker for cytotoxicity. The EHEC-Hly caused similar cytotoxic effects towards the endothelial cells which was observed for the EHECHly-producing bacteria, indicating that the cytoxicity of the stxnegative EHEC-Hly-positive E. coli O26 strains was induced by EHEC-Hly. We conclude that their adherence capacity to the intestinal epithelium as well as the expression of a non-Stx endothelium-damaging factor might add to the ability of these stx-negative E. coli O26 to cause severe disease. ___________________________________________________ GIP18 Characterization of bacteria-binding glycosphingolipids by mass spectrometry A. Müsken1, W. Zhang1, J. Souady2, K. Dreisewerd2 M. Bielaszweska1, A. W. Friedrich1, J. Peter-Katalinic2 H. Karch1, J. Müthing2 1 University of Muenster, Institute of Hygiene, Muenster Germany 2 University Muenster, Institute for Medical Physics and Biophysics, Muenster, Germany The presented method allows the full structural characterization of bacteria-binding glycosphingolipids (GSLs) directly on the high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) plate with low amounts of receptors. The bacterial adhesion assay was established with bacteria with well known GSL binding specificity. After the separation of a mixture of GSLs on silica gel-precoated HPTLC plates the binding-specificity of bacteria can be determined in an overlay assay. For this purpose the HPTLC plates are incubated with the bacteria of interest, and the GSL-receptors can be identified in a solid phase binding assay similar to common ELISA methodologies. Binding of bacteria to GSL receptors was proved with a polyclonal antibody and the appropriate alkaline phosphatase labeled secondary antibody, which mediates the color reaction (BCIP) to visualize the bound GSLs. The positive GSLs were further structurally characterized directly on the HPTLC plate by use of soft-ionization mass spectrometry. Their complete structures, including composition details of the ceramide part and the oligosaccharide moiety of various GSL species, were obtained. This combination of overlay assay and mass spectrometry should be applicable to identify the receptors of any type of GSL-binding bacteria. ___________________________________________________ GIP19 Investigation of Shiga-toxin 1 induced cellular damage A. Bauwens1,M. Bielaszewska1, H. Karch1, H. Schweppe1 R. Reichelt2, B. Kemper3, P. Langehanenberg3, G. von Bally3 J. Peter-Katalini2, J. Müthing2 1 University Clinic, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster, Germany 2 University of Muenster, Institute for medical Physics and Biophysics, Muenster, Germany 3 University of Muenster, Laboratory of Biophysics, Muenster Germany Shiga toxin (Stx) producing E. coli (STEC) are responsible for life-threatening zoonotic food- or water-borne illness. STEC infections result in a spectrum of outcomes ranging from asymptomatic carriage to uncomplicated diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, and the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). Stx 1 is an AB5-toxin produced by several STEC-strains. The B-subunit pentamer of Stx1 interacts via 15 binding sites for its glycosphingolipid receptor globotriaosylceramide (Gb3Cer/CD77). Binding of Stx1 to Gb3Cer on endothelial cells is postulated to be a critical event underlying the vascular injury during STEC-mediated diseases. In this study we explored Stx1mediated cytotoxic action and cellular damage of endothelial cells. To determine the cytotoxic potential of Stx1, serial dilutions of the toxin were incubated with confluent monolayers grown in 96 well microtitre plates. Scanning electron microscopy revealed cellular damage leading to cell irregularity, cellular injury, detachment, and partial disruption of cell monolayers. The most obvious effect of Stx1 was a drop of surface microvilli. Stx1caused cell death occurred after 20 to 50 h as shown by long term time lapse measurements of dynamic changes of the cells’ shape using digital holographic microscopy of single cells. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated the expression of the Stx1-receptor Gb3Cer and globotetraosylceramide (Gb4Cer). The presence of Gb3Cer apparently underlies the Stx1 sensitivity and might be related to cell death. 57 Vascular injury during STEC infections most likely results from the action of Stxs on vascular endothelial cells. An increasing knowledge about the molecular mechanisms by which Stxs interact with their target cells is important not only for the elucidation of pathways of intracellular transport of Stx, but also for the development of preventive and therapeutic measures for STEC-mediated diseases. Acknowledgements This work is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant SPP 11330) and the IZKF Muenster (Ka2/061/04). ___________________________________________________ GIV01 Chromatin modification and regulation of p21 WAF1 promoter in Helicobacter pylori infected gastric epithelial cells G. Xia1,2, A. Diestel3, C. Habold3, S. Krüger3, A. Rössner3 M. Naumann2, U. Lendeckel2, R. Schneider-Stock3 1 University Hospital Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Institute for Experimental Medicine, Magdeburg, Germany 3 Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Institute for Pathology, Magdeburg, Germany Aims: Pathogenic bacteria have acquired the capacity to modulate the transcriptional machinery of host cells. Only little is known about the ability of the human pathogen H pylori to modify the chromatin architecture. We aimed to determine the influence of H pylori infection on chromatin modifications in gastric epithelial cells. As an example the epigenetic regulation at the promoter of the cell cycle regulator p21WAF1 was investigated. Methods: H pylori strain P1 was used to infect gastric epithelial tumor cell line NCI-N87 and mRNA and proteins were prepared after 3, 6, and 24h. The modulation of chromatin modifying enzyme such as methyltransferases (DNMT1, 3A, 3B), histone acetyltransferases (p300, PCAF), and histone deacetylase (HDAC1), acetylated histones H3 and H4 (acH4, acH3), p53, and p21WAF1 were analyzed by western-blot or real-time RTPCR. Chromatin immunoprecipitation was performed to study the epigenetic regulation at the p21WAF1 promoter. The formation of -H2A.X foci as a sign of DNA-damage was studied by immunofluorescence microscopy. Results: Chromatin modifying enzymes were modulated in H pylori infected cells. An up-regulation of p21WAF1 was detected both in NCI-N87 cells and primary cells 6h post infection. This was associated with a higher p53 and acH4 binding at the p21WAF1 Sp1-promoter region. Simultaneously, HDAC1 was released from this promoter site. P21WAF1 up-regulation was not associated with H pylori induced ROS-dependent DNA-damage which was confirmed by treatment with the ROS scavenger Nacetylcystein. Conclusions: We show for the first time, that H pylori infection results in global modification of chromatin in gastric epithelial cells and thus influences gene transcription by direct epigenetic effects on gene promoters. ___________________________________________________ GIV02 Helicobacter pylori controls serine and tyrosine phosphorylation of cortactin to induce actin-cytoskeletal rearrangements and host cell scattering N. Tegtmeyer1, R. Wittelsberger1, S. Brandt1, W. König1 F. Meyer2, N. Martinez-Quiles3, S. Backert1 1 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Department of Medical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany 2 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Department of Surgery, Magdeburg, Germany 3 University of Madrid, Institute for Microbiology, Madrid, Spain Cortactin is an actin-binding protein and central regulator of the actin cytoskeleton. In vitro, cortactin binds and activates NWASP via its SH3 domain to stimulate actin polymerization by the Arp2/3 complex. Cortactin is a target for phosphorylation by Src kinases and by serine/threonine kinases that include Erk1/2, however, the mechanism by which cortactin phosphorylation events modulate the architecture of the actin cytoskeleton in vivo is unknown. Interestingly, cortactin is also a common target exploited by microbes during infection. We have used Helicobacter pylori as a model system to study the role and function of cortactin during infection of gastric epithelial cells. H. pylori translocates the CagA effector protein into the host cell cytoplasm of target cells where it induces both the activation of Erk and the inactivation of Src signaling. This induces the redistribution of cortactin to actin-rich cellular protrusions and global rearrangements of the host cell actin cytoskeleton leading to cell scattering. We monitored the phosphorylation status of cortactin over the time course of infection using phosphospecific antibodies. In addition, we produced a series of phosphorylation-deficient and phosphorylation-mimicking cortactin constructs fused to GFP to study their role in H. pylori-induced phenotypical outcome. We show that the serine-phosphorylated form of cortactin strongly increased its ability to trigger host cell elongation and scattering. By contrast, overexpression of cortactin mimicking its tyrosinephosphorylated form strongly reduced the latter activity and even suppressed serine-phosphorylated cortactin. Thus, Src phosphorylation terminates cortactin activation and blocks cell scattering during H. pylori infection. These findings support an in vivo model where Erk or Src phosphorylation of cortactin acts as a molecular switch modulating its ability to trigger host cell elongation and scattering. Taken together, injected CagA specifically triggers the activation of cortactin by two independent pathways, the stimulation of Erk and inactivation of Src. This has an important impact on how H. pylori abuses cortactin to control the architecture of the host actin cytoskeleton and cell scattering. These processes may contribute to the development of gastric cancer by H. pylori infection. ___________________________________________________ GIV03 Time course analysis of Helicobacter pylori colonization in Mongolian gerbils: Role of cag-pathogenicity island on physiological and immunological markers T. Wiedemann1, M. Stoeckelhuber2, M. Stolte3, R. Haas1 G. Rieder1 1 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute, Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Munich, Germany 58 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Institute of Anatomy Munich, Germany 3 Institute of Pathology, Clinic Bayreuth, Bayreuth, Germany Colonization of H. pylori in the stomach is associated with the development of several gastroduodenal diseases. Recently, we and others have shown that the development of precancerous conditions in Mongolian gerbils is associated with the colonization of the corpus mucosa by H. pylori type I strains expressing the cag-pathogenicity island (cagPAI). Thus strains inducing a severe corpus dominant gastritis after seven months of infection. Aim: Therefore, we continued to investigate the effect of the cagPAI on physiological and immunological markers of the gastric mucosa of H. pylori-infected gerbils during a long-term colonization experiment. Methods: Mongolian gerbils (n = 150) were infected with H. pylori B128 (WT) or an isogenic cagY-mutant for 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 64 weeks. Paraffin sections of antrum and corpus mucosa were graded for H. pylori infection, histological changes stained specifically, and verified by immunohistochemistry. Physiological markers like colonization density, pH, gastrin, and somatostatin were measured. Frozen biopsies were used for qRT-PCR of several inflammatory markers. Results: In comparison to the mutant, WT-infected corpus mucosa revealed a severe inflammation already after several weeks accompanied with a significant up-rise of proinflammatory cytokines like IL1-ß, TNF-a, IFN-g, and KC. Physiological markers (pH, gastrin) as well as histological changes of the mucosa towards atrophy, metaplasia, and dysplasia were occurring in a later phase of the experiment. Interestingly, the colonization density of WT-infected gerbils is uprising in the corpus continuously over the time period. After 14 months of WT infection we found severe histological changes of the corpus showing typical precancerous markers and prominent gastritis cystica profunda. Conclusion: Our data reveal that an intact cagPAI is responsible for an early and severe corpus inflammation associated with an increased expression of cytokines. These cytokines regulate the physiology of the stomach followed by severe histological redifferentiation towards the intestinal type. In general, our study indicates early markers for late gastric diseases that represent important risk factors. ___________________________________________________ GIV04 Genetic analysis of the functional interplay between SurA, Skp and PpiD in the maturation of integral outer membrane proteins in Escherichia coli Y. Matern1, S. Behrens1 1 Georg-August-University Goettingen, Institute for Microbiology and Genetics, Dep. Molekular Genetics and preparative Molecular Biology, Goettingen, Germany Integral beta-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) contribute to the pathogenicity of many virulent Gram-negative bacteria. Several folding factors have been proposed to facilitate the folding and assembly of these proteins in Escherichia coli. A main player in OMP maturation, which has recently been shown to also affect virulence of uropathogenic E. coli [1], is the periplasmic chaperone and peptidyl-prolyl isomerase (PPIase) SurA. Lack of SurA chaperone activity results in reduced levels of the major integral OMPs, the porins, concomitant with a defective outer membrane and a constitutively induced sigmaEdependent extracytoplasmic stress response. In addition, the small periplasmic chaperone Skp and the inner membraneanchored PPIase PpiD have been suggested to affect OMP folding. Most importantly, the combined deletion of SurA with either Skp or PpiD was reported to cause synthetic lethality, and overproduction of PpiD to substitute for SurA function [2,3,4]. This prompted us to more closely examine the functional interplay between SurA, Skp and PpiD. Our data call the previously suggested role of PpiD in OMP maturation into question. Yet, while PpiD in our system neither substitutes for SurA nor for Skp function, we found moderate overproduction of PpiD to complement the lethal phenotype of a surA skp double mutant in a PPIase-independent manner. We currently examine whether this effect is caused by an indirect mechanism or by the weak chaperone-like activity we observed for PpiD in vitro. [1] Justice et al. (2006) Infect. Immun. 74, 4793-4800. [2] Behrens et al. (2001) EMBO J. 20, 285-294. [3] Rizzitello et al. (2001) J. Bacteriol. 183, 6794-6800. [4] Dartigalongue and Raina (1998) EMBO J. 14, 3968-3980. ___________________________________________________ GIV05 Host cell invasion of Campylobacter jejuni: importance of the small Rho GTPases Rac1 and Cdc42 and the bacterial fibronectin-binding protein CadF M. Krause-Gruszczynska1, M. Rohde2, W. König1 M. E. Konkel3, S. Backert1 1 Otto-von-Guericke University, Medical Microbiology Magdeburg, Germany 2 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Microbial Pathogenesis, Brunswich, Germany 3 Washington State University, School of Molecular Biosciences Pullman, USA Host cell invasion of the food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni is one of the primary reasons of tissue damage in humans but molecular mechanisms are widely unclear. Here, we show that C. jejuni strains 81-176 and F38011 trigger membrane ruffling in the eukaryotic cell followed by invasion in a very specific manner first with its tip followed by the flagellar end. To pinpoint important signaling events involved in the C. jejuni invasion process, we examined the role of small Rho family GTPases. Using specific silencing RNA (siRNA), GTPasemodifying toxins, inhibitors and GTPase expression constructs we show that Rac1 and Cdc42, but not RhoA, are involved in C. jejuni invasion. In agreement with these observations, we found that internalization of C. jejuni is accompanied by a timedependent activation of both Rac1 and Cdc42. We also show that C. jejuni-induced GTPase activation involves the bacterial fibronectin-binding protein CadF, but GTPase activation is independent of the cytolethal distending toxin (CDT), adhesin PEB1, virulence plasmid pVir and certain genes such as kpsS and waaF which play a role in the biosynthesis of capsular polysaccharide and lipooligosaccharide, respectively. Thus, CadF is a bifunctional protein which triggers bacterial binding 59 to host cells as well as signalling leading to GTPase activation. Finally, we show that the activation of these GTPases by CadF involves different host cell kinases and guanine-exchange factors (GEFs). Collectively, our results suggest that C. jejuni invade host target cells by a unique mechanism and the activation of the Rho GTPase members Rac1 and Cdc42 plays a crucial role in this entry process. ___________________________________________________ GIV06 Shiga toxin-specific immunity and STEC-shedding in naturally infected calves J. Fröhlich1, G. Baljer1, C. Menge1 1 Justus-Liebig-University, Institute for Hygiene and Infektion Deseases of Animals, Giessen, Germany Calves become infected with Shiga toxin-producing E.coli (STEC) early in life. Previous data suggest that, in the course of this first infection, Shiga toxins (Stx) prevent the development of a STEC-specific cellular immune response resulting in longterm STEC shedding. As a first step towards a vaccination strategy counteracting the immunosuppressive effect of Stx, we aimed at assessing the quantity of maternal (colostral) and endogeneous Stx-antibody titers in naturally STEC-infected calves. Fecal and serum samples were taken weekly from 27 calves at a local dairy herd from birth until the 24th week of life. Colostrum and serum samples of dams were also assessed. STEC shedding was investigated by detection of stx-genes in the feces using PCR. Stx1- and Stx2-specific antibodies in sera and colostrums were quantified by Vero-cell neutralization assay. Shedding of stx1-positive and stx2-positive STEC was detected in 24 and 26 calves, respectively, and at up to 13 sampling times per animal. Stx1-specific antibody titers were observed in serum and colostrum samples of all dams and all postcolostral serum samples of newborn calves but with individual differences. Calves´serum titers rapidly decreased within the first 6 weeks of life down to the detection limit. Even though 22 calves shed stx1-STEC within the first 14 weeks, only 5 calves developed a Stx1-specific seroconversion. Only low Stx2-specific titers were detectable in serum and colostrum of 3 dams and the postcolostral serum samples of the respective calves. Despite frequent stx2-STEC shedding, Stx2-specific seroconversion could not be detected in any of the calves. In conclusion, first STEC infections of calves coincide with a rapid decline of maternal and lack of endogeneous Stx-specific seroconversion. These findings encourage the use of Stx as an antigen for vaccination strategies in calves aimed at preventing long-term STEC shedding in cattle. ___________________________________________________ GIV07 Shifts towards pro-inflammatory bacteria in the intestinal flora of Helicobacter pylori-infected Mongolian gerbils M. M. Heimesaat1, A. Fischer1, U. B. Göbel1, S. Bereswill1 G. Rieder2 1 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Microbiology und Hygiene, Berlin, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Max-von-PettenkoferInstitute, Munich, Germany Inflammatory bowel diseases in humans, such as Crohn`s disease or ulcerative colitis, are frequently accompanied by shifts of the gut flora towards pro-inflammatory bacteria. We and others have recently shown that Escherichia coli and Bacteroides/Prevotella spp. accumulate during intestinal inflammation and aggravate experimental ileitis as well as colitis via Toll-like-receptor signaling. Furthermore, H. pyloriinfection causes alterations of the gastric microflora in mice. Stomachs of H. pylori-infected animals were colonized by bacteria, which are naturally restricted to the lower intestinal tract. This indicates that H. pylori-infection increases the microbial diversity in the rodent stomach. In order to investigate if H. pylori-infection is associated with microflora changes of the intestine, we analyzed the gastric and intestinal flora in Mongolian gerbils, which were colonized with H. pylori for 14 months and developed severe gastric ulcer, metaplasia, and gastritis cystica profunda. The microflora in the stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, caecum, and colon was analyzed using cultural as well as molecular methods (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE)). A global cultural survey of the gut flora revealed that luminal loads of E. coli, Proteus spp., Enterococcus spp., and Bacteroides/Prevotella spp. were increased in the ileum, caecum, and colon of animals with gastric ulcerations, as compared to control animals without clinical signs of H. pylori-infection. Levels of lactobacilli remained constant. H. pylori and disease-associated shifts in the flora of the lower intestine were further confirmed by molecular analysis, which did provide evidence that other bacteria disappear in H. pylori-infected animals. We conclude that H. plyori-infection can influence the gut flora composition. The fact that the accumulating bacteria show a strong proinflammatory potential in inflammatory bowel diseases indicates that the gut flora shifts may contribute to the development of intestinal diseases and raise the risk for inflammatory processes in the lower gastrointestinal tract. ___________________________________________________ GIV08 Characterization of the translocation factors CagF and Cag of the Helicobacter pylori Cag type IV secretion system I. Pattis1, E. Weiss1, R. Laugks1, R. Haas1, W. Fischer1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Max-von-PettenkoferInstitute, Munich, Germany The virulence factor CagA is so far the only effector protein known to be transported by the Helicobacter pylori Cag type IV secretion system into eucaryotic cells. We have previously defined a set of 14 essential components of the secretion apparatus and 4 additional proteins that are necessary for CagA translocation, but little is known about the molecular details of CagA recognition as a type IV secretion substrate. Recently, the examination of translocated effector proteins in different type IV secretion systems has shown that their respective C-terminal regions are necessary and sufficient for translocation. Substrate recognition via these C-terminal regions is thought to be mediated by the so-called coupling proteins. Two components that are specifically necessary for CagA translocation are the coupling protein homologue Cag and the CagF protein that has been shown to interact with CagA. The aim of this study was to 60 characterize the roles of these proteins for the type IV secretion process of CagA. We show that CagF is a secretion chaperone-like protein that interacts with CagA at the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane. GST pulldown experiments indicate that CagF binds to an approximately 100 amino acid domain located in the C-terminal region of CagA, which is adjacent to, but distinct from the Cterminal translocation signal. Although Cag binding to CagA could also be demonstrated, our data indicate that CagF binding precedes recognition of the C-terminal CagA translocation signal, and that both steps are required to recruit CagA to the type IV translocation channel. Moreover, they suggest that at least two sequential steps are involved in CagA recognition as a type IV secretion substrate. Thus, CagA recognition as a type IV secretion substrate seems to be more complex than that of other type IV effector proteins. ___________________________________________________ GIV09 Incidence of EPEC and EAEC in patients with diarrhoea in a university hospital detected by use of a novel multiplex Real-Time PCR C. Hardegen1, S. Messler1, B. Henrich1, K. Pfeffer1 J. Würthner1, C. MacKenzie1 1 Heinrich-Heine-University, Medical Microbiology and Clinic Hygiene, Duesseldorf, Germany Accurate measurement of the incidence of enteropathogenic E.coli in patients with diarrhoea is hindered by the current methods of detection and varies from country to country (particularly the incidence of EAEC). In order to improve the diagnosis we developed a multiplex TaqMan Real-Time PCR designed to detect the respective pathogens from an overnight stool culture. In addition to this, we noted that clinicians seldom requested detection of enteropathogenic E. coli in patients with diarrhoea and therefore set out to determine how many such infections were being missed at a university hospital. Over a period of 12 months (Jan 2006-Jan 2007) all stool specimens received were investigated for EPEC and EAEC using the newly developed multiplex Real-Time PCR. The targets for the PCR were the eae gene and the EAF plasmid (EPEC) and pCVD432 (EAEC). Additionally, two separate multiplex PCRs were developed for the other known enteropathogenic E. coli with the targets slt1 and slt2 (EHEC), ipaH (EIEC) and lt and st (ETEC). A total of 1981 specimens were investigated over the period. Of these 371 specimens had no growth of Enterobacteriaceae (mostly due to selective gut decontamination). Of the remaining 1610 specimens 144 (8,9 %) were positive for EPEC and 78 (4,8 %) positive for EAEC as the identified pathogens in the respective samples. We divided the requesting departments into three groups: Paediatrics, Tropical diseases and the remaining wards of the hospital. Among the EPEC positive stool specimens 28 (20 %) were from the tropical diseases unit, 49 (33,8 %) from the paediatric dept. and 67 (46,2 %) from the remainder of the wards. The EAEC were distributed as follows: 39 (50 %) – tropical diseases, 19 (24,4 %) –paediatrics and 20 (25,6 %) other wards. Analysing the age groups, we found a cluster of EAEC in children under 3 years of age. For the EPECs a cluster was seen in children under 3 and then a relatively constant incidence through the eighth decade of life. In only 22 % of the detected EPECs and 23 % of EAEC was the investigation requested. This is the first study, to our knowledge, using a multiplexed Real-Time PCR for the detection of enteropathogenic E. coli. We conclude from this that the PCR is a useful investigation for the detection of enteropathogenic E.coli, the DGHM MIQ recommendation that all stool specimens for children under 3 years be investigated for EPEC is valid, that it may be useful to additionally screen for EAEC in this age group and finally that clinicians do not look for enteropathogenic E.coli routinely and perhaps they should. ___________________________________________________ GIV10 Allelic variation of the H. pylori adhesin genes babA and sabA during chronic infection is associated with quantitative differences of adhesion to Lewisb and sialyl Lewisx S. Schwarz1, E. Katzowitsch1, S. Cleland1, P. Olbermann1 S. Sürbaum1 1 Hanover Medical School, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany The remarkable genomic plasticity, and the dynamic and multifactorial binding properties of H. pylori are both believed to be important for persistent infection. BabA and SabA are outer membrane proteins of H. pylori which mediate specific adherence to the histo blood group antigens Lewisb (Leb) and sialyl Lewisx (sLex), respectively. In order to test the hypothesis that H. pylori might modify its adhesin genes during chronic infection, possibly adapting to the host individual, we sought to sequence babA and sabA from eight pairs of H. pylori that were sequentially isolated at intervals from three months to three years. Three pairs lacked a babA gene, for all other strains, complete babA and sabA sequences were obtained. In two pairs, babA alleles differed by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and three pairs showed multiple nucleotide polymorphisms (MNPs), possibly representing recombination events. All pairs were sabA positive with three pairs harbouring identical sequences, two pairs differing by SNPs, and two pairs showing MNPs. In one pair, the second isolate had a frameshift mutation in sabA leading to a premature stop codon. Binding of the paired strains to Leb and sLex was quantified by a glycoblot procedure. In 2 out of 4 Leb adherent pairs, the second strain exhibited significantly weaker binding than the first strain. Of the five pairs that showed binding to sLex, one pair showed significantly reduced binding of the second strain. One of the pairs comprised a first isolate adherent to Leb and sLex and a second isolate that did not bind either glycan. Transformation of the non-adherent strain with a complete babA gene amplified from the adherent isolate could restore Leb adhesion. Sequence analysis of the recombinant babA genes from clones with restored adherence is in progress and should permit to identify domains within babA critical for Leb binding. ___________________________________________________ 61 GIV11 Chronic enteric Salmonella infection in mice leads to severe and persistent intestinal fibrosis G. Grassl1, Y. Valdez1, K. Bergstrom2, B. Vallance2, B. Finlay1 1 University of British Columbia, Michael Smith Laboratories Vancouver, Canada 2 University of British Columbia, BC' s Children' s Hospital Vancouver, Canada Background: Intestinal fibrosis and stricture formation are serious complications of Crohn’s disease, often requiring surgical intervention. Unfortunately the mechanisms underlying intestinal fibrosis development are poorly understood, in part because of the lack of relevant animal models. In this study, we present a novel murine model of severe and persistent intestinal fibrosis caused by chronic bacterial induced colitis. Methods: Mice were treated with streptomycin 24 h prior to oral infection with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, and euthanized at various times post infection. Tissues were analyzed for bacterial colonization and inflammation, while fibrosis was assessed by Masson’s trichrome staining and collagen quantification. Expression of the pro-fibrotic cytokines transforming growth factor- 1 (TGF- 1) and connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) was determined by ELISA and RT-PCR and the cell types present in fibrotic tissues were assessed by immunohistochemistry. Results: Infection led to chronic Salmonella colonization of the caecum and colon followed by edema, mucosal ulcerations and severe transmural inflammation. This pathology was accompanied by significantly elevated expression of TGF- 1 and CTGF along with extensive collagen deposition in the caecal mucosa, submucosa, and muscularis mucosa of infected mice. This fibrosis was evident by 7 days post infection, peaking at day 21 and still present at day 70. The fibrotic regions were found to be rich in fibroblasts and myofibroblasts. Conclusions: These data demonstrate that chronic Salmonella infection of the murine GI tract leads to severe tissue fibrosis. Since this model is highly reproducible and easy to perform, it provides great potential for investigating both host and bacterial contributions to intestinal fibrosis. ___________________________________________________ HYP01 Surveillance of nosocomial infections in patients undergoing hematologic stem-cell transplantation - five years ‘ONKOKISS’ M. Dettenkofer1, E. Meyer1, R. Babikir1, H. Bertz2, A. Widmer3 H. Rüden4, T.5 1 Universtiy Medical Center Freiburg, Institute of Environmental Medicine and Hospital Epidemiology, Freiburg, Germany 2 University Medical Center Freiburg, Department of Medicine I, Hematology and Oncology, Freiburg, Germany 3 University Hospital Basel, Division of Infectious Diseases and Hospital Epidemi, Base, Switzerland 4 Charité Berlin, Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany 5 ONKO-KISS, Study Group For surveillance of nosocomial bloodstream infections (BSI) and pneumonia during neutropenia in adult patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation (BMT) or peripheral blood-stem cell transplantation (PBSCT), an ongoing multicenter surveillance project was initiated by the German National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections in 2000 (ONKO-KISS). Methods: Nosocomial Infections are identified using CDC definitions for laboratory-confirmed BSI and modified criteria for pneumonia in neutropenic patients [for detailed information in German language see http://www.nrzhygiene.de/surveillance/onko.htm]. Results: Over the 60-month period up to June 2006, 4.203 patients with 62.338 neutropenic days were investigated. Of these, 2.492 (59%) had undergone allogeneic and 1.711 (41%) autologous BMT or PBSCT. The mean length of neutropenia was 14.8 days (9.4 d after autologous and 18.6 d after allogeneic transplantation). In total, 776 bloodstream infections and 353 cases of pneumonia were identified. Site-specific incidence densities (pooled mean) were: 12.4 BSIs (10.6 for allogeneic vs. 17.8 for autologous transplantations) and 5.7 cases of pneumonia (5.8 for allogeneic vs. 5.3 for autologous transplantations) per 1,000 neutropenic days, respectively. There was a trend to lower incidence densities over the five years reported. Following allogeneic transplantation, 19.7 BSI/100 patients and 10.8 cases of pneumonia / 100 patients occurred whereas following autologous transplantation 16.7 cases of BSI/ 100 patients and 5.0 cases of pneumonia /100 patients were observed. The main pathogens associated with BSI were coagulase-negative staphylococci (52%). Conclusions: The ongoing ONKO-KISS project adds to the improvement of quality of care in patients undergoing Hematologic Stem-Cell Transplantation. Since 2006, surveillance is extended to neutropenic patients with acute leukemia to allow participation for Centers not performing HSCT (ONKO-KISS AL). ___________________________________________________ HYP02 Nasal carriage of MRSA in third-year medical students U. Vogel1, W. Witte2, K. Engelhard1, M. Frosch1 1 University Wuerzburg, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology Wuerzburg, Germany 2 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode, Germany The incidence of carriage and infection with MRSA is increasing in German hospitals. Undetected colonization of health care personnel might cause MRSA clusters. In University hospitals, medical students throughout their education will have increasing contact to patients of a variety of different clinics without necessarily being trained in MRSA prevention and without microbiological control for carriage. As part of the third year medical education, students were trained in medical microbiology and obtained swabs from their own nose to screen for S. aureus carriage. Since 2003 1174 students attended the course. MRSA was found in four female subjects (point prevalence of 3.4/1000 course students). The following spatypes were identified: t008 (n=1); t003 (n=1); t667 (n=1; t044cc; PVL-positive); t032 (n=1). In three cases, MRSA was eradicated by topical antiseptic treatment of the nose, skin, and oral mucosa. In one case, the students´mother was also MRSA positive with the identical clone, whereas flatmates of all students were not colonized. Two strains were associated to skin 62 infections with delayed healing and contact to ambulant surgery. We suggest that MRSA rates found here underestimate reality due to the low sensitivity of the procedure applied; furthermore, MRSA rates might be higher in students of the fourth to sixth year with increasing clinical involvement. We suggest enhanced surveillance of medical students and intensified training in MRSA prevention. ___________________________________________________ HYP03 Monoclonal outbreak of catheter-related septicaemia by Ralstonia mannitolilytica in two oncology departments S. Gröbner1, P. Heeg1, I. B. Autenrieth1, B. Schulte1 1 University Tuebingen, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany Background: Ralstonia mannitolilytica is a non-fermentative, Gram-negative bacterium isolated infrequently from clinical samples. However, within a period of 11 weeks five inpatients developed septicaemia and R. mannitolilytica was cultivated from blood samples of these patients suggesting an outbreak. Methods: Blood cultures and one catheter tip were analysed by standard microbiological procedures. Genetic relatedness of the isolates was investigated by pulsed field gel electrophoresis. To ascertain the possible source of the outbreak, environmental sampling and challenge-recovery experiments to test filters used for multi-dose solution bottles were performed. Results: In the present study a monoclonal outbreak with R. mannitolilytica causing septicaemia of five haematological patients is reported. Underlying severe diseases with consecutive immunosuppression, permanent indwelling intravenous devices, multiple intravenous applications, and chemotherapy were possible risk factors promoting septicaemia. Challenge-recovery experiments revealed that R. mannitolilytica to a high extent even passed through Mini-spike Plus® filters of pore size 0.2 µm. Conclusion: Although the source of the outbreak could not be identified, it is possible that solutions given intravenously were contaminated. Since R. mannitolilytica had never been isolated in our laboratory before and environmental testings performed were negative, it cannot be excluded that commercial products like drugs, saline solutions or infusion systems (filters) were contaminated. ___________________________________________________ HYP04 Nationwide Study on Moxifloxacin susceptibility among pneumococcal isolates from invasive disease in Germany M. van der Linden1, R. R. Reinert1, C. Heeg1, I. Seegmüller1 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, National Reference Center for Streptococci, Aachen, Germany Background: In the last two decades, the worldwide increase in antibiotioc resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae has developed into a serious problem. Method: In this study 679 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates, collected in Germany in the year 2006 were examined. Minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) testing was performed using the broth microdilution method as recommended by the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute. The pneumococcal strains were isolated from blood (n = 568, 83,7%), Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF; n = 86; 12,7%), broncho-alveolar lavage (n = 12; 1,8%) und pleural fluid (n = 13; 1,9%). Results: MIC-values of moxifloxacin towards pneumococci were between 0,03 und 0,5 µg/ml, independent of -lactam or macrolide susceptibility. All isolates were susceptible towards moxifloxacin. A rate of macrolide resistant isolates was obeserved. The results of the antibiotic susceptibility testing are summarized in the table. Conclusion: Our data show that moxifloxacin is a promising therapeutic option for the treatment of pneumococcal infections, including those which are caused by penicillin- or macrolideresistant strains. Table 1: Susceptibility of S.pneumoniae towards Moxifloxacin Moxifloxa Penicillin Clarithromyc Clindamyc cin G in in <= 0,015 <= 0,12 <= 0,12 MIC 50 0,12 <= 0,016 8 <= 0,13 MIC 90 0,25 0 3,7 0 n=1 % interme diate 0 1,5 19,3 4,6 % resistan t Cefotaxi me 0,03 0,03 1,2 0,4 ___________________________________________________ HYP05 Association of resistance, hospital type and hospital department in E. coli K. Heckenbach1, T. Eckmanns1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Infectious Disease Epidemiology Berlin, Germany Resistance to Escherichia (E.) coli is a rising problem in Europe. We identified different risk factors in reference to the hospital type and the departments of the hospitals. Methods Antimicrobial susceptibility data on E.coli collected by the European Antimicrobial Resistance surveillance system (EARSS) is based on a voluntary notification from the laboratories. The resistance of E. coli is monitored for following antimicrobial groups: aminoglycosides, aminopenicillines and fluoroquinolones. The analysis by logistic regression modelled single resistance to the three antibiotic groups as a function of hospital type, departments (medical, immune suppression, surgical and intensive care), age over 65 and sex. Results During the period from 2001 to 2005, overall 41 hospitals participated in different phases. E. coli isolates (N=2209) from blood cultures had an overall resistance of 68%, 46% had a single, 18 % a double and 4% a triple resistance. 65% of the isolates were resistant to aminopenicillins, 21% to fluoroquinolones, and 7% to aminoglycosides. Double resistance occurred in 14% of the 18% as aminopenicillin /fluoroquinolone 3% as aminopenicillins/aminoglycosides and 1% in other combinations. The risk for a bacteraemia caused by an E. coli resistant to aminopenicillins was lower in hospitals other than tertiary care hospitals. In comparison to the medical wards, wards with 63 immune suppressed patients had a twofold higher risk (OR 2.1, 95%CI[1.4 – 3.1]) and intensive care units had an OR of 1.3 (95%CI[1.4 – 3.1]). Risk factors for aminoglycoside resistance were tertiary care hospitals and immune suppressed patients (OR 2.3, 95%CI[1.5 – 3.7]). Risk factors for fluoroquinolone resistance were tertiary care hospitals, immunological (OR3.2 95% CI [2.3– 4.5]) and surgical departments (OR 1.6, 95% CI [1.2 – 2.1]). Male patients had a higher risk of an infection with a resistant E. coli (OR 1.3 to 1.6). Discussion The analysis of routine data from the laboratories identified hospital type and departments as risk factors for resistant E. coli involved in bacteremia. As expected the risk of a resistance is lower in hospitals other than tertiary care hospitals. In contrast to other investigations intensive care units are not a general risk factor for resistant E. coli. ___________________________________________________ HYP06 The impact of imported MRSA for a hospital A. Petzold1, R. Fleck1, C. Kupfahl1, G. Geginat1, H. Hof1 1 University Hospital Mannheim, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Mannheim, Germany Background: The incidence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in Germany has increased dramatically during the last few years. The major reservoirs for MRSA in the hospital setting are colonized patients. The Danish example shows, that the implementation of screening, isolation, and antibiotic use policies decrease the MRSA prevalence. In our study, we explored the MRSA situation in the University hospital Mannheim, a 1400-bed tertiary care hospital. Compared to the MRSA study 2004 of the Paul-Ehrlich-Gesellschaft, the hospital had a high ratio of MRSA to methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus. The prevalence of MRSA among admitted patients was unknown. Methods: Two regular wards from the departments of surgery and internal medicine screened every patient on admission and discharge. The regular swab was taken from the nostril of each patient. Additional swabs from wounds or other regions were encouraged. All swabs were tested, using PCR and/or selective agar. Positive results were communicated immediately and contact isolation precautions were taken. Results: From May to December 2006, 781 patients were screened, and 48 MRSA-positive patients were detected. From all 48 MRSA-positive patients, 45 patients were detected on admission. Of the remaining 3 MRSA-positive patients, 2 patients missed the screening on admission and only one colonization was hospital-acquired. The outcome of this datais a ratio of 5.8% MRSA-positive patients compared to all admitted patients. Of the 781 patients screened, 442 and 339 were hospitalized on the surgery and on the internal medicine ward, respectively. On the surgical ward 23 patients (5,2%) and on the internal medicine ward 22 patients (6.5%) were found to be MRSA-positive on admission. Conclusion: Our results show that the vast majority of MRSA cases are imported. Screening and isolation precautions are effective to prevent the spread of MRSA in the hospital. ___________________________________________________ HYP07 Silver coated textiles reduce the contamination in water systems C. Unger1, P. C. Lück1 1 Technical University Dresden, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden, Germany Silver cations (Ag+) show an antimicrobial effect on all microorganisms, but they are not cytotoxic to human cells. Therefore silver compounds are used as antimicrobial agents in medicine, e. g. for treatments of burns or for coating of catheters. This effect is also used in the production of sport clothing or socks with silver coated textiles cockle. The antimicrobial effect of silver coated textiles in water systems was tested with different strains of bacteria (Legionella pneumophila, Pseudomonas sp. and Staphylococcus aureus) in laboratory experiments. For the detection of a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) strains were incubated in aqueous solutions with different concentrations of silver. The killing of the bacterial count was tested after 1, 3 and 24 hours of incubation. After 24 hours all strains were killed at a concentration about 16 µg/l silver. Already, after 3 hours incubation a reduction of 2 to 4 logarithmic magnitudes with a concentration of silver of 4 to16 µg/l was attained. Due to the antimicrobial effect, which was laboratoryconfirmed, the silver coated textiles were tested in different practical applications. In these experiments three warm water reservoirs with a volume of 1m3 lined with the silver coated textiles were investigated. In addition the silver coated textiles were installed in a industrial applied water system in a paper mill. Silver coated textiles reduce the number of viable bacteria about at least 10 to 100 fold in the warm water reservoirs. This effect could be observed for at least 6 month. This makes the application cost-effective and low-maintenance. In the water supply system in the paper mill there was a reduction of bacteria about 2 to 3 logarithmic magnitudes. In both systems the silver coated textiles are a effective method to reduce the contamination by Legionella and other water borne pathogens in applied water systems. ___________________________________________________ HYP08 Molecular evidence of pneumocystis jirovecii transmission among 16 patients after kidney transplantation S. Schmoldt1, L. Bader1, I. Huber2, R. Schuhegger2 H. Söllner2, J. Heesemann1, A. Sing2 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich, Germany 2 Bayerisches Landesamt für Gesundheit und Lebensmittelsicherheit, Oberschleissheim, Germany In recent years, nosocomial clusters of Pneumocystis jirovecii (formerly P. carinii) pneumonia (PCP) among immunocompromised individuals were reported. Mostly, the source of infections was suspected within the clinical settings when transplant recipients and PCP patients shared hospital facilities. We report a cluster of 16 renal transplant recipients positive for P. jirovecii. None of them received antiPneumocystis prophylaxis prior to P. jirovecii detection. 15 of 64 them were kidney transplanted at a German university hospital and attended the same inpatient and outpatient ward from January through September, 2006. Genotyping of P. jirovecii isolates was performed using DNA sequencing of multiple loci (MLST): ITS1, -tub, 26S and mt26S. P. jirovecii DNA was available from 14 patients and revealed identical MLST types among these renal transplant recipients. Surprisingly, one patient who was treated at a different nephrological Center and negated personal contacts to patients from the renal transplantation cluster harboured the same P. jirovecii MLST type. Three HIV patients and one bone-marrow transplanted hematologic malignancy patient – all treated at two different medical Centers - were used as controls and revealed different MLST types. Interestingly, in three of the four previously described regions new alleles were detected and one new polymorphism was observed in the mt26S region. The genotyping results and previous reports of outbreaks strongly suggest a patient-to-patient transmission of P. jirovecii as one predominant transmission route. ___________________________________________________ policies of each individual hospital. So the stratification according to the frequency of nares culture screening will become a routine method in MRSA-KISS. HYP09 MRSA rates of 53 german hospitals in relation to their screening frequency I. F. Chaberny1,2, M. Behnke3,2, H. Rüden3,2, P. Gastmeier1,2 1 Hanover Medical School, Inst. of Med. Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 2 German National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections, Berlin, Germany 3 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Inst. of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany HYP10 Characterization of the role of IS256 in the development of intermediate vancomycin resistance in a clinical Staphylococcus aureus isolate M. Nagel1, A. Jansen1, M. Türck1, G. Bierbaum1 1 University Bonn, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Parasitology, Bonn, Germany Background:MRSA is one of the most relevant resistant pathogens. The German national nosocomial surveillance infection system (KISS) established a hospital based prospective surveillance system for MRSA to calculate the reference data for Germany. However, the MRSA rates are dependent on the hospitals screeening activities.Objective:To determine the MRSA rates according to the screening activities of German hospitals.Methods:KISS prepared a surveillance protocol and a standardised case report form for MRSA-KISS. The participating hospitals are spread all over Germany. The data were recorded during the routine surveillance by the infection control team of each hospital. Screening for MRSA carriage was mainly performed using nares cultures. The number of nares cultures was received from the microbiology and calculated per 1000 patient days. Results:Data from 101 hospitals, 10,647 MRSA case-patients with 180,158 MRSA patient days and with 14,409,799 patient days were analysed for the year 2005. 6,744 (63.3%) patients of the total number of MRSA case-patients were colonized with MRSA and 4,016 (37.7%) had a MRSA infection. 7,053 (66.2%) were imported and 3,707 (34.8%) were nosocomial. The number of nares cultures was recorded in 53 hospitals. These data were stratified into 4 categories (s. table) according to the different MRSA-rates. The data from 2006 were currently calculated and will be demonstrated.Conclusion:The amount of screening samples of a hospital should be considered to evaluate MRSA rates. Recording the number of nares cultures per 1,000 patient days seems to be a good method for reflecting the actual screening Table 1: MRSAFrequency incidence of MRSA density screening Number (MRSA (nares of casecultures per hospitals patients 1,000 per 1,000 patient patient days) days) <= 2 27 0.51 > 2 and <= 4 11 0.66 > 4 and <= 9 0.82 10 > 10 6 0.98 Overall 101 0.65 Nosocomial MRSA incidence density (nosocomial MRSA casepatient per 1,000 patient days) 0.21 0.19 25.6 21.1 0.23 20.1 0.31 0.21 17.4 21.4 MRSA days-associated nosocomial MRSA rate (nosocomial MRSA casepatients per 1,000 MRSA patient days) ___________________________________________________ Staphylococcus aureus tends to acquire multiple antibiotic resistance determinants and therefore vancomycin has been the treatment of choice for serious infections caused by methicillinresistant strains. However, therapeutic failure has been described. There is growing evidence that environmental stress, which may be exerted by the presence of antibiotics themselves, leads to an induction of mutational mechanisms in bacteria. The bacterial SOS response, for example, is a physiological reaction that is induced by the failure to replicate DNA and double strand breaks and is caused by fluorochinolones and UV light, as well as by cell wall biosynthesis inhibitors like vancomycin. Since the SOS response is known to induce delocalization of ISelements, this study was conducted (i) to establish a system that allows mapping of the copies of IS256, (ii) to locate the copies of IS256 in the genome of the VISA isolates and (iii) to check the influence of antibiotic stress and the SOS response on the transposition/recombination frequency and resistance development. Mapping and localization of the IS256 elements were performed by digestion of chromosomal DNA with XmnI, dilution and religation. Circular fragments comprising a copy of IS256 were amplified by reverse PCR, using outgoing primers that anneal in IS256, and sequenced. The intermediately vancomycin resistant S. aureus strain pair employed in this study carries at least 14 copies of IS256. In the selection mutant displaying higher resistance, part of the resistance is caused by an insertion of IS256 into the gene tcaA [2], whereas IS256 was found instead in the promoter of yycFG in the clinical parent isolate leading to an overexpression of this two-component regulatory system [1]. In addition, apart from several insertions in intergenic regions, a copy of IS256 was found to interrupt orf SA1848 which encodes 65 a putative ammonium transporter in both strains. In conclusion, mobile genetic elements may play a role in the acquisition of resistance against antimicrobial agents. [1] Jansen, A. et al., Int. J. Med. Microbiol. (2007) [2] Maki, H. et al., Antimicrob. Agents Chermother. 48, 19531059 (2004) ___________________________________________________ HYP11 Prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacteria (MRSA, VRE and ESBL producing enterobacteria) in geriatric clinics, nursing homes and ambulant care T. A. Wichelhaus1, I. Gruber1, U. Heudorf2, C. Brandt1 R. Püllen3, V. Brade1 1 University, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Clinical Hygiene, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 Local Health Authority, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 3 Deaconry-Clinic, Frankfurt am Main, Germany Colonization/infection with multidrug-resistant bacteria (MRB) such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), and extended spectrum betalactamase (ESBL) producing enterobacteria, is an increasing problem in hospitals but also in homes for the elderly and in ambulant care. Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of colonization/infection with MRSA, VRE and ESBL producing enterobacteria in geriatric clinics, nursing homes and ambulant care facilities in Frankfurt am Main. Materials and methods: 255 patients and 62 staff members from 2 geriatric clinics (n = 61), 8 nursing homes (n = 206), and 2 ambulant care facilities (n = 50) were screened for MRB. If a consent by a participant was given, swabs were taken from nose, throat, rectum and if present wounds. Results: 23 patients (9%) and 2 staff members (3.2%) were colonized with MRSA, 8 patients (3.1%) were screened positive for VRE, and 24 patients (9.4%) and 2 staff members (3.2%) were found to be colonized with ESBL producing enterobacteria. Conclusion: This is the first report to our knowledge presenting data on the prevalence of VRE and ESBL producing enterobacteria in homes for the elederly and in ambulant care in Germany. With respect to previous studies about MRSA, the prevalence in Frankfurt am Main has risen from 2.3 to 9%. We assume that existing hygiene recommendation concerning MRB are sufficient, however, staff members and patients should receive better education on how to implement these guidelines in routine practice in order to avoid spread of MRB. ___________________________________________________ HYP12 Can it be true? What does a positive MRSA-PCR result stand for? S. Schütt1, A. Carstens-Slim1, C. Wendt1 1 University Hospital, Institute of Hygiene, Heidelberg, Germany Introduction: Modern PCR methods allow the rapid identification of MRSA patients. However, PCR-positive results can not always be confirmed by conventional culture. This may be explained by false positive results due to characteristics of the test kit, false positive results due to contamination or true positive results from non-viable microorganisms. We conducted a retrospective analysis of our positive test results to identify factors that may be associated with positive results that could not be confirmed by culture. Methods: University Hospital of Heidelberg is a 1500-bed tertiary care Center. Patients who are admitted to an intensive care unit are screened for MRSA with the BD GeneOhm™ MRSA Assay using nasal specimens. The qualitative multiplex real-time PCR assay is based on the detection of the mec right extremity junction (MREJ) of the staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCC). PCR-positive swabs were cultured in enrichment broth. Additionally swabs from nose, throat, inguinal and anal were requested and processed by conventional culture. Results: Between January and December 2006 swabs from 97 different patients were PCR-positive. These patients were divided in 3 groups depending on the results of culture. Group A “true positives”: 69 patients with positive MRSA culture from nares (55) or other sites (14); Group B “false positives”: 9 patients with culture positive for Methicillinsensible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) which contains MREJ; Group C “unconfirmed”: 19 patients without any culture of MRSA or MREJ-containing MSSA. Patients of group C were not different from patients of group A in terms of underlying diseases, presence of typical risk factors for MRSA colonization or application of antibiotics. 17 of the 19 unconfirmed results were the only positive result in the batch tested. Conclusion: In our study nearly 10% of positive results were due to MREJ positive MSSA as described previously. Almost 20 % of PCRAssay positive nasal swabs could not be confirmed by cultural detection of MRSA from any patient site. The patients showed typical risk factors for MRSA colonization and thus the results can be considered genuine. Previous antibiotic therapy or local antiseptic treatment can be a reason for lack of positive cultures. ___________________________________________________ HYP13 Preventive hospital hygiene – measurments of airborne mold spores during and after demolition work at an University Childrens Hospital S. Harpel1, A. Knaust1, T. Eikmann1, C. Herr1 1 Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, University Medical Center Giessen and Marburg , Giessen, Germany From February toApril 2007 part of the University Childrens Hospital in Giessen was torn down. Extensive measures (taped windows and irrigation of site) were applied to prevent spread of dust from the demolition site into the adjacent remaining hospital buildings. Nevertheless there was considerable concern of possible spread of airborne spores into the wards, especially the ward for children’s oncology (bone marrow transplantation). Therefore, it was decided to accompany the demolition work with measurements of airborne mold. 66 Four of the five samplings took place during the demolition work and one after. Sampling locations: one in a patient’s room, one on the ward, one outside of the ward in the hall, one on the outside balcony of the ward and one outside control sample. Viable mold spores were incubated at 20°C and 36°C on DG 18 agar. Additionally, humidity and temperature were assessed. Inubation at 36°C yielded on ward mold spore concentration between 0 and 384 cfu/m³, while respective concentrations on the ward balcony (closest to the construction work) were between 8 and 104 cfu/m³. The lowest outdoor value on this balcony was measured, when on-ward concentration was highest and the highest value on this balcony was found after completion of the demolition work, when identical values were determined at the outdoor control point. Mold spore concentrations after incubation at 20°C showed some correlation with simultaneously measured humidity. They were always considerably lower on the ward (0-28 cfu/m³) compared to oudoors (8-260 cfu/m³) and in the same range on the ward balcony and the control point. Mold concentrations in the outdoor ambient air near the oncology ward were not related to the ongoing demolition work, most likely due to the extensive preventive measures. On-ward air spore concentrations were usually considerably lower and not related to outdoor concentrations. ___________________________________________________ HYP14 Different MRSA screening strategies – experiences, outcome and costs A. Knaust1, K. Madlener2, H. Wagner3, N. Tschernych3 J. Barekzai3, T. Eikmann3, C. Herr3 1 Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Giessen Germany 2 Kerckhoff Clinic, Bad Nauheim, Germany 3 Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Institute for Hygiene and Environment Medicine, Giessen, Germany Screening of incoming patients is discussed to be an effective method to decrease rates of MRSA colonization and infection in hospitals. In previous studies various designs were used, either screening patients with established risk factors in their history and/or patients who are admitted to certain areas of health care facilities, i.e. intensive care units. The current study aimed to compare two different MRSA screening strategies according to: i) effort of invention, ii) sensitivity of identifying MRSA positive patients, iii) costs. The study was based in a university hospital (UH) and a cardiosurgical hospital (CH) which used two different MRSA screening strategies: A) in UH: screening of patients which belong to risk groups (history or MRSA, wounds, haemodialysis, submission from health care facilities) andpatients who were admitted to selected departments or wards (intensive care units), B) in CH all patients were screened upon admission. Microbiological diagnostics were performed either by bacterial cultures or by a real time PCR based method. More than 4000 patients were screened during a 12-month (UH) and 6-month period (CH) respectively. Invention of a selective screening (strategy A) in UH turned out to require substantial administrative efforts. Despite of communication via hygiene standard and intranet and extensive coaching of staff the quality of implementation was still suboptimal. Strategy A was performed with relatively low costs but missed a significant number of MRSA positive patients. Screening of all patients upon admission was associated with high costs. To establish MRSA screening strategies in health care facilities careful cost-effectiveness calculation is necessary, taking into account local MRSA epidemiology, risk of patients to suffer MRSA infection and costs of screening procedures and following barrier precautions. Therefore, standard strategies for MRSA screening as recommended by various guidelines require critical assessment with respect to their effectiveness and costs. ___________________________________________________ HYP15 Test system for examination of the barrier effectiveness of sterilised medial products in health care systems. U. Schmelz1 1 University Goettingen, Human Medicine - Department Gerneral Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Goettingen Germany Background: Up to now, there is no suitable system by which the barrier effectiveness and the quality of the sterilised medical devices in the final packaging can be examined after transport and storage. Aim of study: The purpose of our investigation consisted in developing a test kit as a suitable test system for this task and in starting in a pilot' s scheme. Methods: The test kit exists of a dry Caso-Agar disk (soil for cultivateable micro-organisms) and of an ampoule with 8 milliliters of water. The ampoule is surrounded by a break-proof plastic cover and is provided with a pipette. The test kits were placed in see-through pouches, sterilised under application terms analogously to normal medical devices and stored. For the controlling of the barrier effectiveness, the kit was activated by breaking open the ampoule, without damaging the packages. Afterwards, the kits were incubated with 36°C. The packages were still closed while incubating. Non-sterility is proved by colony growth after incubating. In each case, 100 test kits in packages for medical devices from paper and plastic were exposed (according to EN 868-5) at 4 different sites for 8 weeks. The packages with the kits were stored in closed shelves from wicker network. For the additional simulation of frequent pressure changes, exposition took place in a lift in 3 of the 4 sites. As control, we used 100 systems, which were examined directly after sterilization. Results: In dependence of the storage conditions, a recontamination rate of 50 to 80% was proved with the exposed test kits. Conclusion: The test kit provides a suitable procedure for the supervision and quality assurance of sterilised medical devices taking into account existing storage and environmental conditions. ___________________________________________________ 67 HYP16 Acquisition of MRSA in a geriatric rehabilitation Center M. Michelmann1, T. Biundo2, K. Oberdorfer1, C. Wendt1 1 University Heidelberg, Department Hygiene, Heidelberg Germany 2 Clinic of Rehabilitation Hockenheim, Hockenheim, Germany Background: Colonization with MRSA is often considered as a contraindication for treatment in rehabilitation facilities. But most facilities do not screen all admitted patients and there may be an unknown number of MRSA carriers in such programs. We conducted a study to assess the number of unknown MRSAcarriers treated in a rehabilitation Center for geriatric patients and to identify risk factors for MRSA transmission in the institution. Methods: Setting: A geriatric rehabilitation Center in Southern Germany. Patients were treated in 3 different locations with 38, 35 and 28 beds respectively. Patients: All patients entering the program were screened for MRSA at admission and discharge. The origin of swabs was blinded until the end of the study. Microbiology: Swabs taken from nose, throat and wounds were cultured on chromogenic media (Biorad) and in caso broth. MRSA was identified by coagulase and confirmed by PCR. The isolate were typed by spa-typing. Data analysis: A case-control study was performed to identify risk factors for MRSA acquisition during the stay in the clinic. Patients who acquired MRSA were matched with patients admitted directly before or after the case patients to the same house. Data were abstracted from the patient’s chart and analysed by SPSS. Results: Of 990 patients screened 70 were colonized with MRSA. 18 patients acquired MRSA during their stay and 50 patients were already positive at admission. 2 MRSA positive patients were screened at discharge only and therefore the mode of acquisition could not be evaluated. Spa typing revealed that 16 patients of the newly colonized patients had MRSA probably acquired from other patients. Two patients were colonized with unique spa types and a source of transmission could not be detected. Patients who had acquired MRSA during their stay were not different from other patients in terms of gender, age, underlying disease, functional status, or contact to therapists. There was a weak association between housing in a room adjacent to a MRSA carrier and acquisition of MRSA. Conclusions: We detected an unexpected high number of unknown MRSA carriers who were admitted to a rehabilitation program. 1.9% of the patients of the rehabilitation Center acquired MRSA during their stay. Because preventable risk factors for MRSA transmission could not be identified specific prevention measures can not be recommended. However, rehabilitation therapy is an important therapeutic procedure that should not be denied. Thus compliance with standard hygiene precautions is of major importance. ___________________________________________________ HYP17 Extracellular protease of the nosocomial pathogen Stenotrophomonas maltophilia: Crystal structure as prerequisite for drug design W. Weber1, S. Windhorst1, U. Larsen1, M. Perbandt2 A. Gabdoulkhakov2, C. Betzel1 1 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Institute for BioChemistry und Molekular Biology I , Hamburg/Eppendorf Germany 2 University of Hamburg, Department of Bio-Chemistry Hamburg, Germany Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is a multiresistant pathogen increasingly emerging in the hospital environment. In immunosuppressed patients these bacteria may cause severe infections associated with tissue lesions like pulmonary haemorrhage. This indicated proteolysis as a possible pathogenic mechanism in these infections. Indeed, a new protease with broad specificity has been found to be secreted by S. maltophilia [1]. The gene, termed StmPr1, was analyzed; it codes for a 63 kDa precursor, which is processed to the mature protein of 47 kDa. The enzyme is an alkaline serine protease which, by sequence homology and enzymic properties, can be further classified as a new member of the family of subtilases. However biochemical studies with the purified protein indicated that the StmPr1 protease differs substantially from so far known subtilisins in molecular size and in substrate specificity. In order to gain insights into the structure-function-relationship the StmPr1 gene was overexpressed in E. coli and processed to the active enzyme. Crystals of the native and inhibited enzyme could be grown after the protease was allowed to truncate from the C-terminus to a 36 kDa active core protein. Diffraction data sets of the native and inhibited enzyme were collected to 1.5 Å resolution applying synchrotron-radiation, and the 3D-structure was solved. Compared to known baterial proteases it revealed a new overall fold and architecture of the active site. The high resolution structure can serve to develop specific agents for a targeted therapy of St. maltophilia infections. S. Windhorst, E. Frank, D.Georgieva, F. Buc, P. Borowski, N. Genov, and W. Weber, W. J Biol Chem. 277, 11042 (2002) ___________________________________________________ HYV01 Pseudomonas aeruginosa-contaminated manufactured synthetic saliva solution caused nosocomial outbreaks in several German hospitals L. Bader1, A. Walter1, J. Heesemann1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Max von PettenkoferInstitute, Bacteriology and Hygiene, Munich, Germany During March and April 2007, at least 13 post-cardiac surgery ventilated ICU-patientsin a Bavarian university hospital wereinfected with early-onsetnosocomial pneumonia or colonized inthe respiratory tract by a single Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PSAE)-strain.Cause of this outbreak was a synthetic saliva solution (SSS) used as lubricant for preoperative endotracheal intubation following the indicationsfor this medical product given byits German manufacturer. PSAE with identical genotype by RAPD-PCR was detected from these 13 patients andfrom originalSSS samples containing > 68 105CFU/ml in three lots produced in Octoberand December 2006, respectively. The outbreak was officially notified to the appropriate authorities like the Federal Institutefor Drugs and Medical Products (BfArM) and the regional governmental pharmaceutical supervisor responsible for the manufacturer of this SSS. As a result of the notifications performded inthis case, we got informations concerning comparable nosocomial outbreaks in severalGerman hospitals - both, in other Bavarian regions and in other federal states - due to PSAE-contamination of further lots from 2006 since Augustof this SSS, too. Although the above mentioned pharmaceutical authorities were informed recently by severalusersabout suspected or detected microbial contaminationin manufacturing of this medical product - for example in November 2006 and January 2007 - a Germanywide recall compaign for alldelivered SSS lots from 2006 and 2007 wascarried out by the manufacturer not earlier than in May 2007. The local reccalls until January 2007 performed in hospitals which notified PSAE-contamination in SSS lots produced for themselves onlywere not sufficientto preventfurther outbreakscaused bythis medical productin other hospitals. In our presentation we will discuss our concern for hygienic safety in manufacturing ofmedical products like SSS. ___________________________________________________ HYV02 An outbreak of Clostridium difficile-related diarrhoea (CDAD) in an adult surgery unit A. Cohrs1, P. Gastmeier1, A. Kola1, F. Mattner2,3, M. Kist4 I. F. Chaberny1 1 Hanover Medical School, Inst. of Med. Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiolog, Hanover, Germany 2 University of Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany 3 University of Luebeck, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Luebeck, Germany 4 Freiburg University Hospital, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg, Germany Background: From January 25th through April 27th 2007 several patients in a surgical unit acquired Clostridium difficilerelated diarrhoea in an university hospital. This outbreak was investigated. Methods: A case was defined as the occurrence of diarrhoea and either the detection of C. difficile toxins/ toxin-producing C. difficile in a diarrhoeal stool specimen or the detection in bacterial culture. All other patients admitted in the same unit from January until April, who developed diarrhoea, were included in the control group. Preventive measures such as isolation, cohorting, education of staff members as well as a change of disinfection procedures were performed. Epidemiological and clinical information as age, gender, underlying disease, nosocomial or non-nosocomial acquisition of diarrhoea, prior antimicrobial treatment were collected. A multivariant analysis was performed to determine risk factors. All 12 culture positive samples were evaluated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, a PCR ribotyping investigation was carried out in one of them exemplarily. Results: In total 31 patients appeared with CDAD. 87% of these cases were nosocomial acquired. 28 patients formed the control group; 19 of them showed a negative result in microbiological testing, the remaining 9 were lacking a sample. Due to the implementation of preventive measures no further nosocomial cases occurred. No severe cases were found. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of the 12 samples were compared by GelCompar II and showed the identical strain in 11 cases; only one strain mismatched. The PCR investigation of one sample of the predominant strain showed the ribotype 001, which is the most common type. According to multivariate analysis age > 78 years (95% CI, 1.57-50.37; OR 7.05) and the treatment with fluoroquinolones (95% CI, 1.42-182.4; OR 9.23) were risk factors to acquire CDAD. Conclusion: A continuous prospective surveillance is needed to discover cases of Clostridium difficile-related diarrhoea early. This enables the implementation of preventive measures at an early stage to avert outbreaks proactively. ___________________________________________________ HYV03 Do seasonal variations of nosocomial infections exist? B. Piening1, H. Rüden1, P. Gastmeier2 1 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Institute for Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany 2 Hanover Medical School, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany Background: Several infectious diseases are known to have a seasonal variation in their incidence but it is not clear, if these differences have to be considered for evaluating surveillance data of nosocomial infections. Objective: To investigate seasonal influences for the most important nosocomial infections and their causing pathogens. Method: The data from the surveillance components for ICU patients (ICU-KISS) and operated patients (OP-KISS) of the German Nosocomial Infection Surveillance System (KISS) between January 1997 and December 2006 were considered for the analysis. Infection rates (infections/1000 patient days for ICU-KISS or infections/100 patients for OP-KISS) for the winter period (December – February) and the summer period (June – August) as well as the resulting incidence density ratio (IDR) for ICUKISS or risk ratio (RR) for OP-KISS were calculated. As test of independence two-sided p values were calculated using mid-p exact method for IDR’s and Fisher’s exact test for RR’s. Results: A total of data from 694 185 ICU patients from 401 ICUs and 267 537 operated patients from 382 departments were analyzed. The results for the 4 most important infection types and some pathogens with a significant difference are shown in table 1. Conclusion: Minor seasonal variations do exist but it seems not to be necessary to consider these differences for evaluation of surveillance data. 69 Table 1: Infection rate summer half year 10637 4.34 ICU-KISS Pneumonia UTI 5248 2.09 BSI 3107 1.36 P. aeruginosa 2717 1.16 CNS 1861 0.82 Enterobacter spp. 1372 0.62 OP-KISS SSI / 100 patients 5215 2.17 Infection type / Infection with pathogen n Infection rate winter half year 4.13 2.10 1.10 1.00 0.66 0.47 1.81 IDR / RR 1.050 0.995 1.235 1.152 1.252 1.313 1.199 p <0.05 0.86 <0.05 <0.05 <0.05 <0.05 <0.05 ___________________________________________________ HYV04 No significant influence of the air quality in the operating room on the Surgical Site Infections rate in abdominal surgery C. Brandt1, U. Hott2, D. Sohr2, H. Rüden2 1 Clinic of J.-W.-Goethe-University, Med. Microbiology and Clinic Hygiene, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 Charité - University Medicine Berlin, Institute for Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany Introduction: There is no evidence, that ventilation systems in operating rooms (OR)contribute to the prevention of SSI in abdominal surgery. On the other hand, ventilation systems are frequently used in Germany and account for high investment costs and operating expenses. The aim of this study is to evaluate, whether there is an influence of the OR air quality on the SSI rates after abdominal surgery in hospitals participating to the German nosocomial infections surveillance system KISS or not. Methods: Data here was included from surgical departments participating to KISS, with each having at least 100 operations (from the years 2000 to 2004) registered for the operative procedure categories appendectomy, cholecystectomy and colon surgery and having provided detailed information about the ventilation system in the OR. Results: Appendectomy: Among the 23 departments none has natural OR ventilation, 9 had turbulent high-efficiency air filtration (n = 3765 operations; SSI rate 1.9% <1.4; 2.3>) and 14 had laminar-air-flow (n = 7897 operations; SSI rate 2.5% <1.8; 2.8>) Cholecystectomy: Included were the data from 36 surgical departments, 1 had natural OR ventilation (n = 416 operations, SSI rate 0.2% <0.0; 0.7>). Turbulent high-efficiency air filtration was used in 14 departments (n = 6317 operations; SSI rate 1.3% <1.0; 1.5>) and 22 departments had laminar-air-flow (n = 13805 operations; SSI rate 1.5% <1.2; 1.8>). Colon surgery: Out of the 23 included departments, all had artificial ventilation. Turbulent high-efficiency air filtration was used in 7 departments (n = 3248 operations; SSI rate 6.2% <5.4; 7.1>) and 16 departments had laminar-air-flow (n = 13805 operations; SSI rate 5.4% <4.8; 6.1>). Discussion: This data does not support the current requirements by German industrial standards. Neither the benefit of any artificial ventilation, nor the propagated laminar-air-flow supply-air diffuser have been shown any protection against SSI inthis data. HYV05 How safe are sterilisation processes for complex surgical instruments? J. Goldberg1, S. Harpel1, C. Herr1, T. Eikmann 1, A. Knaust1 1 Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Giessen Germany Testing of sterilisation processes is commonly performed by assessment of thermo-physical parameters. For complex surgical instruments thermo-physical testing might not ensure sterilisation, either because of special characteristics of material or geometry of the instrument. Therefore, microbiological testing might be asked to complete validation of sterilisation processes of certain instruments. In the presented study different instruments, which failed validation after assessment of the sterilisation process by thermo-physical parameters, were tested by microbiological methods. The selection of instruments comprised instruments with plastic surfaces and instruments with extreme tight lumens. Instruments were charged with a suspension of Geobacillus stearothermophilus spores. Positive controls were charged with dilutions of the spore suspension to demonstrate the rate of recovery. Sterilisation was performed by vapour sterilisation at 134oC under vacuum fractionation. Spores were recovered with sterile swabs which were incubated in Caso bouillon at 56oC for seven days. Recovery of spores or growth of G. stearothermopphilus respectively was shown even after charge with a 6-log dilution of spore suspension. So far, no bacterial growth was shown after performance of vapour sterilisation. Allthough, for tight lumens sterilisation effectiveness seems to range in a borderline area, which was shown by assessments performed under “half cycle” conditions. Uncertainties of thermo-physical assessment of sterilisation of complex surgical instruments require systematic assessment. To avoid these uncertainties, which might also implicate forensic consequences, validation of sterilisation processes by manufacturers of instruments including microbiological testing should be discussed. ___________________________________________________ HYV06 Patient care quality parameters and central venous catheter associated bloodstream infection rates: An international comparison S. Hansen1, F. Schwab1, M. Behnke1, H. Carsauw2, P. Heczko3 O. Lyytikaeinen4, A. Savey5, P. Gastmeier6 1 Charite - University Medicine Berlin, Institute of Hygiene Berlin, Germany 2 Scientific Institute of Public Health , Unit of Epidemiology Brussels, Belgium 3 Jagiellonian University, Department of Microbiology, Cracow Poland 4 National Public Health Institute, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Helsinki, Finnland 5 C. Clin Sud-Est, Lyon, France 6 HanoverMedical School, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 70 Background: Prevention of central venous catheter (CVC) associated bloodstream infections (BSI) is an important part of infection control activities. Corresponding measures and CVCBSI rates show a great variety in Europe. Objective: To determine data on quality of infection control practices concerning BSI prevention in Intensive Care Units (ICU) and to evaluate the influence of the country on the CVC-BSI rate. Methods: A survey embedded in the European surveillance network HELICS (Hospitals in Europe Link for Infection Control through Surveillance) was conducted. ICUs participating in the ICU surveillance networks of 5 countries were asked to fill in questionnaires which contained questions about the structure of the ICU, surveillance methods, CVC insertion techniques as far as further management of CVCs. The results were associated with the corresponding CVC-BSI rates. Univariate and multivariate analyses were carried out. Results: Data from 288 ICUs of 5 countries (Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Poland) with 1.383.444 patient days, 969.897 CVC days and 2095 CVC-BSIs were analysed. The monthly number of taken blood samples per 1000 bed days varied between the participating ICUs (median=82, Q1=36; Q3=164). The median CVC utilization rate was 68.8%, the median CVCBSI rate was 1.73. CVC-BSI rates showed a variety between the countries as shown in table 1. Multivariate analysis showed the categorical variable country as a significant risk factor for the development of a CVC-BSI. Furthermore university hospitals were a risk factor for CVC-BSI (OR:2.55, CI95:1.17-5.58; p=0.019). Conclusion: Whether surveillance methods or infection control policies are responsible for the countries influence on CVC-BSI rates remains unclear. Probably differences in cultural, social and legal perspectives as well as differences in health care systems are crucial for explaining these differences. Table 1: CVC associated BSI rates of the participating countries Country Country Country Country Country all 1 2 3 4 5 1,27 1,52 3,27 4,35 1,73 (0,78; median 0,94 (0,00; (0,54; (0,82; (1,26; (2,38; 3,60) CVC2,10) 3,63) 4,45) 8,18) BSI rate 6,57) (Q1; Q3) ___________________________________________________ HYV07 Nosocomial outbreak of carbapenem-resistant pseudomonas aeruginosa in a surgical intensive care unit A. Kohlenberg1, D. Weitzel-Kage1, D. Sohr1 P. van der Linden1, H. Rüden1, K. Weist1 1 Charité Berlin, Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany Background: Infection control personnel performing surveillance activities for the German Nosocomial Infection Surveillance System for Intensive Care Units noticed a cluster of patients with isolates of carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the surgical intensive care unit. Methods: An outbreak investigation including a descriptive analysis, a case-control study and PFGE typing of P. aeruginosa isolates was carried out. Cases were defined as patients with a carbapenem-resistant isolate of P. aeruginosa in the surgical intensive care unit during the outbreak period from 01.07.2006 to 31.10.2006. Controls were defined as patients with a carbapenem-sensitive isolate of P. aeruginosa in the same intensive care unit during the same time period. Odds ratios were calculated in a univariate analysis. To identify independent risk factors a multiple logistic regression analysis was performed. Results: 15 cases and 18 controls were identified. Seven cases had a nosocomial infection according to CDC criteria. In the univariate analysis isolation of P. aeruginosa from a wound culture, presence of an abdominal or pleura drain, abdominal surgery, abdominal lavage, an operation with a wound contamination class 3 and therapy with aminoglycosides, quinolones or carbapenems were significantly associated with carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa. Presence of an abdominal drain (odds ratio 26.37, 95% CI 1.90 – 999) and therapy with quinolones (odds ratio 39.12, 95% CI 3.17 – 999) were independent risk factors for the isolation of carbapenemresistant P. aeruginosa. Seven of ten available isolates from case patients with carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa showed an identical PFGE-pattern. Conclusion: This polyclonal outbreak of carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa in surgical patients was associated with the presence of abdominal drains as an indicator of improper wound management and antibiotic therapy with quinolones. ___________________________________________________ HYV08 Increase of VRE in a german university hospital. A. Kola1, F. Schwab2, S. Sürbaum1, P. Gastmeier1 1 Hanover Medical School, Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 2 Charité-University Medicine, Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany Background: Starting in 2004, an increase of vancomycinresistant E. faecium (VREfm) was observed at HanoverMedical School (MHH), a 1 400 bed university hospital with 40 000 admitted patients per year: The proportion of VREfm raised from 1.2 % (first half-year of 2004) to 20,4 % (second half-year of 2006) in spite of isolation precautions. Methods: VREfm were typed by PFGE and the simple diversity index SD (different genotypes / N isolates * 100) was calculated. Results were compared to those obtained for 239 isolates of Vancomycin-susceptible E. faecium (VSEfm). In addition, multiple-locus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) and PCR amplification of the esp-gene were performed. Results: 171 primary isolates of 166 patients hospitalised on 30 wards were analysed: PFGE revealed 57 different genotypes, of which 36 were unique and 21 appeared in clusters of 2–31 isolates. With the exception of three clusters of two, three and five isolates, there was no genotype that was related to a specific ward. Sixty-one patients (37 %) with VREfm were in the general surgery unit and 38 patients (23 %) in the haematological oncology unit. In these units, 30 % of VREfm 71 were due to patient-to-patient transmissions. SD was significantly different between VREfm and VSEfm (33.3 vs. 44.8, RR VREfm/VSEfm = 0,745, CI95: 0,58-0,96, p = 0.024), as were the cluster sizes (number of isolates belonging to one genotype) of VREfm and of VSEfm (mean: 6.47 vs. 4.77, median: 3 vs. 2, p = 0.028). MLVA-analysis of the two most prominent PFGE-clusters revealed the involvement of the epidemic clonal complex-17 (MT 1 and 7), but only the isolates of one of these two cluster were esp-positive. Conclusion: The lower SD and the greater median cluster size of VREfm express a higher genetic relationship of VREfm in comparison to VSEfm. Considering the 36 unique genotypes and the occurrence of identical genotypes on different wards without epidemiological linkage, this is not explained by simple patient-to-patient transmission of VREfm, which accounted for approximately 30 % of VREfm. Further analysis has to be done to clarify the causes of the increase in VREfm at MHH. ___________________________________________________ HYV09 Long-term MRSA-persistence determined by MRSA surveillance of subsequent hospital stays F. Mattner1, F. Biertz2, H. Hecker2, M. to Baben-Yang2,3 S. Ziesing4, S. Sürbaum4, P. Gastmeier4, I. F. Chaberny4 1 University Luebeck, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Luebeck, Germany 2 Medical University Hanover, Biometry, Hanover Germany 3 Medical University Hanover, Electronic Data Processing Centre, Hanover, Germany 4 Medical University Hanover, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Hanover, Germany Objective: To estimate the duration of the persistence of MRSAcolonized patients. Methods: From 1st Jan 2001 to 31st October 2005 all patients admitted to a Northern German university hospital who had at least one MRSA-positive culture were included in our study. Readmissions of MRSA-positive patients were identified by an alert system. All microbiological materials submitted to the laboratory during all subsequent hospital stays were tested for MRSA. A patient was regarded MRSA-negative, if for three subsequent days specimens taken at initially MRSA - positive body sites were tested negative in absence of MRSA targeting therapy. Results: A total of 1032 MRSA-positive patients yielded to 2038 admissions. 403 (39%) patients were readmitted at least once. The mean follow-up time was 136±219 days for all 1032 patients. 339 Patients had a follow-up time of at least 90 days (range 90; 1325 days) For the frequence of MRSA-positivity at discharge of subsequent hospital stays see table 1. The kaplan-meier survival analysis of all MRSA-positive admissions revealed that at 362 days post admission 50% of the patients lost the MRSA. Patients colonized only in the nares were significantly more likely to loose the MRSA compared to those colonized at other or a combination of body sites (OR 2,6; 95% CI 1,2; 5,9). Decolonization during the first admisssion showed a trend towards a long-term effectiveness (log-rank-test p = 0,07). Conclusion: The high readmission rate (40 %) of MRSApositive patients underlines the importance of an alert system.MRSA-carriage is partially lost dependend on time course, initial colonization sites and decolonization procedures. Table 1: Long-term MRSA-carriage of patients hospitalized at least twice MRSA-carriage at subsequent admission(s) Patients readmitted at Patients with a followleast once (%) (N=403) up of > 90 days (%) (N=339) At all subsequent 238 (59,1%) admissions positive At at least three subsequent admission alternating MRSAstatus 25 (6,2%) 187 (55,2%) 24 (7,1%) Only at the last 58 (14,4%) admission negative 55 (16,2%) 82 (20,3%) 73 (21,5%) During at least two subsequent readmissions negative ___________________________________________________ HYV10 EUREGIO-project MRSA-net twente/Muensterland: Prevalence screening and other network activities to control MRSA dissemination in the dutch-german border region A. W. Friedrich1, I. Daniels-Haardt2, R. Köck1, F. Verhöven3 A. Mellmann1, J. E. W. van Gemert-Pijnen3, F. Kipp4 K. Becker4, M. G. R. Hendrix5 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Hygiene Muenster, Germany 2 State Institute of Puplic Health Service North RhineWestphalia, Muenster, Germany 3 University Twente, Fakulty of Behavioral Science Twente, Germany 4 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 5 Laboratory Microbiology Twente-Achterhoek, Enschede Germany Against the background of remarkable differences in MRSA prevalence between Netherlands and Germany, recent efforts to reinforce cross-border cooperations in healthcare spotlight the need to monitor and reduce MRSA spread in the Dutch-German border region. Since July 1st 2005, the EUREGIO-project MRSA-net Twente/Muensterland has created a vivid network of healthcare providers aiming at setting up a regional quality group which controls MRSA dissemination and enables reliable cross-border cooperation in the long run. Here we report on current network activities. 1. Until today, 44 hospitals, representing 95% of all patient beds procured in the region, are participating actively in the project. On the German side of the border a MRSA admission screening 72 and risk factor assessment was performed in November 2006. Therefore, a collaboration of the regional microbiological laboratories was established. All isolates were spa typed. Screening of patients yielded a proportion of 7.4 MRSA/100 S. aureus. Risk factor analysis led to the implementation of a graduated regional screening recommendation. 2. In ambulatory healthcare, general practitioners were invited to informative meetings conveying an educated handling of MRSA patients. In cooperation with health insurers and the regional Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KVWL) the refunding of MRSA-associated treatment costs was introduced. 3. Standardized MRSA surveillance data are collected by all participating hospitals using a standardized protocol and a computerized database for transmitting the data annually to the public health departments enabling them to control regional MRSA dissemination according to §23 of the German Infection Prevention Act. 4. MRSA guidelines for patient transport services and nursing homes have been developed in cooperation with the public health departments. 5. For improving the presentation of information on MRSA, behavioural scientists analyzed MRSA guidelines with special regard to their user-friendliness and target-group-orientation. A bilingual web-based question-answering tool was developed on the basis of an interview study. Active crossborder collaboration strengthens the regional network between the healthcare providers. Prevalence screening enlightens the local prevalence of MRSA and the local importance of MRSA-associated risk factors. ___________________________________________________ HYV11 Molecular protein A (spa)-typing for excluding possible MRSA transmission episodes among detected MRSA inpatients I. F. Chaberny1, S. Marsch1, P. Gastmeier1 1 Hanover Medical School, Inst. of Med. Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany Background: A routine surveillance for MRSA was established since 2001 at HanoverMedical School. In order to identify nosocomial transmission episodes spa-typing was introduced. Method: MRSA-isolates from all possible epidemiological associated patients in 2004 (stay on the same unit and during the same time interval (± 9 days)) were included in spa-typing analysis. When two different spa-types were identified, a possible MRSA transmission episode was excluded. Results: 445 patients and their MRSA isolates were included in the analysis. With 62.2% was the spa type t032 or so called “Barnimer” strain predominant followed by t003 (7%), t456 (2.9%), t004 (2.6%) and other. Because of no epidemiological associations 75 patients were excluded for further epidemiological analysis. Hence, 370 patients were examined. Due to the definition 317 possible transmission episodes were revealed. Of these 105 (33%) were identified as definite nontransmissions by comparing spa typing results. 21 (6.6%) were determined as definite transmission episodes. Due to the predominant strain in our setting 193 (60.9%) episodes could not categorized. Conclusion: The molecular spa typing provided additional information to the epidemiological associations during routine MRSA surveillance. ___________________________________________________ HYV12 Results of a prospective one year follow-up study with the Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus intelligent operating system (METHIOS) – The awarded computer based real-time MRSA surveillance D. Krickhahn1, C. Krickhahn1, M. Herrmann1, U. Geipel1 1 University Hospital des Saarlandes, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Homburg, Germany Objective: Evaluation of the computer-based surveillance METHIOS and presentation of the actual prospective follow-up study results. Design: We compared the efficiency of MRSA eradication with or without the assistance of thecomputer based surveillance system. This study was performed to determine differences in MRSA detection and decolonization procedures as well as additional infection control interventions in the two groups. Patients and Setting: A total of 290 MRSA colonized patients with 367 hospital stays in a 1.355-bed university hospital between January 2006 and May 2007. Results: From the 367 in-patient treatments the duration of the hospital stay after the initial MRSA detection was evaluated. In 194 cases the hospital length of stay was less than 11 days, so the minimal time spent for a proved MRSA eradication trial in our study protocol was not given. 173 cases could be observed for MRSA eradication. Of these 36 were included in the software based MRSA surveillance METHIOS, 137 patients were on hospital units which were in this period in the normal personnel based MRSA surveillance. We found a high significant difference in verified MRSA eradication between the METHIOS group (83.3%) and the control group (20.4%); p<0.001. Conclusions: The here described Computer-based surveillance system is an effective and also attractive option to optimize MRSA infection control. This METHIOS surveillance software package might also be a useful interactive platform for an MRSA network of different hospitals optimizing surveillance and intervention of infections due to MRSA and other multiresistant nosocomial pathogens. C.K. won the „IKOP-Innovationspreis für angewandte Infektionspraevention 2007“ for the developmentand the implementation of the computer-based surveillance of MRSA. ___________________________________________________ IIP01 Oral continuous exposure to environmental mycobacteria renders germfree but not conventional mice susceptible to M. tuberculosis infection S. Behnck-Knoblau1, O. Goldenberg2, U. Steinhoff1 1 MPI for Infektion Biology, Immunolgy, Berlin, Germany 2 Transgenomic Ltd., Berlin, Germany We investigated the exposure to environmental mycobacteria (MOTT, mycobacteria others than tuberculosis) and the impact of the intestinal flora on the ability of the vaccine BCG to 73 protect against M. tuberculosis (M. tub.) infection. Dissemination and persistence of MOTT and BCG were analyzed by culture and identity of bacterial isolates was determined by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) on the WAVE® Microbial Analysis System (Transgenomic Ltd). To evaluate BCG efficiency, animals were challenged 11-12 weeks after vaccination with virulent M. tub. When given via the drinking water, MOTT disseminated to multiple organs but did not persist. Continuous administration of MOTT had no influence on dissemination and persistence of oral BCG in conventional (SPF) and germfree (GF) mice. Furthermore, in SPF animals, MOTT exposure had no influence on BCG mediated protection against subsequent aerosol M. tub.infection. In contrast, GF-mice pre-sensitized with MOTT were highly susceptible to aerosol M. tub.-infection despite vaccination with BCG. Although dissemination and persistence of BCG was not affected, aerosol challenged mice showed high titers of M. tub. in spleen and lung. These findings indicate that i) in the absence of an endogenous microflora oral exposure with MOTT interferes with BCG induced immunity and ii) that these suppressive effects are independent of the spread and multiplication of the BCG vaccine strain. ___________________________________________________ IIP02 C5a/C5a-receptor modifies the course of experimental colitis in mice M. Martin1, K. Johswich2, A. Bleich3, E. Bleich3, E. Gessner4 M. Kracht5, O. Dittrich-Breiholz5, S. Sürbaum2, C. Rheinheimer2, A. Klos2 1 Lund University, University Hospital Malmoe, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund, Denmark 2 Medical School Hanover (MHH), Medical Microbiology Hanover, Germany 3 Medical School Hanover (MHH), Institute for Laboratory Animal Science , Hanover, Germany 4 Medical School Hanover (MHH), Clinical Immunology Hanover, Germany 5 Medical School Hanover (MHH), Institute of Pharmacology Hanover, Germany Crohn´s disease and ulcerative colitis show increasing incidence and impact in industrial countries. Animal models are useful tools to study the pathogenesis of these multifactorial diseases. The complement system is activated in colitis - most likely by bacteria originating from the gut due to an impaired mucosal barrier. Because the application of a C5a-receptor (C5aR, CD88) antagonist in rats indicated a crucial role of this receptor, we questioned if a knockout of C5aR modifies the course of dextran-sulfate-sodium (DSS)-induced colitis in mice. Experimental colitis was induced in C57BL/6J-C5ar1tm1Cge (C5ar1-/-) and wild-type (wt) mice by oral administration of 2.5 % (w/v) DSS ad libitum for eight and four days, respectively. Control mice received normal drinking water. The mice were scored daily for the following parameters: body weight, spontaneous as well as induced behaviour, habitus, stool consistency/faecal blood, food and water intake, as well as overall health appearance. All these parameters were incorporated into a disease activity index. On day four or eight, respectively, mice were sacrificed and blood was withdrawn by heart puncture. Colons were collected to assess the development of colitis by histological score and measured to determine the colitis-induced shortening. Myeloperoxidase activity was quantified in colon homogenates, and plasma C3a-levels were measured to determine the degree of complement activation. DSS-treated wt mice showed significantly higher weight loss, diminished water and food intake, shorter colons, as well as higher disease activity indices from day five on compared to the corresponding water controls, demonstrating that the DSStreated mice developed the typical colitis symptoms. Symptoms were milder and appeared later in C5ar1-/- than in wt mice upon DSS-application. Furthermore, C5ar1-/- mice developed less severe colitis as determined by histology on day four of DSStreatment. Thus, our results strongly suggest that C5a/C5aR modify the development of experimental colitis in mice and could serve as a new therapeutic target in colitis. Additional data will be presented at the meeting. ___________________________________________________ IIP03 Analysis of the role of iNOS in chronic Burkholderia pseudomallei infection P. Wongprompitak1,2, K. Breitbach1, I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 Mahidol University, Department of Immunology, Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand The gram-negative soil bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, an infectious disease which has emerged as an important cause of severe communityacquired infections in certain areas of the tropics. Burkholderiapseudomallei is able to multiply intracellularily within the cytosol and can directly spread from cell to cell. The clinical manifestations of melioidosis are extremely variable being either localized or disseminated, either chronic or acute infections with fulminant septicemias. Long periods of latency are characteristic of the disease, but the mechanisms leading to clinical infections are unknown. We could recently demonstrate that iNOS was not essential for the early control of acute B.pseudomallei infection in relatively resistant C57Bl/6 mice. In contrast, C57Bl/6 iNOS-/- mice seemed to be even slightly protected from infection within 48 h after infection (Infect Immun 2006. 74:6300). In this study, we address a potential function for iNOS at later stages during chronic murine melioidosis. Our experiments showed that there was no significant difference in mortality between C57Bl/6 wildtype and C57Bl/6 iNOS-/- mice within three months after infection. Moreover, C57Bl/6iNOS-/- bone-marrow derived macrophages revealed no essential role for iNOS-mediated mechanisms to eliminate B.pseudomallei in these cells over a period of 120 h. However, NO inhibition in macrophages derived from susceptible BALB/c mice led to a reduced bactericidal activity compared to control cells. In ongoing experiments, we are comparing and analyzing the role of iNOS in C57Bl/6 and BALB/c mice in controlling B.pseudomallei infection in various organs several months after infection. ___________________________________________________ 74 IIP04 Similar T cell-activating properties of egc-encoded and classical Staphylococcus aureus superantigens D. Grumann1, S. Holtfreter1, C. Kohler2, S. Scharf3, M. Hecker2 U. Völker3, S. Engelmann2, B. M. Broeker1 1 University of Greifswald, Institute for Immunology and Transfusion Medicine, Greifswald, Germany 2 University of Greifswald, Institute for Microbiology Greifswald, Germany 3 University of Greifswald, Institute for Functional Genomics Greifswald, Germany Neutralizing serum antibodies against S. aureus superantigens are common in the healthy population with one exception: superantigens of the enterotoxin gene cluster (egc). These are by far the most prevalent superantigens in clinical S. aureus isolates but only rarely elicit a neutralizing antibody response, even in carriers of egc-positive S. aureus strains. We hypothesized that this egc-gap in the antibody response is due to i) different T cellactivating properties of classical and egc superantigens and/or ii) their differential regulation. Three classical (SEB, SEQ, and TSST-1) and three egc superantigens (SEI, SEM, and SEO) were overexpressed in E. coli, purified and LPS-depleted, and their T cell activating properties were studied. We found no major differences between the T cell-mitogenic potency of classical and egc superantigens. In contrast, egc-encoded proteins were secreted by S. aureus during logarithmic growth, while classical superantigens were released in the stationary phase. In conclusion, we propose that, due to their different regulation, classical and egc superantigens contact the host’s immune system under conditions, which either favour or, in the case of egc superantigens, prevent efficient antibody production. ___________________________________________________ IIP05 “Live carrier” therapeutic tumor immunization independent of tumor antigens. Do we need tumor antigens? K. Panthel1, S. Jellbauer1, B. Köhn1, G. Pfaffinger1, E. Roider1 H. Rüssmann1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Max von PettenkoferInstitute, Munich, Germany Today tremendous efforts are undertaken to identify and characterize tumor antigens. Different immunization schedules applying diverse immunization procedures such as antigen loaded dendritic cells are examined. Because of the complexity of the Tumor microenvironment, and the complex and highly polymorphic nature of the patients immune system, for example the MHC-polymorphism, it is difficult to identify optimal antigens in different patients. Here we show that a combined prophylactic / therapeutic immunization with Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella typhimurium against a highly aggressive murine fibrosarcoma is effective as a therapeutic treatment independent of a predefined tumor antigen. Data suggest that potent and “MHC-haplotype adapted” but tumor unrelated antigen may be transported to the tumor cells by intracellular bacteria provoking a local anti tumor immune response. This is achieved through colonization of tumor tissue by bacteria after preimmunization against the antigen. Utilizing the Type Three Secretion System of Salmonella and the intrinsic properties of Listeria it is possible to induce antigen specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that may be responsible for the therapeutic effect observed in immunized animals. Optimization of therapeutic immunization may be achieved in the near future by simultaneously addressing antigen specific immunity and characteristic properties of tumor microenvironment through “live carrier” mediated therapy. Today it is not clear whether direct or indirect effects account for the observed therapeutic effects. ___________________________________________________ IIP06 Clonal distribution of superantigen genes in clinical Staphylcoccus aureus isolates H. Silva1, D. Grumann1, M. Schmudde1, H. Thi Thu Ngyuen1 P. Eichler1, B. Strommenger2, K. Kopron3, J. Kolata1, S. Giedrys-Kalemba3, I. Steinmetz4, W. Witte2, B. M. Bröker1 1 University of Greifswald, Immunology, Greifswald, Germany 2 National Reference Center for Staphylococci, Wernigerode Germany 3 Pomeranian Medical University , Dept. Microbiology and Immunology, Sczcecin, Poland 4 University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute for Medical Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany Staphylococcus aureus is both a successful human commensal and a major pathogen. The elucidation of the molecular determinants of virulence, in particular the assessment of the contributions of the genetic background versus those of mobile genetic elements (MGEs), has proved difficult in this variable species. To address this, we have simultaneously determined the genetic background (spa-typing) and, as markers for MGEs, the distribution of all 19 known superantigens as well as the exfoliative toxins A and D (multiplex PCR). Methicillinsensitive S. aureus strains from Pomerania, 107 nasal and 88 blood culture isolates, were investigated. All superantigenencoding MGEs were linked more or less tightly to the genetic background. Thus, each S. aureus clonal complex was characterised by a typical repertoire of superantigen and exfoliative toxin genes. However, within each S.aureus clonal complex and even within the same spa-type, virulence gene profiles varied remarkably. Therefore, virulence genes of nasal and blood culture isolates were separately compared in each clonal complex. The results indicated a role in infection for the MGE harbouring the exfoliative toxin D gene. In contrast, there was no association of superantigen genes with blood stream invasion. In summary, we show here that the simultaneous assessment of virulence gene profiles and the genetic background increases the discriminatory power of genetic investigations into the mechanisms of S. aureus pathogenesis. ___________________________________________________ 75 IIP07 IFIT-2 – A putative novel negative regulator of proinflammatory responses S. Berchtold1, E. Fahl1, M. Hornef2, J. Geisel1, J. - S. Frick1 E. Bohn1 1 University Hospital Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Tuebingen, Germany 2 MedicalUniversity Hanover, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Hanover, Germany Interferon-induced tetratricopeptide repeat protein (IFIT-) 2 is induced upon acute infection with Yersinia enterocolitica in CD11b-positive cells of the spleen of mice as well as in the colon of IL-2 deficient mice which develop inflammatory bowel disease. IFIT-2 is induced by type II and type I interferons or indirectly by LPS in an type I interferon dependent manner. Recently it was reported that mouse IFIT2 (P54) affects protein synthesis by interaction with the translation initiation factor eIF3c. Therefore we speculated that this gene could represent a negative regulator of host responses by down regulating protein synthesis. To address the role of IFIT2, stably transfected RAW 264.7 macrophages were established overexpressing IFIT-2. These cells were viable and showed similar proliferation as control cells. IFIT-2 overexpression did not alter LPS triggered p38, ERK, JNK and I-kappaB phosphorylation indicating that IFIT-2 does not affect LPS mediated signal transduction. Overexpression of IFIT-2 in RAW 264.7 macrophages reduced LPS induced protein expression in a selective manner at posttranscriptional levels. Thus, TNF- , IL-6 and MIP-2 secretion but not protein expression of IFIT-1 or early growth reponse 1 were affected by IFIT-2. IFIT-2 may represent a novel negative regulator of proinflammatory responses. ___________________________________________________ IIP08 Repeated peripheral administrations of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides lead to sustained CNS immune activation S. Sethi1, I. Wagner2, W. Xiang2, A. Giese2, S. Ebner2 H. Kretzschmar2 1 Insitute of Medical Microbiology, Microbiology, Homburg Germany 2 Center for Neuropathology and Prion Research, Prion Research, Munich, Germany Bacterial DNA containing CpG motifs activates cells of the innate immune system. In this study, we examined the effects of multiple peripheral bacterial DNA-mediated CNS innate immune stimulation. To study this issue, we repeatedly peripherally administered synthetic CpG-oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODN) and assayed effects on CNS-associated TNF-alpha (TNF ) and C1q mRNA levels. We for the first time accounted for frequency of CpG-ODN administration and time kinetics of mRNA expression. We were able show that multiple intraperitoneal CpG-ODN administrations have a sustainable effect on immune effectors of the brain and stimulate TNF mRNA secretion even up to 7 days after the last CpG-ODN application. This could on the one hand indicate a depot effect after multiple peripheral CpG-ODN administrations, however, it could also indicate that the cell producing TNF mRNA remains activated for the indicated time period. Furthermore, elevated mRNA levels of C1q were observed, possibly indicating microglial activation after multiple peripheral bacterial DNA administrations. In this study, we have correlated frequency of CpG-ODN administrations with CNS-associated TNF mRNA levels and show that multiple peripheral administrations of CpG-ODN lead to a sustained level of a Th1-associated cytokine in the brain. These findings indicate that the repeated peripherial administration of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides offer a therapeutical possibility for CNS-associated infections and tumors. ___________________________________________________ IIP09 Yersinia enterocolitica induces cell death in splenic dendritic cells: Evidence for YopP dependent and independent mechanisms S. E. Autenrieth1, D. Middendorf1, I. B. Autenrieth1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University , Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany The virulence factor YopP of Yersinia enterocolitica (Ye) induces cell death in mouse bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DCs). Here we have investigated whether YopP of Ye might induce cell death in DCs in vivo. For this purpose, C57BL/6 mice were infected i.v. with Ye wild type (pYV+) or with the YopP deficient mutant strain (pYV+ yopP). One, two and three days post infection the number of splenic DCs including subpopulations as well as the frequency of apoptotic DCs was analyzed by flow cytometry and immunofluorescence microscopy. Infection of mice with the pYV+ resulted in a higher number of CD11c+ cells in the spleen one day post infection compared to untreated mice. This effect was not observed in the spleen of mice infected with pYV+ yopP, indicating that the rapidly increased number of DCs in the spleen one day after Yersinia infection is mediated by YopP. Three days post infection the number of CD11c+ cells was three times lower in the spleen of mice infected with pYV+ compared to untreated mice. The decrease in CD11c+ cells was associated with significantly higher numbers of apoptotic and necrotic DCs three days post infection with the wild type strain pYV+ compared to uninfected mice or to mice infected with the YopP deficient mutant strain pYV+ yopP as revealed by immunostaining of active caspase 3, TUNEL reaction and staining with propidium iodide. However, infection with pYV+ yopP also resulted in a significant, although lower increase of apoptotic DCs suggesting that part of DC death after Yersinia infection in vivo is caused by mechanisms independent of YopP. Recent published data suggest, that LPS promotes DC death in bacterial infections in vivo. Furthermore, analysis of DC subpopulations revealed that Ye induces cell death predominantly in CD4+CD8 - DCs. Whether and how this affects priming of T cells required for the control of Ye infections remains to be shown in future studies. Taken together, our data demonstrate YopP dependent and YopP independent induction of DC death in vivo suggesting that YopP, possibly in concert with LPS, induces cell death in splenic DCs. ___________________________________________________ 76 IIP10 Immune modulation mediated by Aggregatibacter (Actinobacillus) actinomycetemcomitans as a possible mechanism for the development of periodontitis A. Schubert1, D. Nickel2, S. Poppert2, H. Bruns2, A. Spahr1 S. Stenger2 1 University Hospital Ulm, Department of Dentistry Ulm, Germany 2 University Hospital Ulm, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Ulm, Germany Aggregatibacter (Actinobacillus) actinomycetemcomitans (A.a.) is a major causative agent of chronic and aggressive periodontitis. The aim of this study was to investigate the interaction between A.a. and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), as the interaction of this pathogen with the host´s immune system seems to play a major rule in the development and progression of this disease. To determine the efficiency of infection, we designed probes specific for A.a. and performed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The majority of the bacteria were in the proximity of or adjacent to PBMC implying the possibility of immunological interaction. This finding prompted us to measure cytokine production (TNF, IFN- ) and bacterial survival using a co-culture system of A.a. and PBMC. The amounts of cytokines in the co-culture were measured by Elisa. TNF titers measured after 24 and 72 h were 1300 pg/ml and 540 pg/ml, respectively. IFN- levels were 290 pg/ml after 24 h and 1600 pg/ml after 72 h. Under these conditions (5% human serum) no viable bacteria were found after 24 h of incubation. We are currently trying to establish conditions that permit the survival of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells. Ultimately, we intend to identify immune deviations in patients with severe periodontitis that account for the hyper-inflammation characteristic for this disease. ___________________________________________________ IIP11 Role of complement in EHEC-induced haemolytic uraemic syndrome: purified shiga toxin activates complement in vitro D. Orth1, K. Grif1, A. - B. Khan1, A. Naim1, M. P. Dierich1 L. - B. Zimmerhackl2, R. Würzner1 1 Innsbruck Med. Univ., Dept. Hygiene, Microbiology & Social Medicine, Innsbruck, Austria 2 Innsbruck Med. Univ., Dept. Pediatrics, Innsbruck, Austria Infections with Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) represent a major cause for haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) and acute renal failure in childhood. Shiga toxins (Stx1 and Stx2) are believed to be major virulence factors of EHEC, contributing to the pathogenesis of HUS. Besides EHEC-associated HUS, there are hereditary forms of HUS, which are caused by mutations of complement regulator proteins, in particular factor H, and not dependent on EHEC bacteria. In contrast, a direct action of Shiga toxins on renal cells has been proposed for development of the EHECassociated HUS. The aim of our study was to investigate whether complement is also involved in the pathogenesis of diarrhoea associated EHECinduced HUS. By measuring the Terminal Complement Complex (TCC) using an ELISA based on a neoepitope on human C9 we could show that purified Shiga toxin 2 significantly activates complement when incubated with normal human sera in fluid phase in vitro. This effect was not seen when heat-inactivated Shiga toxin was used. In conclusion, the major EHEC virulence factor Shiga toxin activates complement in vitro, suggesting that complement also plays a role in EHEC-induced HUS. Our hypothesis is that EHEC virulence factors exert some of their destructive action via complement. ___________________________________________________ IIP12 Multiepitope vaccine against extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) A. Wieser1, S. Schubert1 1 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institut, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Bacteriology, Munich, Germany ExPEC cause a wide variety of infectious diseases such as sepsis or urinary tract infections, and are responsible for a significant mortality and morbidity in humans and animals. As ExPEC strains become more and more resistant to antibiotics, preventive measures such as vaccination against these pathogenic E. coli strains are an achievable goal. Based on previous findings in genome analyses we selectively target virulence factors and uropathogen associated proteins. To identify the relevant immunogenic regions, the unknown three dimensional structure of these Proteins was simulated using a combination of Hidden-Markov-Model, and neuronal network based algorithms. Furthermore MHCI and MHCII epitopes as well as proteasome cleveage sites were predicted. Considering these data two recombinant modular proteins were designed, containing epitope bearing regions separated by linker sequences unlikely to be presented on MHCI or MHCII molecules. To express the recombinant vaccine proteins, two fully synthetic genes have been synthesized using an optimised codon bias to enhance protein expression in Enterobacteriaceae. We further evaluated two application routes in the mouse model for these new multi-epitope vaccine proteins to obtain both, a high humoral and cellular immune response. First, we produced the vaccine proteins in vitro using an E. coli expression system and administered them nasally. Second we used a novel bacterial antigen delivery system which targets the vaccine directly into the cytoplasm of mammalian cells in vivo to enhance the cellular T-cell mediated immune response. The elicited cellular and humoral immune response was evaluated using IFN- ELISpot and sub-class specific antibody ELISA. Immunized mice showed titre increases of specific IgG in their serum as well as IgA antibodies in vaginal wash and an increase in cytotoxic T-cells specific for the recombinant vaccine proteins. In the challenge model of peritonitis a significant reduction of bacterial load could be achieved in immunized mice. ___________________________________________________ 77 IIP13 Proteins derived from Nocardia farcinica activate human dendritic cells and induce IL-12 and IL-23 secretion M. Eisenblätter1, E. Jasny1, A. Buchal1, G. Stübs1 T. Ulrichs1,2, G. Yapici1, R. R. Schumann1, S. Bereswill1 J. Zweigner1, R. Ignatius1 1 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Hygiene, Berlin, Germany 2 Max-Planck-Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, Germany The gram-positive, partially acid-fast cell wall of the bacillus Nocardia farcinica is composed of proteins, lipids, lipoproteins, glycolipoproteins, and peptidoglycan. As dendritic cells (DCs) are of major importance for the induction of T-cell mediated immunity, we were interested in the interaction of human DCs with N. farcinica in vitro as well as in the bacterial components and cellular mechanisms that might be involved in this interaction. We investigated the effects of live and killed N. farcinica as well as lipid and water-soluble non-lipid preparations of bacterial lysates on human monocyte-derived DCs in vitro. In contrast to previous findings with DCs infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, DCs exposed to live or killed N. farcinica in vitro were potently activated, i.e., they developed a mature phenotype, secreted IL-12 and IL-23, and stimulated allogeneic T cells in mixed leukocyte reactions. Neither filtered supernatants of the cultures nor the lipid fraction but only the water-soluble non-lipid fraction of the bacterial lysate induced DC maturation. Experiments with Toll-like receptor- (TLR-) expressing human cell lines demonstrated the involvement of TLR2 but not TLR4 in the cellular recognition of the components of the nocardial water-soluble non-lipid fraction. Similarly, murine bone marrow-derived DCs (bmDCs) of TLR2 knock-out mice secreted less IL-12 than DCs from wild-type or TLR4 knock-out mice. Thus, water-soluble non-lipid components of N. farcinica, likely proteins, activate DCs and TLR2-signaling is involved in the activation. Further investigations of other TLRs and NOD proteins possibly contributing to the recognition of nocardial components and characterization of the activating proteins are ongoing. ___________________________________________________ IIP14 IL-6 and maturation govern TLR2 and TLR4 induced TLR agonist tolerance and cross-tolerance in dendritic cells J. - S. Frick1, J. Geisel1, F. Kahl1, C. J. Kirschning2, H. Wagner2 I. B. Autenrieth1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Technical University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Hygiene, Munich, Germany Stimulation of murine bone-marrow-derived-dendritic-cells (DC) with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or the synthetic lipopeptide N-Palmitoyl-bis(palmitoyloxy)-propyl-cysteinyl-seryl-Lys4 (P3CSK4) induces expression of TNF-a in a TLR4- or TLR2dependent fashion, respectively. Pre-treatment of DC with LPS results in hyporesponiveness to a subsequent LPS challenge, termed LPS-tolerance and to subsequent P3CSK4 challenge, termed cross-tolerance. Concordantly, treatment of DC with P3CSK4 resulted in homo-tolerance towards subsequent P3CSK4 as well as cross-tolerance towards subsequent LPS challenge. Different mechanisms seemed to account for induction of DC tolerance. Pre-stimuation with LPS or P3CSK4 at low concentration induced tolerogenic DC in an IL-6-dependent fashion and was accompanied neither by activation and maturation of DC nor by downregulation of TLR2/4 expression. In contrast, induction of tolerogenic DC by treatment with LPS or P3CSK4 at high concentrations was independent of IL-6. In homo-tolerogenic DC degradation of IkB upon challenge was inhibited, as well as in cross-tolerogenic DC pretreated with high dose LPS or P3CSK4. In contrary, cross-tolerance in DC pretreated with low amounts of LPS or P3CSK4 did not correlate with reduced IkB degradation upon secondary challenge. Our data indicate that in DC TLR4 and TLR2 stimulation results in homo- and cross-tolerance and that neither reduction of TLR2 or TLR4 expression levels, nor reduced NF?kB activtion are essential for TLR agonist tolerance of DC. ___________________________________________________ IIP15 CD8+Foxp3+ T-cells modulate cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell functions in the intestine A. M. Westendorf1, J. Bür1,2 1 German Research Center for Infection Research, Mucosal Immunity, Brunswich, Germany 2 Hanover Medical School, Institute of Medical Microbiology Hanover, Germany Several studies have observed links between infections and the development of intestinal autoimmunity. The normal intestine contains a significant concentration of immune cells in a chronic state of so-called physiological inflammation, in which the gut is poised for, but actively restrained from, full immunologic responses. During the course of infections in the normal host, full activation of the GALT occurs is rapidly controlled by regulatory cells. In contrast to antigen specific CD4+ regulatory T cells in the intestine, the generation and function of immunomodulatory antigen-specific CD8+ T cells is less well defined. To dissect the immunologic mechanisms of CD8+ T cell function in the mucosa, reactivity to a self-antigen expressed in intestinal epithelium of mice bearing a MHC classI-restricted T-cell-receptor specific for this antigen was studied. Here, we demonstrate that intestinal self-antigen expression leads to peripheral induction of antigen-specific CD8+ Foxp3+ T cells rather than the induction of cytotoxic CD8+ effector T cells and intestinal pathology. This induction is restricted to the mesenteric lymphnode and the lamina propria. Antigenexperienced CD8+ T cells in this transgenic mouse model are characterized by significantly upregulation of CD103, CD83, GPR83 and granzyme A/B expression, molecules also expressed on regulatory CD4+ T cell subsets. Despite the fact that naïve and antigen-experienced CD8+ T cell exhibit the same proliferative capacity in vitro, CD8+ T cells from this transgenic mouse model produce much less IFN-gamma and no TNF-alpha after in vitro stimulation in comparison to naïve CD8+ T cells. Furthermore, whereas naïve CD8+ T cells further aggravate CD4+ T cells proliferation in an inhibition assay CD8+ T cells isolated from this transgenic mouse model slightly reduce antigen-specific CD4+ T cell proliferation in vitro. In summary, we demonstrate that self-antigen expression of intestinal 78 epithelial cells is sufficient to induce CD8+ regulatory T cells which maintain intestinal homeostasis by down-modulating effector functions of T cells. ___________________________________________________ IIP16 CD4+ T cell immune response induced by bacterial polysaccharide requires activated IL-6- secreting antigen presenting cells S. Meemboor1, E. Flenner1, A. Zingarelli1, M. Bessler1 W. Kalka-Moll1 1 University of Cologne, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Hygiene, Cologne, Germany Abscess formation associated with intra-abdominal sepsis causes severe morbidity and are difficult to treat. The presence of CD4+ T cells is essential for abscess formation. Zwitterionic polysaccharides (ZPS) from commensal bacteria such as Bacteroides fragilis, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus represent a novel class of immunomodulatory bacterial antigens that stimulate CD4+ T cells in a MHC class II-dependent manner. Sp1 is the capsular polysaccharide of S. pneumoniae serotype 1 and acts as a ZPS model antigen. Sp1 possesses a zwitterionic charge motif with free amino and carboxyl groups and promotes T cell-dependent intraperitoneal abscesses in an experimental murine model. Mice are administered Sp1 with sterile cecal content adjuvant (SCCA) which reflects the spillage of colonic contents that occurs during the onset of intra-abdominal sepsis in humans and aids the pro-inflammatory response. SCCA alone has been proven not to induce abscess formation. In this study we address the role of the cytokine IL-6 on antigen presenting cells during Sp1-induced abscess formation. FACS analysis demonstrate that macrophages are the most prevalent antigen-presenting cells in intraperitoneal lavage after intraperitoneal Sp1 challenge. Macrophages activated by Sp1 secrete significant amounts of IL-6 as shown by intracellular cytokine staining. IL-6 secreting macrophages are incorporated in the abscess capsule as immunohistochemical analysis of the Sp1-induced abscesses do visualize. Migration assays demonstrate a dose-dependent IL-6induced CD4+ T lymphocyte migration. In IL-6-deficient mice we demonstrate that IL-6 fails to attract CD4+ T cells into the peritoneal cavity after Sp1 challenge and to hence develop abscesses. In addition, administration of a neutralizing antibody specific for IL-6 prevents abscess formation following Sp1 challenge. These data delineate the requirement of activation of antigen-presenting cells by ZPS and underscore the essential role of IL-6 in this disease process. ___________________________________________________ IIP17 Impaired respiratory burst of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes after phagocytosis of F. tularensis holarctica and F. tularensis tularensis strains W. D. Splettstösser1,2, D. Frangoulidis3, M. Bastian4 P. Kaysser1, E. Seibold1, P. Schuff-Werner4 1 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Immunology, Munich Germany 2 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Virology & Hygiene Medical Microbiology, Rostock, Germany 3 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Munich, Germany Institute of Clinical Chemistry & Laboratory Medicine Rostock, Germany 4 Background: Human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) represent the first line of defense against invading microorganisms. During phagocytosis, PMN produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) and release cytotoxic granule components to kill ingested microbes. Only few microorganisms evade killing by different mechanisms. Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia, has been reported to be less efficiently killed by PMN but the exact mechanisms involved have so far not been identified. Methods: Flow cytometric analysis of phagocytosis and respiratory burst after incubation of PMN with different F. tularensis strains was performed employing heparinized whole blood obtained from vaccinated or non-immune donors. The PhagoTestTM or BurstTestTM (Orpegen Pharma Heidelberg) were used according to the manufacturer`s instruction, and bacterial target cells were “live”-stained by different fluorophores. Results: Regular phagocytosis occurred with all strains even in the absence of specific antibodies. Strains of the subspecies F. tularensis tularensis or holarctica did not trigger ROS production, while F. tularensis subspecies novicida was able to induce the respiratory burst independently from the opsonization with normal or specific immune sera. The activation of the respiratory burst in “none-immune“ PMN depended on the preopsonization with anti-Francisella antibodies. Conclusion: Immunity to infection with F. tularensis is widely considered an example of T-cell mediated immune defense, driven by activated macrophages. However, at least in murine infection, the critical role of PMN for host defense against primary infection and their participation in defense against reinfection had been recognized. We demonstrated that differences in virulence of F. tularensis strains are reflected by different handling by human PMN. It remains to be elucidated if ingestion and oxidative killing triggered by Francisella-specific antibodies are the only ways how PMN can contribute to immune defense against this intracellular pathogen. ___________________________________________________ IIP18 Adenoviral Rab-GFP fusion protein by phagosomal and endosomal trafficking studies in primary antigen presenting cells N. Robinson1, T. Li Stephen1, S. Meemboor1, W. Kalka-Moll1 G. Plum1 1 University of Cologne, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Hygiene, Cologne, Germany Antigen presentation by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II on antigen presenting cells (APCs) is facilitated after a sequence of events that starts with a phagocytic process, followed by phagosomal processing of the antigen, phagolysosomal degradation of the phagocytosed material and loading of antigenic peptides onto MHC molecules. A detailed picture of this process termed phagosome maturation is beginning to emerge, involving regulators of membrane trafficking in mammalian cells and phagosomal interactions 79 with endosomal organelles and the trans-Golgi network. So far, cell biology studies of antigen presentation can be performed in primary cells after fixation and permeabilization for staining with specific antibodies or other endosomal pathway probes. Investigation in live cells is solely possible in cell lines after transfection with expression vectors for GFP-tagged endosomal marker proteins. In an effort to open up ways to elucidate the phagosomal processing events after antigen uptake in live primary antigen presenting cells of murine and human origin we have developed a set of adenoviral Rab-GFP fusion protein expression vectors that allow observation and tracking individual phagosomes. Transfection with the early endosomal marker Rab5-GFP, late endosomal marker Rab7-GFP, and transferrin receptor recycling marker Rab11-GFP was achieved in 92% to 93% of mouse dendritic cells, in 89% to 94% of human macrophages and in 70% to 82% of mouse macrophages. Rab-GFP fusion proteins were readily expressed in these primary cells using these highly efficient adenoviral constructs allowing phagosome and endosome trafficking by fluorescently labeled fluid phase marker. Our data show that the intracellular endocytic trafficking events preceeding antigen presentation in primary APCs can be effectively studied in live cells by using our adenoviral expression systems. ___________________________________________________ IIP19 Analysis of inflammatory mediators in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid during hospital-acquired pneumonia by a bead array based multiparameter assay M. Klotz1, A. Klemmer1, M. Lohoff1 1 University Hospital Marburg, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Marburg, Germany Although BAL has been helpful in the diagnosis and differentiation of various types of lung diseases including interstitial lung diseases, malignancies and pulmonary infections, it is often unclear, whether the presence of bacteria represents colonization or infection. During lung diseases cytokines and chemokines are important mediators of the inflammatory response leading to lung injury. The proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1ß and tumor necrosis factor- are produced by alveolar macrophages. In turn, they induce the production of a variety of other cytokines and chemokines by both macrophages and mesenchymal cells (including fibroblasts, epithelial and endothelial cells), which recruit more leucocytes to the site of inflammation. Here, we measured different cytokines and chemokines in BAL from 102 patients with and without clinical symptoms of pneumonia by flow cytometry using a Cytometric Bead Array (CBA) multiparameter analysis. Nine different cytokines (IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, TNF , IFN , IL-1ß, IL-6 and IL-12p70) and five different chemokines (IL-8, CCL5/RANTES, CXCL9/MIG, CCL2/MCP-1 and CXCL10/IP-10) were analysed. We found a great heterogeneity in the amount of cytokines. The chemokine IL-8 was present at high levels in most samples. IL-1ß showed high levels in BAL from patient with pneumonia and pathogenic bacteria. Surprisingly, IFN and IL-6 were present at high amounts in BAL from patients with pneumonia independent of the presence of bacteria. These data were correlated with the clinical outcome, pulmonary infiltration, fever and further laboratory values, such as leucocytes and procalcitonin. The long-term goal of this study is to develop an inflammatory-mediator-score-system that helps to establish a diagnosis of pneumonia. ___________________________________________________ IIP20 Bartonella henselae exists as a mosaic of different genetic variants in the mammalian host J. Berghoff1, J. Viezens1, M. Arvand1 1 University Rostock, Institut für Med. Microbiology, Rostock Germany Bartonella henselae is a fastidious bacterium associated with chronic infections in humans and cats. The mechanisms involved in the long-term survival of bartonellae despite vigorous host immune responses are poorly understood. Generation of genetic variants is a possible strategy to circumvent the host specific immune responses. We have recently demonstrated the coexistence of different genetic variants within the progeny of three primary B. henselae isolates from Berlin by PFGE analysis. Aims of the present study were to determine whether coexistence of different variants is a common feature of B. henselae isolates worldwide and whether the genetic variants originally emerged in vivo. Thirty-four primary isolates from different geographic regions were analysed by subjecting multiple single colony derived cultures to PFGE analysis. Up to three genetic variants were detected within 20 (58.8%) isolates, indicating that most primary isolates display a mosaic-like structure. The close relatedness of the genetic variants within an isolate was confirmed by multi-locus sequence typing (MLST). In contrast to the primary isolates, no genetic variants were detected within the progeny of 20 experimental clones generated in vitro from 20 primary isolates, suggesting that the variants were not induced in vitro during the procedure of PFGE analysis. Hence, the genetic variants within a primary isolate most likely originally emerged in vivo. Consideration of the mosaic structure of primary isolates is essential when interpreting typing studies on B. henselae. ___________________________________________________ IIP21 CMV reactivation of patients with septic shock: role of antiviral immune response L. von Müller1,2, M. Principi2, A. Klemm2,3, N. Durmus2 M. Schneider3, M. Weiß3, H. Suger-Wiedeck3, T. Mertens2 1 University of Saarland Hospital, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Homburg, Germany 2 University Hospital Ulm, Institute of Virology, Ulm, Germany 3 University Hospital Ulm, Department of Anesthesiology, Ulm Germany Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is discussed as a pathogen of emerging importance in critically ill patients without immunosuppressive therapy. In this single center prospective study sixty-five patients with septic shock were recorded. Prospective weekly monitoring of active CMV infection on the one hand and immune functions of the other hand were performed using quantitative pp65-antigenemia, viral isolation, interferon-gamm 80 release assay for T-Helper1-cell (Th1) function and cytotoxic Natural Killer cell (NK) assay. Forty-three CMV seropositive patients with a prolonged ICU stay (<7 days) were included. Within two weeks fourteen patients (32.6%) developed an active CMV infection with low pp65-antigenemia (median 3 positive / 5´105 WBCs). Surprisingly, CMV reactivation occurred in patients with intact CMV specific Th1-cells. Pp65-antigenemia became undetectable without antiviral therapy after twenty days, on average. Thereby, the frequency of CMV and superantigen (SEB) reactive Th1-cells significantly increased in the groups with active CMV infection but remained low in the group without active CMV infection. In addition to CMV reactivations also herpes simplex virus (HSV) reactivations were detected in sixteen patients in bronchial aspirates which occurred at the same time in the same patients. Overall, morbidity was not different between CMV seropositive and seronegative patients; however, ICU treatment (median 17 vs. 33.5 days) and the need of mechanical ventilation (median 19 vs. 42.5 days) were significantly prolonged once active CMV infection occurred. We conclude that CMV reactivation followed by antiviral immune response could impair pulmonal function of patients with septic shock. Early antiviral therapy aimed at preventing viral associated morbidity of CMV seropositive patients with septic shock should be evaluated in future clinical as a new treatment option. Fig. 1: CMV and SEB reactive Th1-cells The following scenarios were analyzed. Patients with active CMV infection (group 1; A and D), patients with negative pp65antigenemia without CMV reactive Th1-cells (group 2; B and E) and patients with negative pp65-antigenemia with CMV reactive Th1-cells (group 3; C and F).Statistical analysis was perfomred using paired t-test , and significance was set at a level of p = 0.05. Figure 1: ___________________________________________________ IIP22 The control of Anaplasma phagocytophilum in vivo is dependent on CD4+ T cells, but is independent of typical Th1 cytokines and a wide spectrum of effector mechanisms F. von Löwenich1, K. Becher1, Y. Kern1, B. Steiner1 C. Bogdan2 1 Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg Germany 2 Institute of Clinical Microbiology, Immunology and Hygiene Erlangen, Germany Anaplasma phagocytophilum is a Gram-negative, obligate intracellular bacterium that is transmitted by ticks and replicates within neutrophils. In order to define the mechanisms of immunological control, we studied the course of infection in transgenic mouse strains with various defects of the immune system. The mice were systemically infected via i.p. injections of infected SCID mouse blood. At certain time after infection, the bacterial load was measured in the blood, spleen and lung by a quantitative PCR technique. Mice deficient for cytokines and effector molecules involved in the control of other intracellular pathogens were unimpaired in eliminating A. phagocytophilum (IL-12p35-/-, IL-12p35-/-p40-/-, IL-4-/-, IFN-gamma-/-, IFNalphaR-/-, TNF-/-, iNOS-/-, gp91phox-/-, neutrophil elastase-/Cathepsin G-/-, MCP-1-/-, Perforin-/-,Faslpr, Faslgld). SCID and Rag1-/- mice developed strikingly increased bacterial loads in the blood compared to wild-type. SCID mice died after about 21 to 30 days of infection, but were rescued by the transfer of T-cells. Similarly, T-cell deficient nude mice were not able to control the pathogen, whereas Ig -/- mice (lacking mature B-cells) cleared the infection. Wild-type mice as well as JHT-mice (no B-cell-receptor) were protected against a second infection. MHC II-deficient mice, CD4-depleted mice and Tcrb-/- mice showed a low level bacterial persistence which indicates that a CD4+-TCell dependent Th1-response plays a role in controlling A. phagocytophilum in vivo. ___________________________________________________ IIV01 Shifts towards pro-inflammatory intestinal bacteria aggravate acute murine colitis and ileitis via toll-likereceptor signalling M. M. Heimesaat1, A. Fischer1, B. Siegmund2, A. Batra2 C. Loddenkemper3, O. Liesenfeld1, M. Blaut4, U. B. Göbel1 R. R. Schumann1, S. Bereswill1 1 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Microbiology and Hygiene, Berlin, Germany 2 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, CBF, Medical Clinic I Berlin, Germany 3 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, CBF, Institute for Pathology, Berlin, Germany 4 German Institute for Food Research, Gastrointestinale Microbiology, Potsdam-Rehbruecke (Nuthetal), Germany Inflammatory bowel diseseases (IBD) are accompanied by shifts of the gut microflora towards pro-inflammatory bacteria. Components of gut bacteria are specifically sensed by the innate immune system via Toll-like-receptors (TLRs) 2 and 4. Therefore, we assessed gut flora changes and disease susceptibility in ileitis and colitis by using mice lacking TLR2, 81 TLR4, or the innate immunity signaling adapter proteins MyD88 and TRIF. In DSS-colitis, TLR2-/-, TLR4-/-, and TLR2/4-/- mice displayed reduced signs of acute colitis, reduced levels of immune mediators, lower amounts of neutrophils, and less regulatory Tcells in situ as compared to wild-type (wt) animals. During colitis, E. coli concentrations increased in wt mice but were significantly lower in TLR2/4-/- animals. Enterococci showed a tendency to increase in colitis and were also less abundant in TLR2/4-/- mice. Microflora shifts were confirmed by cultureindependent molecular analyses. In T. gondii-induced ileitis, E. coli increased by nine orders of magnitude. Mice impaired in TLR4 or MyD88, but not TRIF or TLR2 expression, displayed reduced mortality and diminished immunopathology. Decreased IFN-g- and NO-levels in the inflamed ileum of TLR4-deficient mice indicated that TLR4signaling aggravates ileitis via local mediator release from immune cells. E. coli strains isolated from the inflamed ileum induced TLR4-dependent NF-kB activation and nitric oxide (NO) production in HEK293 cells and peritoneal macrophages. In gnotobiotic mice treatment with purified E. coli lipid A and colonization with live E. coli aggravated ileitis, whereas animals lacking TLR4 were protected. Treatment with the LPS scavenger polymyxin B ameliorated ileitis. Immunohistochemistry and analysis of immune cell populations at inflamed mucosal sites in situ revealed that the amelioration of ileitis in TLR-deficient animals was associated with lower tissue concentrations of neutrophils and regulatory T-cells, which were both significantly increased in the inflamed ileum. We conclude that shifts towards pro-inflammatory bacteria potentiate colitis and ileitis via TLR signaling indicating that the innate immune system is essential for maintaining the intricate balance between mucosal homeostasis and intestinal inflammation. This highlights the innate immune system as a key player in bacteria-mediated gastrointestinal immunopathology. The application of TLR-antagonists may represent a novel strategy for amelioration of acute intestinal inflammation in course of IBD. ___________________________________________________ IIV02 Role of dendritic cells in S. pyogenes infection T. Loof1, M. Rohde2, S. Jung3, E. Medina1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Mikrobielle Pathogenicity/Infektion Immunology, Brunswich, Germany 2 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Mikrobielle Pathogenicity, Brunswich, Germany 3 The Weizmann Institute of Science, Immunology, Rehovot Israel Infections with Streptococcus pyogenes remains a significant health care problem. The identification of immune components required for host defenses against S. pyogenes constitutes an important area of research. Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells that play a crucial role in initiation and modulation of specific immune response against microbes. We investigated the role of DCs during S. pyogenes infection using an experimental mouse model. S. pyogenes induces maturation of DCs, indicated by high expression levels of co-stimulatory molecules such as CD40 or MHC class II and the release of cytokines such as IL12, IL6, and TNFa in in vitro experiments. The contribution of DCs to host defenses against this infection was investigated using CD11c-diphteria toxin receptor (DTR) transgenic mice, in which DCs can be transiently depleted in vivo by treatment with low doses of DT. We show that ablation of DCs led to increased bacterial dissemination into draining lymph nodes and systemic organs. Furthermore, ablation of DCs but not of macrophages resulted in a significant reduction in the levels of IL-12 in the serum of infected mice. These data suggest that although other cell populations such as macrophages can also produce IL-12, DCs are the main producers of this cytokine during in vivo infection. This is an important finding since IL-12 has been shown to contribute to host resistance to S. pyogenes infection. The results of our study are therefore of high relevance to the understanding of the early events of infection and the onset of protection against S. pyogenes. ___________________________________________________ IIV03 Caspase-1 is essential to control intracellular infection with Burkholderia pseudomallei K. Breitbach1, J. Köhler1, P. Wongprompitak1,2, K. Eske1 I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich Loeffler Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 Mahidol University, Department of Immunology, Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand Using murine models of infection, Caspase-1 has been shown to play an important role in defence against several intracellular pathogens. However, in some of these models results were conflicting, since absence of caspase-1 caused increased susceptibility in vivo but, in contrast, seemed to protect infected macrophages from cytotoxic effects of the pathogen in vitro. Recently, it has been shown that the facultative intracellular gram-negative rod Burkholderia pseudomallei can induce caspase-1 dependent cell death in macrophages. The present study was aimed to elucidate the role of caspase-1 during B.pseudomallei infection in more detail. Our data presented here shows that cytotoxicity in B.pseudomallei-infected caspase-1-/macrophages was reduced within the first hours after infection, but strikingly correlated already with an increased intracellular bacterial burden compared to control cells at this time point. In contrast, 24 h after infection deficiency of caspase-1 led to highly increased cell damage of infected cells and a dramatic increase in bacterial burden. Finally, in agreement with our in vitro data we found caspase-1-/- mice to be highly susceptible against B.pseudomallei challenge. Our results suggest that, although B.pseudomallei induces cell death in macrophages to some degree via a caspase-1-dependent mechanism in the early phase of infection, this enzyme is important to control intracellular bacterial growth in the early and late phase of infection. This dual role of caspase-1 might explain some conflicting in vitro and in vivo results on the role of this enzyme in infection models with other intracellular organisms. ___________________________________________________ 82 IIV04 Inhibition of apoptosis conserves neutrophil effector function and can contribute to inflammation in vivo T. Frankenberg1, R. Paul2, B. Obermaier2, S. Kirschnek1 H. Häcker3, G. Häcker1, U. Ködel2 1 Technical University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Munich, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Department of Neurology Munich, Germany 3 St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Infectious Disease Memphis, USA Neutrophil granulocytes have essential functions during immune responses against pyogenic bacteria. Following pathogen clearance, neutrophils have to be removed from sites of infection. We used a mouse model of pneumococcal meningitis to test for the role of apoptosis in neutrophils in this termination of the immune response. In this model, neutrophil function is known to be crucial for efficient defence against bacterial infection. Mice overexpressing anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 in the hematopoietic compartment had more severe symptoms and higher lethality than wild type littermates. We observed a similar recruitment of leukocytes into the brain at early time points during infection but a significantly higher leukocyte count in the cerebrospinal fluid at later stages. This was accompagnied by a loss of blood-brain-barrier function, impaired clearance of bacteria from the blood in Bcl-2transgenic mice and more pronounced histopathological alterations. The continued presence of neutrophils in these mice despite clearance of bacteria suggested that the block of apoptosis caused sustained pleocytosis and contributed to the severity of the inflammation. To test this, we compared in vitro apoptosis and effector function of wt and Bcl-2 overexpressing neutrophils derived from isolated bone-marrow progenitor cells retrovirally transduced with regulable Hoxb8. In its active state, Hoxb8 promotes progenitor expansion while upon inactivation it permits cellular differentiation. This culture system thus provides the possibility to generate almost unlimited numbers of ‘near-primary’ neutrophils. Differentiated Hoxb8 neutrophils displayed the typical nuclear morphology, expressed Gr-1, and were phagocytosis-proficient. No obvious differences in terms of differentiation and effector functions were observed between wt and Bcl-2 neutrophils. Upon prolonged culture, the vast majority of differentiated wt neutrophils underwent apoptosis. The overexpression of Bcl-2 efficiently protected neutrophils from cell death and, importantly, these ‘undead’ cells retained at least some of their effector functions. These data show that inhibition of apoptosis can prolong neutrophil lifespan and effector function, which very likely contributes to the more severe pathology in Streptococcus pneumonia-induced murine meningitis. This model therefore suggests that granulocyte apoptosis is an important event for the termination of the innate immune response. ___________________________________________________ IIV05 CD8alpha+ dendritic cells are required for efficient entry of Listeria monocytogenes into the spleen M. Neuenhahn1, K. Kerksiek2, M. Nauerth1, M. Suhre1 M. Schiemann1, F. Gebhardt1, C. Stemberger1, K. Panthel3 S. Schröder2, T. Chakraborty4, S. Jung5, H. Hochrein1 H. Rüssmann3, T. Brocker2, D. Busch1 1 Technical University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Hygiene, Munich, Germany 2 Ludwig-Maximilian-University, Institute for Immunology Munich, Germany 3 Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute Munich, Germany 4 Justus-Liebig-University, Institute for Medical Microbiology Giessen, Germany 5 Weizmann Institute, Department of Immunology, Rehovot Israel In addition to their bridging function between innate and adaptive immunity, dendritic cells (DCs) may also contribute to primary resistance against infection. Therefore, we analyzed the role of DCs during infection with Listeria monocytogenes by performing systemic in vivo depletion of these cells. Surprisingly, we found that CD8alpha+ DCs are crucial for Listeria spreading and proliferation in the spleen. Efficient and rapid uptake of Listeria by CD8alpha+ DCs requires the small GTPase Rac1 and is a general characteristic of this DC subpopulation in filtering particles out of the blood. Thus, CD8alpha+ DCs appear to play an important role for efficient bacterial entry into the spleen. Depletion of DC consequently abrogates subsequent T cell responses, which are again detectable upon bypassing the dependency of sustained Listeria infection on the presence of an intact DC compartment. Based on these important features of early Listeria infection kinetics, we performed further experiments using Listeria mutants and bone marrow chimeric mice in order to analyze the relative contribution of different antigen-presenting cells for the establishment of protective T-cell responses against intracellular pathogens. ___________________________________________________ IIV06 Role of non-proteasomal proteases in the processing of Listeria monocytogenes-derived MHC class I-presented antigenic peptides S. Grauling-Halama1, U. Bahr1, S. Schenk1, G. Geginat1 1 University Heidelberg, Faculty for Clin. Medicine Mannheim Institute for Med. Microbiology and Hygiene, Mannheim Germany The effective control of the infection of mice with the facultatively intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes requires CD8 T cells which recognize bacterial antigenic peptides presented in the context of host MHC class I molecules. It is generally accepted that bacterial antigens are processed by the proteasome, a proteolytic cytoplasmic multiprotein complex. We observed that presentation of certain L. monocytogenes-derived CD8 T cell epitopes by infected cells can not be totally suppressed by inhibitors of the proteasome. Further analysis revealed that also inhibitors of the cytoplasmic 83 tripeptidyl protease II suppressed the presentation of L. monocytogenes-derived CD8 T cell epitopes. Total, synergistic inhibition of bacteria-derived CD8 T cell epitopes occurred in the simultaneous presence of inhibitors of the proteasome and the cytoplasmic tripeptidyl protease II. Our data clearly indicate that both, the proteasome and other cytoplasmic proteases play a role in the processing of L. monocytogenes-derived antigenic peptides. ___________________________________________________ IIV07 Astrocyte gp130-expression is critical for the survival of murine Toxoplasma encephalitis U. Helmuth1, M. Deckert2, K. Drögemüller1 M. Sakowicz-Burkiewicz1, D. Reinhold3, D. Gutmann4 W. Müller5, D. Schlüter1 1 OvG University of Magdeburg, Medical Microbiology Magdeburg, Germany 2 University of Cologne, Neuropathology, Cologne, Germany 3 OvG University of Magdeburg, Immunology, Magdeburg Germany 4 Washington University School of Medicine, Neurology St. Louis, USA 5 Helmholtz Center for Infection Research, Experimental Immunology, Brunswich, Germany In response to murine Toxoplasma encephalitis (TE), there is robust astrocyte activation; however their in vivo function is largely unknown. To study their role in TE, we generated mice deficient in astrocytic expression of gp130 (GFAP-Cre gp130fl/fl), the signal transducing receptor for cytokines of the IL-6 family. These mice were significantly impaired in control of T. gondii ultimately dying of a necrotizing TE. While GFAP+ astrocytes of infected gp130fl/fl control mice were activated and increased in number, which was associated with effective parasite control, containment of inflammatory lesions and survival of TE, GFAP-Cre gp130fl/fl mice lossed GFAP+ astrocytes during TE. In vitro, survival of T. gondii-infected, LPS- and TNF-stimulated astrocytes was also gp130-dependent. Despite loss of astrocytes, the intracerebal production of chemokines, cytokines, anti-parasitic effector molecules, and recruitment of leukocytes was unimpaired in TE of GFAP-Cre gp130fl/fl mice. These findings together with the observation that in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis astrocyte survival and control of the intracerebral autoimmune attack was also gp130-dependent, show that astrocytes are of crucial importance in TE and EAE and that gp130 is a critical survival factor of astrocytes. ___________________________________________________ IIV08 Innate natural killer cell response in cutaneous and visceral Leishmaniasis requires toll-like receptor 9-mediated Interleukin-12 production by myeloid dendritic cells U. Schleicher1, J. Liese1, S. Kunz1, C. Kurzmann1, C. Bogdan1,2 1 University Clinic of Freiburg, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg, Germany 2 University Clinic of Erlangen, Clinical Microbiology Immunology and Hygiene, Erlangen, Germany Natural killer (NK) cells are rapidly activated during the early immune response to intracellular pathogens including Leishmania and contribute to the control of the parasites. In vitro studies suggested that the activation of NK cells during infections not only results from the balance of stimulatory and inhibitory signals by NK cell receptors, but depends on the interaction with plasmacytoid (pDC) or myeloid dendritic cells (mDC) that sense the pathogen and generate NK cellstimulatory signals. Here, we investigated the cell types, pattern recognition receptors and cytokines that are required for NK cell activation during Leishmania infections in vivo. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) exposed to Leishmania promastigotes in vitro released both interferon (IFN)-alpha/beta and interleukin (IL)-12 in a TLR9-dependent manner, although they did not internalize the parasites. In contrast, myeloid dendritic cells (mDCs) phagocytosed the parasites and produced high amounts of IL-12, but not IFN-alpha/beta, in the presence of TLR9. In vivo, Toll-like receptor (TLR) 9 was indispensable for NK cell IFN-gamma production and cytotoxicity in both cutaneous (L. major) and visceral leishmaniasis (L. infantum). Studies with IL-12- or IFN-alpha/beta receptor (IFNAR)knockout mice revealed that IFNAR-deficiency only slightly reduced the L. infantum-induced IFN-gamma production by NK cells, whereas NK cell cytotoxicity and IFN-gamma secretion was completely abolished in IL-12-deficient mice. The latter phenotype was also observed in mDC-depleted mice, whereas NK cell activation in response to L. infantum was maintained after depletion of pDCs. Intracellular cytokine staining showed that mDCs represent the source of IL-12 during the early phase of Leishmania infection. TLR9-deficient mice lacked IL-12 expression by mDCs after infection with L. major or L. infantum. Thus, NK cell priming in vivo in response to Leishmania parasites is linked to mDCs, which sense the pathogen via TLR9 and subsequently deliver IL-12 to stimulate the NK cells. ___________________________________________________ IIV09 Candida albicans and Candida-derived cell wall components stimulate toll-like receptor and cytokine expression in human keratinocytes J. Wagener1, G. Weindl1, P. W. de Groot2, A. de Bör3 M. Weig3, M. Schaller1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University Tuebingen, Department of Dermatology, Tuebingen, Germany 2 University of Amsterdam, Swammerdam Institute of Life Sciences, Amsterdam, Neterlands 3 Georg-August-University Goettingen, Department of Medical Microbiology, Goettingen, Germany Rapid immune response in Candida infections is mediated in part by a family of innate recognition molecules known as tolllike receptors (TLRs). TLRs recognise conserved motifs called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), which represent broad groups of microbial pathogens or components. TLR signalling pathways trigger subsequent inflammatory responses which are crucial for successful host defence against pathogens. Fungal cell wall components such as beta-glucan and mannoproteins have been shown to stimulate the innate immune response in myeloid cells in a TLR-dependent manner, 84 particularly through TLR2 and TLR4. However, Candida albicans cell wall components that specifically induce TLR responses in keratinocytes have not yet been investigated in detail. In our studies we first analysed the TLR expression of human keratinocytes after exposure to viable and heat-inactivated C. albicans yeast cells by quantitative RT-PCR. Stimulation with viable C. albicans cells showed increased TLR4, TLR9 and TLR10 mRNA levels in a time and concentration-dependent manner, associated with increased expression and production of proinflammatory cytokines, analysed by RT-PCR and ELISA. In contrast, heat-inactivated C. albicans yeast cells showed only a weak upregulation of TLR4 and TLR9 mRNA and failed to induce a cytokine response. In addition, we examined the effect of different cell wall extractions from C. albicans on TLR gene expression and found a slight increase of TLR4 and TLR10, accompanied with an induction of GM-CSF and IL-8 levels comparable to those observed after treatment with viable cells. However, different wild type cell wall extractions and cell wall extractions from C. albicans cell wall mutants showed no major differences in the TLR expression pattern and cytokine release. In conclusion, these results indicate that distinct TLRs and possibly other pattern recognition receptors together trigger innate immunity in human keratinocytes by recognising different structures of C. albicans. The similar immune response to different cell wall extractions suggests that specific ligands are present in all layers of the fungal cell wall. Furthermore, we speculate that C. albicans possesses, but as yet unidentified, TLR ligands which are recognised by TLR9 and TLR10. ___________________________________________________ IIV10 Clinical relevance of serum antibody responses elicited by nasal colonization with Staphylococcus aureus. S. Holtfreter1, T. T. H. Nguyen1, H. Wertheim2, P. Eichler3 T. T. H. Le4, H. Kusch5, K. Eske1,6, Q.P. Truong4, K. Roschack1 L. Steil4, M. Hecker5, S. Engelmann5, A. van Belkum2 U. Völker4, B. Broeker1 1 University of Greifswald, Department of Immunology Greifswald, Germany 2 University Medical Center Rotterdam, Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Rotterdam, Germany 3 University of Greifswald, Department of Transfusion Medicine, Greifswald, Germany 4 University of Greifswald, Department of Functional Genomics Greifswald, Germany 5 University of Greifswald, Institute of Microbiology, Greifswald Germany 6 University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute of Medical Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany Colonization by Staphylococcus (S.) aureus increases the risk of nosocomial S. aureus infection. Surprisingly, the outcome of S. aureus bacteraemia is much better in carriers than in noncarriers. We therefore propose that individuals colonized of with S. aureus mount an immune response which partially protects them in the case of infection. To test this hypothesis, we first used staphylococcal superantigens (SAg) as indicator antigens because of their high prevalence and strain variability. Sera from S. aureus carriers very efficiently inhibited the T cell proliferation induced by the SAgs of their colonizing strain. In contrast, their neutralizing serum capacity for secretion products of S. aureus strains with different SAg genes was much lower and it did not differ from that of non-carriers. These results show that S. aureus carriers show a very effective and highly specific neutralizing antibody response against the SAgs of their commensal strain. This raises the question, whether colonization with S. aureus per se is a potent trigger of an adaptive immune response. To investigate this, we colonized 16 healthy volunteers with the S. aureus strain 8325-4, which was selected because of its low virulence, and obtained serum samples before and four weeks after colonization. The secreted staphylococcal proteins were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblots with the human sera were produced. Consistent with our results concerning anti-SAg antibodies, we observed a large inter-individual variability in the antibody profiles against S. aureus 8325-4 already before experimental colonization. The healthy volunteers harboured antibodies directed against a broad range of extracellular S. aureus proteins, which are likely due to previous encounters with S. aureus. Only rarely we observed additional antibody signals or increased signal intensities after experimental colonization with S. aureus. This shows that short term nasal colonization with a laboratory strain does not trigger strong antibody responses to S. aureus. We conclude that the high antibody titres observed in most healthy individuals, in particular in S. aureus carriers, require either long lasting contact with S. aureus or, most likely, minor infections as they commonly occur with this microorganism, especially with strains of higher invasive potential. ___________________________________________________ IIV11 A molecular mechanism of serum resistance of Borrelia spielmanii sp. nov.: Binding of immune regulators factor H and FHL-1 to complement regulator-acquiring surface proteins P. Herzberger1, C. Siegel1, C. Skerka2, V. Fingerle3 U. C. Schulte-Spechtel3, B. Wilske3, V. Brade1, R. Wallich4 P. F. Zipfel2, P. Kraiczy1 1 University Hospital , Institute for Medical Microbiology und Krankenhaushygiene, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 Leibniz-Institute, Department for Infection Biology, Jena Germany 3 Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Max von PettenkoferInstitute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Munich, Germany 4 University Heidelberg, Institute for Immunology, Heidelberg Germany B. spielmanii sp. nov. has recently been identified as a novel human pathogenic genospecies that cause Lyme disease in Europe. In order to elucidate immune evasion mechanisms of B. spielmanii as a means of evading the innate immune system we have compared the ability of isolates obtained from Lyme disease patients and tick isolate PC-Eq17 to escape from complement-mediated bacteriolysis. Applying a growth inhibition assay, we show that four B. spielmanii isolates, including PC-Eq17, are serum-resistant whereas a single isolate, PMew, was more sensitive to complement-mediated lysis. All 85 isolates activate complement in vitro as demonstrated by covalent attachment of C3 , however, deposition of later activation products C6 and C5b-9 was restricted to the moderately serum-resistant isolate PMew and serum-sensitive B. garinii isolate G1. Furthermore, serum adsorption experiments revealed that all B. spielmanii isolates acquire the host alternative pathway regulators factor H and FHL-1 from human serum. Both complement regulators retain their factor Imediated C3b inactivation activity when bound to spirochetes. In addition, two distinct factor H and FHL-1 binding proteins, BsCRASP-1 and BsCRASP-2, were identified that are approximately 23 to 25 kDa in size. A further factor H-binding protein, BsCRASP-3, was exclusively found in the tick isolate PC-Eq17. In conclusion, this is the first report describing an immune evasion mechanism utilized by B. spielmanii sp. nov. and demonstrates capture of human immune regulators to resist complement-mediated killing. This work was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG, Project Kr3383/1-1 and Wa533/7-1. ___________________________________________________ IIV11a Immune escape of the Lyme disease spirochete Borrelia spielmanii sp. nov.: Characterisation of the plasmid-encoded complement regulator-acquiring surface protein-1 that binds human immune regulators factor H and FHL-1 P. Herzberger1, C. Siegel1, C. Skerka2, V. Fingerle3 U. C. Schulte-Spechtel3, B. Wilske3, V. Brade1, R. Wallich4 P. F.Zipfel2, P. Kraiczy1 1 University Hospital, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 Leibniz-Institute, Department for Infektion Biology, Jena, Germany 3 Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Max von Pettenkofer-Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Hygiene, München, Germany 4 Universität Heidelberg, Institut für Immunologie, Heidelberg Germany Borrelia spielmanii sp. nov., one of the etiological agents of Lyme disease found in Europe escapes complement-mediated killing by recruitment of immune regulators factor H and FHL-1 from human serum. Serum-resistant and intermediate serumresistant isolates express up to three distinct complement regulator-acquiring surface proteins (CRASPs) that bind to factor H and/or FHL-1. Here we report identification and functional characterization of BsCRASP-1, the dominant factor H and FHL-1 binding protein of B. spielmanii. BsCPASP-1 is a 27.7 kDa outer surface lipoprotein, which after processing is predicted to be 24.9 kDa. The gene encoding BsCRASP-1 is a single genetic locus that maps to a linear plasmid of approximately 55 kb. Ligand affinity blot techniques revealed that both, native and recombinant BsCRASP-1 from different isolates, bind to FHL-1 and weaker to factor H. Deletion mutants of BsCRASP-1 were generated and a high affinity binding site for factor H and FHL-1 was mapped to a 10 amino acid residue domain at the C-terminus of BsCRASP-1. Similarly, the predominant binding site of factor H and FHL-1 was localized to short consensus repeats 5 to 7. Factor H and FHL-1 maintain their cofactor activity for factor I-mediated C3b inactivation when bound to full-length BsCRASP-1 but not to a deletion mutant lacking more than 10 amino acid residues at its C-terminus. In conclusion, BsCRASP-1 binds the host immune regulators factor H and FHL-1 with high affinity and is the key molecule of the spirochetes’ complement resistance. Thus, BsCRASP-1 most likely contributes to persistence of B. spielmanii and to pathogenesis of Lyme disease. This work was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG, Project Kr3383/1-1 and Wa533/7-1. ___________________________________________________ IIV12 Commensal Bifidobacterium adolescentis prevents dissemination of Y. enterocolitica infection in vivo by a TLR2 dependent mechanism J. - S. Frick1, F. Kahl1, K. Fink1, J. Geisel1, M. Müller1 C .J. Kirschning2, I. B. Autenrieth1 1 University Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene Tuebingen, Germany 2 Technical University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Hygiene, Munich, Germany An increasing body of evidence suggests that probiotic bacteria are effective in the treatment of enteric infections although the molecular basis of this activity remains elusive. In previous studies we identified a Bifidobacterium adolescentis strain that suppressed the Yersinia enterocolitica induced inflammatory host response in vitro. This B. adolescentis strain was administered to C57BL/6 mice, orally infected with Y. enterocolitica. Interestingly B. adolescentis fed mice had significantly lower mean pathogen burden in visceral organs, decreased intestinal TNF-alpha mRNA expression and loss of bodyweight upon oral infection with Y. enterocolitica. This protective effect was abolished in TLR2-/- mice, indicating that the protective effect of B. adolescentis is mediated via TLR2 dependent signalling. Mice deficient for the DC homing factor CCR7 were still protected from dissemination of Y. enterocolitoca infection indicating that rather epithelial cells than DC contribute to the modulation of Y. enterocolitica infection by administration of B. adolescentis. This is in line with the finding that activation and maturation as well as DC phenotype did not differ between B. adolescentis treated and only Y. enterocolitica infected mice. Ongoing experiments investigate whether the protective effect of B. adolescentis can be related to an increased expression of tight junction proteins and an enhanced integrity of the intestinal epithelial layer. We suggest that B. adolescentis increases the resistance of the intestinal barrier and thereby impedes the translocation of Y. enetrocolitica and the dissemination of Y. enterocolitica infection. ___________________________________________________ 86 IIV13 CD8+ T-cells modulate abscess formation induced by bacterial polysaccharides M. Fabri1, A. Zingarelli1, E. Flenner1, M. Bessler1, H. Hafke1 W. Kalka-Moll1 1 University of Cologne, Microbiology, Cologne, Germany Polysaccharides have been classically considered T-cellindependent antigens. In contrast, zwitterionic capsular polysaccharids (ZPS) from bacteria such as Bacteroides fragilis, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae induce the formation of intraabdomial abscesses in a CD4+ T cell- and MHC class II-dependant manner. ZPSs are characterized by having both positively and negatively charged substitutans on each repeating unit of a highly repetitive structure. Previous investigations on ZPS-induced intraabdominal abscesses have exclusively focused on the role of CD4+ T cells. Herein, we sought to elucidate the immune response of CD8+ T cells to ZPSs. We characterize the function of CD8+CD28- T cells in a experimental model of ZPS-induced abscess formation in vivo and in vitro. Moreover, we provide evidence that ZPSs modulate CD8+ T cell activation by a previously unknown mechanism implying enhanced cross-linking of TCRs on CD8+ T cells. These data provide substantial new insights in the unique functions of bacterial ZPSs to induce and regulate T celldependent intra-abdomial abcsess formation. ___________________________________________________ KMP01 Panchlamydia PCR for detection and identification of chlamydia trachomatis, chlamydophilia pneumoniae, and chlamydophilia psittaci by LightCycler PCR T. Juretzek1, I. Buder1, W. Bär1 1 Carl-Thiem-Clinic, Microbiology, Cottbus, Germany The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of a panchlamydia real time PCR for screening of the human pathogenic Chlamydia, such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Chlamydophilia psittaci, Chlamydophilia abortus and Chlamydophilia pneumoniae in clinical specimen. This study included patients with respiratory affects, lung cancer, neonates with respiratory affects with possible participatipon of C. trachomatis or C. pneumoniae, patients from the ophthalmology clinic, gynaecology, urology as well as pregnant women were examined. In total3281 Specimens were routinely investigated. 0.96 % (16/1662) of adults with respiratory affects were infected by C. pneumoniae, 0.3 % (5/1662) with C.psittaci.5.8 % (34/581) of the pregnants carried C. trachomatis and 0.3 % (2/581) C.abortus. 2.2 % (8/368) of the neonates were infected by C .trachomatis 0,27% (1/368) with C pneumoniae. 2.8 % (18/625) of the children carried C.pneumoniae in the respiratory tract. 6.6 % (3/45) C. trachomatis were detected in swab of eges. The melting curve analysis feature of the Lightcycler allowed identification of C. trachomatis and C. pneumoniae directly, whereas C. psittaci and C. abortus were confirmed by 16sRNA gene sequencing. The Panchlamydia PCR detecteds all 4 abovementioned chlamydia within 3 to 4 h. Due to this PanChlamydia PCR it was possile to reduce the cost for PCR and also rare found bacteria like C. abortus or C. psittaci were detected. ___________________________________________________ KMP02 Prolonged EHEC excretion by a girl and her domestic cat indicating a possible infection cycle between humans and pets U. Busch1, S. Hörmansdorfer1, S. Schranner2, I. Huber1 K. - H. Bogner1, A. Sing1 1 Bavarian Health and Food Safety Authority, Oberschleissheim Germany 2 Landratsamt Landshut, Landshut, Germany Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) can cause severe hemorrhagic colitis characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms and bloody diarrhea as well as hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). Cattle and small ruminants are the major natural reservoir of these food-borne pathogens. Besides this foodrelated route of transmission, human infections might develop after direct contact to cows, goats, sheep and deer. Although domestic dogs and cats are known as rare EHEC carriers, no human EHEC infections associated with pet contact have been reported. Here we present the first case of an EHEC strain of serotype O145:H- infecting both a child and her domestic cat over a prolonged period of time. ___________________________________________________ KMP03 Bacteriology of biopsy specimens of nasal mucosa and nasal lavages of patients with Chronic Rhinosinusitis A. Niederführ1, H. Kirsche1, H. Riechelmann1 N. Wellinghausen2 1 University Hospital, Otorhinolaryngology, Ulm, Germany 2 University Hospital, Institute of Medical Microbology and Hygiene, Ulm, Germany The pathogenesis of Chronic Rhinosinusitis (CRS) is still unknown. Aim of this study was to determine the bacteriology of middle meatal biopsy specimens in comparison to nasal lavages of patiens with CRS. Special attention was drawn to Staphylococcus aureus and S. aureus Small Colony Variants (SCV). 37 CRS patients, including 27 with nasal polyps (CRSNP+), 10 without polyps (CRSNP-) and 11 control patients with septal deviation without inflammation of the mucosa were investigated. Detection of the bacteria was done by culture, including cultures for SCV. Additionally, S. aureus-specific quantitative LightCycler PCR and Fluorescence in situ Hybridization (FISH) was done from the biopsy specimens. Bacteria cultured from biopsy specimens in CRS patients included mainly staphylococci, streptococci, corynebacteria, Enterobacteriaceae, Haemophilus spp. and anaerobes. 75 of 123 strains (61%) cultured from biopsies were simultaneously found in the corresponding lavage. Bacteria cultured exclusively in biopsy specimens of CRS patients (n=48) included mainly Propionibacterium spp., Peptostreptococcus spp., E. coli, Haemophilus spp., and alpha-haemolytic streptococci. S. aureus was cultured in biopsy specimens in 22% of CRSNP+ patients, 10% CRSNP- patients and 18% of controls. In all patients simultaneous growth in the nasal lavage was found. 6 of 38 samples investigated were positive in the S. aureus-PCR and in all of them culture revealed growth of S. aureus. Only 1 of 37 paraffin sections was positive in the FISH. S. aureus SCV were 87 not detected in any specimen. Altogether, there were no significant differences in the species spectrum between patients and controls. Bacterial culture is the most sensitive method to detect S. aureus from biopsy specimens and nasal lavages. PCR and FISH do not increase sensitivity and are, thus, not necessary for routine workup of specimens. Nasal lavage is a sensitive method to determine prevalence of S. aureus in patients with CRS. There is a tendency towards a lower prevalence of S. aureus in CRSNPpatients. S. aureus SCV were not detectable in the 37 CRSpatients investigated. The significance of bacteria cultured exclusively in biopsies of CRS patients will be further determined in the ongoing study. ___________________________________________________ KMP04 Identification of various CTX-M extended-spectrum lactamases as the leading cause of cephalosporin resistance of nosocomial Escherichia coli in a German hospital Y. Pfeifer1, A. Danschke1, H. von Baum2, W. Witte1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Nosocomial Infections, Wernigerode Germany 2 University of Ulm, Institute of Microbiology and Hygiene Ulm, Germany ESBL enzymes of the Ambler class A like SHV and TEM ßlactamases have evolved from plasmid-located enzymes by mutations resulting in amino acid substitutions and leading to the expansion of substrate spectrum. Since the late 1990s diverse ESBL-types of the CTX-M-group occur with increasing frequency in Enterobacteriaceae in hospital and community settings worldwide. For this study 22 isolates of E. coli were collected from a hospital during a period of eight months in 2006. The strains were isolated from urine (59%), tracheal secretions (14%), sputum (9%), wounds (9%) and fecal smears (9%). Phenotypical susceptibility testing for 3rd and 4th generation cephalosporines with and without inhibitor protection (microbroth MIC) was performed. Relevant resistance genes (blaTEM, blaSHV, blaCTX-M) were amplified by Multiplex-PCR and the amplicons were sequenced. All isolates were typed by pulse-field gelelectrophoresis (PFGE). Furthermore PCR for phylogenetic grouping, plasmid analysis and conjugation experiments were performed. All isolates displayed the ESBL-phenotype. Furthermore the isolates were resistant to fluoroquinolones and sulfonamides and most of them were resistant to aminoglycosides and tetracyclines as well. PCR analysis revealed no “classical” outbreak situation. Different ESBL genes occurred: One isolate harbored SHV-5. Among the CTX-M-group ESBL six different types have been identified. ESBL type CTX-M-15 (n = 12) was most frequently. One isolate exhibited a CTX-M-type not yet described (designated as CTX-M-65). The majority of isolates were attributed to phylogenetic group D. When subjected to pulse-field gel electrophoresis only eight of 22 isolates exhibited the same or similar patterns. In one case in which two patients were hospitalized in the same room clonal dissemination is likely. The completely different macrorestriction patterns of the remaining isolates and conjugation experiments are proof for the wide spread of these ESBL genes and other resistance determinants by horizontal gene transfer. ___________________________________________________ KMP05 Clinical and microbiological characteristics of melioidosis in Northern Vietnam T. T. Trung1, D. M. Phuong2, N. Meukow1, K. Breitbach1 N. Q. Tuan3, G. Flunker1, D. D. Khang4, N. X. Quang2 I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich Loeffler Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 Bach Mai Hospital, Department of Microbiology, Hanoi Vietnam 3 Bach Mai Hospital, Department of Infectious Diseases, Hanoi Vietnam 4 Vietnamese Academy of Sciene and Technology, Institute of Biotechnology, Hanoi, Vietnam The worldwide distribution of melioidosis, an infectious disease of the tropics and subtropics caused by the soil bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, is still unknown. In Vietnam, only very limited data on melioidosis are available for the indigenous population, although the disease received considerable attention amongst French colonials and American soldiers. In this retrospective study, we reviewed clinical and demographic data of patients with culture-proven melioidosis diagnosed at a single large referral hospital in Hanoi between November 1997 and December 2005. There was a striking seasonal accumulation with a peak of cases admitted during the wet season between June and September. In 81.6% of melioidosis patients, the primary diagnosis was septicemia and B.pseudomallei was isolated from the blood. In 57.5% of septicemic patients, clinical evidence for the potential source of infection was obtained. 45% of septicemic patients had clinical signs of respiratory tract infection. The mortality rate of patients with positive blood cultures was 42.5%. 48.9% of melioidosis patients had known risk factors such as e. g. diabetes mellitus or renal disease. The analysis of the geographical origin of melioidosis patients showed that melioidosis exists in at least 18 provinces with a population of more than 30 millions. The characterization of clinical B.pseudomallei strains isolated between June 2002 and December 2005 revealed the typical biochemical and antigenic features of this species. ‘Multi Locus Sequence Typing’, based on the analysis of 7 house keeping genes, identified a number of sequence types not previously described. The melioidosis patients seen at our hospital most likely represent the very tip of the iceberg of cases in Northern Vietnam. In conclusion, our study suggests that fatal septicemic melioidosis is widespread but underdiagnosed in Northern Vietnam. Prospective studies are needed to unravel the true prevalence of melioidosis and its clinical presentation in Vietnam. ___________________________________________________ 88 KMP06 Emergence of increasing Linezolid-resistance in enterococci in a post-outbreak situation with Vancomycin-resistant enterococci B. Schulte1, A. Heininger2, I. B. Autenrieth1, C. Wolz1 1 Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene University Hospital Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Klinik für Anaesthesiologie und Intensivmedizin University Hospital Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany Linezolid is an oxazolidinone antibiotic active against grampositive bacteria approved in Europe in 2001. Here we describe the emergence of linezolid-resistant enterococci (LRE) in a university hospital in which linezolid is in use since 2003. In 2004 and in the beginning of 2005 the hospital was affected by an extensive outbreak of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE). Linezolid-resistant enterococci emerged during this period. Due to this outbreak situation, usage of linezolid became more common also for non-VRE-infections because of good clinical experiences in treatment. Subsequently, linezolidresistance was not longer limited to VRE. Additionally, nosocomial spread of linezolid-resistant but vancomycinsusceptible Enterococcus faecium was detected. These strains now emerged also in patients without prior drug exposure. ___________________________________________________ KMP07 Molecular and microscopic epidemiology of intracellular persisting Staphylococcus aureus in tonsillar epithelial cell specimens from patients with recurrent tonsillopharyngitis A. E. Zautner1, M. Krause2, M. Rohde3, A. Podbielski1 1 Institute for Medical Microbiology, Virologie und Hygiene Rostock, Germany 2 Klinik und Poliklinik für Hals-Nasen-Ohrenheilkunde, Rostock Germany 3 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Brunswich Germany Treatment failures in acute tonsillopharyngitis and the occurence of recurrent tonsillopharyngitis have been associated with the pathogens' formal capability for intracellular persistence. In a prospective study, pre-surgery tonsil swabs and surgically removed tonsil specimen from 45 / 77 juvenile and adult patients with chronic recurrent tonsillopharyngitis have been examined for the presence of extra- and intracellular pathogenic bacteria. As negative controls served 5 tonsil specimens from habitual snorers and patients with uvula hyperplasia. The specimens were conventionally cultured, subjected to antibiotic protection assays and inspected by fluorescence microscopy following a selective double immuno stain as well as by high powered scanning electron microscopy. Staphylococcus aureus, Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pyogenes were isolated from 58,2%, 17,2% and 9,8% of all tonsillopharyngitis patients, respectively. Thus, Staphylococcus aureus was the predominant pathogenic species in chronic recurrent tonsillopharyngitis. In accordance with the general antibiotic resistance pattern of German Staphylococcus aureus strains, 67,6% of tonsil-associated isolates displayed a penicillin resistance. When comparing the isolates with pulsed field restriction analysis and different typing methods, a high degree of diversity could be demontrated among Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes strains. Based upon the antibiotic protection assay results, only three Staphylococcus aureus strains were exclusively located outside the eukaryotic cells. The remainder displayed at least partial intracellular location. The results were confirmed by results from the double immuno staining assays. Overall, intracellular location and penicillin resistance of Staphylococcus aureus play obviously a pivotal role in the etiology and treatment failure of recurrent tonsillopharyngitis. ___________________________________________________ KMP08 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Escherichia coli from wild boars S. Günther1, H. Kasper2, S. Schwarz3, J. Jores4, J. Eichberg1 L. H. Wieler1, P. Schierack1 1 Institute of Microbifology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany 2 Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit Berlin, Germany 3 Institut für Tierzucht, Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft, Neustadt-Mariensee, Germany 4 International Lifestock Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenia While pathogenic as well as commensal Escherichia (E.) coli from domestic pigs have been studied extensively for antimicrobial resistance and associated genes, the corresponding knowledge about E. coli from wild boars is scarce. We therefore compared E. coli from wild boars with E. coli from clinically healthy conventionally pigs (piglets and sows) for their antimicrobial resistance and the resistance genes present. Initially, 300 isolates from 10 wild boars and 538 isolates from 15 conventional piglets were assigned to different groups by macrorestriction analysis. Subsequently, representatives of these groups were tested for antimicrobial susceptibility by determination of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and for resistance genes by PCR (45 E. coli from wild boar / 49 from conventional pigs). All of the E. coli strains from wild boars were susceptible against all tested antibiotics. In contrast, 71% of the tested E. coli strains from healthy domestic piglets were resistant to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, neomycin, streptomycin, spectinomycin, tetracycline or trimethoprim/sulfamethoxacole though several respective antibiotics were not applied for long periods to this pig population. Additionally, also MICs of the susceptible E. coli population were significantly lower in those E. coli from wild boars indicating a lower effectiveness of the involved protection mechanisms. None of the E. coli strains from wild boars carried any of the resistance genes tested. In contrast, E. coli strains from healthy conventional piglets carried one to six different resistance genes, with the tetracycline resistance gene tet(A) and the spectinomycin/streptomycin resistance gene aadA2 being the most prevalent. Additional screening of fecal samples from ten conventional sows by real time PCR proved the existence of two to four different resistance genes in one DNA sample. In conclusion, the data confirm that E. coli from wild boars might lack resistance genes and do not express resistance phenotypes in contrast to from conventional pigs. 89 KMP09 Susceptibility of Staphylococcus saprophyticus subsp. Saprophyticus M. Kaase1, F. Szabados1, T. Sakinc1, S. Friedrich1, B. Kleine1 S. Polywka2, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Department of Medical Microbiology, Bochum, Germany 2 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Virologie und Hygiene Hamburg,Germany Staphylococcus saprophyticus is the second most frequent pathogen in uncomplicated urinary tract infection of female outpatients. Only few resistance data exist. A strain collection of 242 isolates which were phenotypically confirmed as Staphylococcus saprophyticus subsp. saprophyticus were tested for resistance against various antibiotics by agar diffusion according to CLSI. In addition a cloverleaf assay was performed for penicillinase detection. No resistance was found against gentamicin, tobramycin, kanamycin, nitrofurantoin, rifampicin, linezolid, minocyclin and ciprofloxacin. Susceptibility rates were 5.4% for fosfomycin applying the SFM breakpoint, 96.3% for chloramphenicol, 97.5% for sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim and 92.6% for tetracyclin. Erythromycin resistance with accompanying clindaymcin resistance was found in 2.9%, erythromycin resistance with an inducible MLSB phenotype in 4.5% and isolated erythromycin resistance in 16.9%. A positive cloverleaf assay indicating presence of a penicillinase was found in 55%, an inhibition zone of less than 25 mm for cefoxitin indicating oxacillin resistance was found in 5.4%. Surprisingly we found two trehalose positive S. saprophyticus subsp. saprophyticus strains for which identification was confirmed by sodA sequencing. S. saprophyticus subsp. saprophyticus shows susceptibility against most antibiotics. Resistance against fosfomycin is detected in almost all isolates as previously reported. Erythromycin resistance is found in 24.4%. The presence of a penicillinase is suggested by a positive cloverleaf assay in 55% of isolates. ___________________________________________________ KMP10 Rare cases of nonthyphoidal Salmonella associated pulmonary infection in immunocompromised patients R. Schwarz1, J. Matten1 1 Colonge Merheim Medical Center, Medical Microbiology Cologne, Germany Pulmonary infection with nontyphoidal Salmonella is very uncommon. An increased risk is associated with HIV, diabetes mellitus, prolonged corticosteroid therapy, alcohol abuse and neoplastic diseases. Definitive microbiological conformation from pulmonary specimens is unusual. Here we describe three cases of nonthypoidal Salmonella pulmonary infections in febrile patients with lung cancer without any signs of gastrointestinal symptoms. The organisms were isolated from the sputum, pleural fluid, blood cultures and the stool. All of the isolates wereidentified as Salmonella entrica serotype Typhimurium. After administration of appropriate and adequate treatment the patients were subsequently discharged from our hospital without any complications. ___________________________________________________ KMP11 Combined Moxifloxacin and Rifampin treatment of experimentally induced Staphylococcus aureus periprosthetic osteomyelitis: An animal study W. Silvis1, J. Schaumburger2, T. Kalteis2, N. Lehn1 1 University of Ratisbon, Medical Microbiology & Hygiene Ratisbon, Germany 2 University of Ratisbon, Orthopaedic Surgery, Bad Abbach Germany Background: Standard antibiotic therapy forperiprosthetic osteomyelitisdue to Staphylococcus aureus (SA) is dual therapy comprising Rifampin (RIF). Previously, we demonstrated Moxifloxacin (MOX) to be superior to vancomycin (VAN) for treatment of SAperiprosthetic osteomyelitisin a rat model. MOX was now compared to dual therapies MOX + RIF and VAN + RIF and monotherapies VAN and RIF. Methods:Periprosthetic osteomyelitisof the hind leg femur was surgically induced in 53 male Wistar rats: 107 colony forming units (cfu) of methicillin-sensitive SA strain ATCC 29213 were inoculated into the medullary cavity and a steel implant was inserted. After 7 days, rats were randomised to intraperitoneal administration of placebo, MOX 10 mg/kg b.i.d., RIF 20 mg/kg, VAN 60 mg/kg b.i.d., MOX + RIF or VAN + RIF. After 14 days of treatment, periprosthetic femur, capsular soft tissue of knee joint and implant were aseptically explanted and cultured quantitatively. Differences in remaining bacterial burden (cfu SA/ material) were analysed by ANOVA and Tukey HSD posthoc test. Results: Treatment results are shown in the table. Significant differences (p<0.05) to placebo (*) and MOX (#) are indicated. Conclusion: Dual therapy MOX + RIF was equivalent to VAN + RIF and showed higher efficacy than MOX or VAN monotherapy. M seems a promising new partner for dual therapy with RIF. Further studies comparing MOX + RIF to dual therapy betalactams + RIF are under way. Table 1: ___________________________________________________ KMP12 Phenotypic Oxacillin resistance in a Staphylococcus aureus blood culture isolate lacking mecA M. Kaase1, A. Anders1, F. Szabados1, S. Friedrich1, T. Sakinc1 B. Kleine1, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Department of Medical Microbiology, Bochum, Germany 90 We report the case of a 78-year-old male patient from whom Staphylococcus aureus could be isolated in several blood culture pairs over two months. About seven weeks after the initial isolation of methicillin-susceptible S. aureus in six blood culture pairs we isolated three morphologically clearly distinguishable S. aureus strains from another blood culture pair. Of these, isolate I was methicillin-susceptible whereas isolates II and III showed oxacillin resistance using the VITEK AST-P536 card. Presence of the mecA gene was excluded either by PCR and by hybridization. Performing agar diffusion a shade of growth could be detected in the oxacillin inhibition zone which could be inhibited by placing an amoxicllin/clavulanic acid disk near the oxacillin disk. Growth on oxacillin screening agar was detectable for isolates II and III only after 48 h incubation and the cefoxitin inhibition zone diameter for both isolates was well above the current threshold. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis gave identical banding patterns for all three isolates and showed no relatedness to any currently circulating MRSA clones in our area. Therefore we postulate a different mechanism for oxacillin resistance than expression of PBP2a as in usual MRSA isolates and suspect that overexpression of penicillinase might be involved. ___________________________________________________ KMP13 Evaluation of the new oxoid chromogenic Salmonella medium mark II (OSCM II) for detecting Salmonella species, including lactose positive Salmonella in human stool samples J. Schmitt1, I. Massow2, J. Stringer3 1 Oxoid Biotechnik GmbH, Wesel, Germany 2 Med. VZ Dr.Riegel GmbH, Wiesbaden, Germany 3 Oxoid Ltd., Basingstoke, United Kingdom During a clinical study 966 stool samples were examined for the presence of Salmonella species by direct inoculation on SS Agar, Rambach Agar and OSCM II. Within 55 positive samples 7 different serotypes were isolated. The sensitivities after 24 hours incubation were 41.8%, 27.3% and 47.3%, respectively, and increased after 48 hours to 58.2%, 34.5% and 70.9%. OSCM II is a highly selective medium which includes thenovel inhibigen concept. So in contrast to the less selective Rambach medium it could be used as a direct screening medium. In this study about 50% of the Salmonella positive specimens were detected after 24 hours and therefore the time to result was greatly reduced. ___________________________________________________ KMP14 Relapse of pneumocystis pneumonia in HIV patients after beginning of HAART therapy D. Bandt1, M. Kolditz2, P. Spornraft-Ragaller3 1 Medical Faculty/Technical University of Dresden, Inst. for Virology, Dresden, Germany 2 University Hospital/Technical University of Dresden, Medical Clinic 1, Dresden, Germany 3 University Hospital/Technical University of Dresden Dermatology, Dresden, Germany Two cases of HIV-infected patients with Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PcP) are described. After initially successful therapy followed by secondary prophylaxis, they suffered from a relapse of PcP when HAART antiretroviral treatment was initiated. The sequence of the DHPS gene was analysed. We found polymorphisms in the sequence, but no known resistenceassociated mutations. Therefore, the relapse was assumed to be linked to a combination of a recurrence of the infection and an immune reconstitution syndrome (IRS). The risk factors for a relapse of PcP and the significance of IRS are discussed. ___________________________________________________ KMP15 Membrane permeability in the antibiotic resistance of Proteus and Providencia Q.-T. Tran1,2, H. Weingart1, A. Regli2, J.-M. Pagès2 M. Winterhalter1 1 Jacobs University Bremen, School of Engineering and Science, Bremen, Germany 2 Université de la Méditerranée, Laboratoire UMR-MD1 Marseille, France Proteus and Providencia are pathogenic bacterial agents involved in hospital-acquired infection. They appear among the most frequently isolated species in clinic and cause urinary tract infection. The resistance generally described in these genera is mainly due to enzymatic mechanisms, predominantly extendedspectrum beta-lactamases of the TEM type. These bacteria present an intrinsic resistance to imipenem. Moreover, some clinical isolates of Providencia demonstrate a multidrug resistance phenotype with a very high level of resistance to cephalosporins of the last generation such as cefepime and cefpirome. These antibiotic molecules are known to use porins as major pathway for cell entry. Our main research focus is on the characterization of the outer membrane proteins of Proteus and Providencia for a better understanding of their role in drug resistance. We observed a negative detection of a special antigenic site previously reported as internal loop3 marker of non-specific porins in various Enterobacteriaceae. The immunoblots using specific antibodies against porins showed that Proteus and Providencia express OmpF- and OmpCimmunorelated proteins with a modified L3 loop. The porin genes of Proteus showed about 50% identity with E. coli OmpF, OmpC and PhoE. The amino acid sequence analysis showed a high conservation of typical porin structure with an important modification in the constriction region. These findings suggest a special structure of the internal loop inside the porin channel of those bacteria that may be involved in the resistance to carbapenems and cephalosporins in Proteus and Providencia. ___________________________________________________ KMP16 Severe endocarditis due to Streptobacillus moniliformis W. Geißdörfer1, C. Schlundt2, T. Strecker3, M. Kondruweit3 M. Weyand3, W. G. Daniel2, C. Schörner1 1 University Erlangen, Institute forr Clinical Microbiology Erlangen, Germany 2 University Hospital, Erlangen, Medical Clinic 2 (Cardiology) Erlangen, Germany 91 3 University Hospital Erlangen, Center of Heart Surgery Erlangen, Germany Background: Streptobacillus moniliformis is the agent of rat bite fever. It is found in the oropharynx of rats and can be transmitted to human by rat bite, contact with rat excreta or ingestion of contaminated food. The most common manifestations are arthralgia, fever, and rash. Endocarditis is a rare complication with only 19 reported cases worldwide, and a fatality rate of 47 %. Case: A 29-year-old patient was transferred to our department of cardiology with the diagnosis of acute endocarditis. On admission, TEE showed a large vegetation on the aortic valve and a perivalvular abscess cavity. Aortic valve replacement was performed immediately, but turned out to be challenging as a consequence of perivalvular tissue destruction, necessitating a further surgery for re-fixation of the loosend prosthetic aortic valve. During the postoperative 7-week stay at our intensive care unit the patient suffered several complications, i.e., postoperative renal and hepatic failure followed by hemodialysis, dysphagia induced aspiration followed by transient intubation and ventilation, septic cranial embolism, and severe pericardial infection due to Candida glabrata. The antibiotic regimen was adapted several times, and included penicillin for S. moniliformis endocarditis. The patient was finally discharged in a satisfactory condition to a rehabilitation unit. Microbiology: Blood cultures remained negative after 14 days of incubation. Microscopic examination of the explanted aortic valve revealed gram-positive/gram-variable bacteria, which appeared as straight, curved, and filamentous rods. After 48 h tiny colonies grew on sheep blood agar, showing long filamentous gram-variable rods. The bacteria were identified as S. moniliformis by analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequence. The identical sequence was amplified directly from the explanted valve specimen. The S. moniliformis isolate did not grow on chocolate agar, formed typical cottonballs in thioglycolate broth supplemented with horse serum, and was negative for catalase, oxidase, and indole. It was highly susceptible to penicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems, aminoglycosides, quinolones, erythromycin, clindamycin, and vancomycin. Conclusion: Our case illustrates that endocarditis due to S. moniliformis is a life-threatening infection. There was no rat bite, but our patient may have had contact to rat excreta when he helped his parents with their farm work. In addition, he reported a cut wound at one hand two weeks before admission, which may have been the site of infection. ___________________________________________________ KMP17 A case of sepsis after dog bite: Rapid identification of Capnocytophaga canimorsus from blood culture via pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA E. I. Kaminski1, I. Seegmüller1, F. J. Meyer2, A. Dalpke1 S. Zimmermann1 1 University Heidelberg, Hygiene, Heidelberg, Germany 2 University Heidelberg, Cardiology, Heidelberg, Germany A 56-year old female was transferred from her primary care physician to our intensive care unit for fever, pneumonia and renal failure. She had presented at primary care with a six weeks history of a productive cough (white sputum) and generalized weakness, but there had been no history of chest pain, dyspnea or TB-contacts. She had been treated with levofloxacin. Medical history revealed that the patient was a bird breeder (parakeets) with no known allergies. Four days before admission she had been bitten by a dog in the right hand. Two years earlier she had been splenectomized for splenic abscess and had undergone aortic valve replacement because of endocarditis with Streptococcus oralis. There was no information on pneumococcal vaccination. On arrival treatment was switched to imipenem. Blood cultures were positive and revealed slow growing fastidious gramnegative rods. Pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA variable region 3 (V3) was performed and resulted in the identification of Capnocytophaga canimorsus within 24 hours after the positive blood culture signal. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing happened to be time consuming due to the slow growing nature of our strain. Imipenem treatment proved successful and after five weeks of treatment she could be transferred to an external hospital. The early determination of C. canimorsus after dog bite in patients with an increased risk (splenectomy) is essential for adequate treatment and can be facilitated by pyrosequencing of 16s rRNA. ___________________________________________________ KMP18 Helicobacter pylori infection in patients with Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) R. Krausse1, M. Hiller1, J. Leiendecker1 1 University Hospital S.-H, Institute for Infection Medicine, Kiel Germany Aim: To establish whether Hp is implicated in the development of CHD. Methods: Altogether the sera of 365 persons were analysed (186 patients [pat.], mean age 61 y with CHD [65 pat. had a control angiography after PTCA; 30 with [w] restenosis, 35 without [w/o] restenosis and 179 control persons, mean age 63 y without any CHD). The patients were in-patient treatment at the clinic for Cardiology; the control group was collected by an internist. The sera were screened by ELISA (IgG/A) (Virion Serion). To differentiate (Hp type I [VacA or CagA pos] and Hp type II [VacA and CagA neg] a Western blot (WB) test (Viramed) was lead through. There was no significant correlation between the occurrence of antibodies (Abs) and CHD, neither in the screening nor in the WB. A small number of individuals (32 pat./18 contr.) who were only positive for IgG-Abs showed differences in Hp types (pat.: 46.9% Hp I and 53.1% Hp II; contr.: 100% Hp II). Patients with restenosis showed significant higher IgA-Abs in screening. However, these results could not be confirmed in WB. Several sera were tested positive on both types of Hp, but without any remarkable difference between the groups. Conclusion: No correlation was found between the occurrence of antibodies and CHD. There were no serological differences 92 between the patients with and without restenosis. An evidence that Hp is a risk factor for CHD could not be found. Table 1: Collectives ELISA positive (%) IgA 62,8 58,5 IgG 86,9 82,4 Patients (186) Controls (179) Pat. w restenosis (30) Pat. w/o restenosis (35) *p = 0,03 90,0 81,8 Patients (166) Controls (145) Pat. w restenosis (30) Pat. w/o restenosis (35) 75,9 75,9 47,1 50,0 WB positive (%) IgA IgG IgG + IgA 61,6 59,5 IgG + IgA Hp I Hp II Hp I Hp II Hp I Hp II 47,9 55,7 19,6 22,9 42,3 47,5 7,1 6,6 35,1 41,7 3,3 4,6 Hp I + II 7,8 5,3 30,0 16,7 30,0 3,3 23,3 0 3,3 25,7 17,1 40,0 2,9 22,9 0 11,4 ___________________________________________________ KMP19 Moxifloxacin as an adjunctive antibiotic in treatment of periodontitis is effective in reduction of periodontopathogenic bacteria W. Pfister1, K. Wegner1, A. Güntsch2, H. Jentsch3 T. Hoffmann4, S. Eick1 1 University Hospital Jena, Institute for Medical Microbiology Jena, Germany 2 University Hospital of Jena, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Jena, Germany 3 University Hospital of Leipzig, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Leipzig, Germany 4 University Hospital of Dresden, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Desden, Germany Objectives: In vitro studies demonstrated the high effectiveness of moxifloxacin against periodontopathogenic bacteria. The aim of this study was to compare the adjunctive use of moxifloxacin to doxcycline in the treatment of severe chronic periodontitis. Material and methods: In the randomised prospective study 92 patients underwent a standardized systematic periodontal therapy. 35 patients got 400 mg moxifloxacin / d, 36 patients doxycycline (1st day 200 mg, then 100 mg / d) over a time period of 10 d per os, 21 controls got no antibiotic. Subgingival plaque samples were collected with paper points in the three sites with an attachment loss > 5 mm before scaling and root planing as well as 3, 6 and 12 months later. Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (A.a.), Porphyromonas gingivalis (P.g.), Tannerella forsythia (T.f.) and Treponema denticola (T.d.) were determined by real-time PCR. The cut-off was about 1,000 bacteria each. Results: In the moxifloxacin group a significant reduction of the load of all investigated bacteria was found at each appointment in comparison to baseline. The number of negative samples increased from 60% to 83% for A.a., from 20% to 64% for P.g., from 26% to 44% for T.f. and from 36% to 60% for T.d 12 months after treatment. In the doxycycline group a significant decrease of the numbers of P.g. and T.f. was also observed 3, 6 and 12 months after treatment, T.d. was significant lower only 3 months after treatment. The numbers of A.a. did not change at any time. In controls a significant reduction of the load of periodontopathogenic bacteria was not detectable. Conclusions: The adjunctive application of an antibiotic reduces the load of periodontopathogenic bacteria in periodontitis. Moxifloxacin seems to be more effective than doxycycline and might be an alternative drug in treatment of severe cases of chronic periodontitis. ___________________________________________________ KMP20 Effect of antibiotic treatment on development of resistance in periodontitis S. Eick1, A. Güntsch2, T. Seltmann2, W. Pfister1 1 University Hospital of Jena, Institute of Medical Microbiology Jena, Germany U2niversity Hospital of Jena, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Jena, Germany Objective: In periodontitis usage of antibiotics is common in treatment. Side effect may be the development of resistance of bacteria. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the number of resistant bacteria in subgingival plaque after application of antibiotics. Methods: 33 patients with severe chronic periodontitis were treated with scaling and root planing. 16 of them got additionally moxifloxacin (400 mg/d), 11 doxycycline (200 mg d1, then 100 mg/d) for 10d. 6 patients served as control. At baseline, 2 weeks and 3 months after treatment subgingival plaque was sampled from each two sites (Baseline-PD > 5 mm) and plated on media containing 1 and 10 mg/l doxycycline and 0.25 and 2.5 mg/l moxifloxacin and without antibiotics. Each the numbers of resistant bacteria were counted. The MICs of the two antibiotics against Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (A.a.)and Porphyromonas gingivalis (P.g.) strains were determined. Results: At baseline, in all groups 3.50 % of bacteria showed a resistance against 1 mg/l and 0.41 % against 10 mg/l doxycycline. 3.50 % of bacteria grow on media containing 0.25 mg/l and 1 % on media with 2.5 mg/l moxifloxacin. Immediately after application of doxycycline the percentage of bacteria increased to 21.5 % exhibiting resistance to 1 mg/l and to 1.94 % to 10 mg/l doxycycline. The values for moxifloxacin were 10.66 % against 0.25 mg/l and 2.07 % against 2.5 mg/l. 3 months after treatment we did not find an elevated resistance to both antibiotics compared to baseline. At all we found 4, in the doxycycline group 2 P. g. strains with a high resistance against doxycycline (> 64 mg/l). In A.a. strains exhibiting a resistance against 6 mg/l Ribo2 gene was found. Without association to the MICs, 75% of the screened A.a. and P.g. strains had the tetM gene.In moxifloxacin patients 2 P. g. strains exhibited a moderate resistance with a MIC of 0.5 mg/l. In these strains, the Ser-83 Phe mutation in gyrA was not detectable. The antibiotic therapy tended to a temporary increase in number of resistance bacteria against the used antibiotic. After application of doxycycline the development of highly resistant P. gingivalis strains has to be considered. ___________________________________________________ 93 KMP21 PCR method for “serotyping” of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 A. Thürmer1, P. C. Lück1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Institute of Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Dresden, Germany Legionella pneumophila is commonly detected in environmental specimens can cause pneumonia (Legionaires’ disease) if transmitted to susceptible persons. Several PCR assays based on 16SrRNA and virulence-associated genes are available for detection and subtyping L. pneumophila. However no PCR methods have been published that can discriminate between serogroups and the MAb 3-1 (Pontiac) subgroup of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 the most common serogroup. By analysing published sequences we developed two PCR methods specific for serogroup 1. From all serogroup 1 strains (n=23) including the ATCC type strains specific DNA fragments could be amplified. In contrast none of the serogroups 2 – 15 strains (n=27) contained these serogroup 1-specific genes. Strains associated with illness are often reacting with (MAB 31). This epitope is related to the lag-1 gene that encodes an Oacetyltransferase. Therefore primers specific for the lag-1 were designed and tested. All MAb 3-1 positive strains contained the lag-1 gene. In turn 12 of 17 MAb 3-1 negative strains tested negative in the PCR. However we detected several strains that did not react with MAb 3-1 and harboured truncated or mutated lag-1 genes. In summary serogroup 1 strains could differentiated from strains belonging to other serogroups by using PCR. However the differentiation of MAb3-1 positive strains and MAb 3-1 negative strains could not be achieved for all strains. PCR with primers specific for the serogroup 1 genes can be used for diagnosis of legionellosis caused by L. pneumophila serogroup 1 with out need for isolation by culture. These PCR could be a valuable tool in outbreak investigations and in risk assessment. ___________________________________________________ KMV01 Major outbreak of wound botulism among injecting drug users, North Rhine-Westphalia 2005 M. Schröter1, K. Alpers2, U. van Treeck1, C. Frank2 N. Rosenkötter1, R. Schaumann3 1 Institut for Public Health, NRW, Communicable Diseases Epidemiology and Hygiene Unit, Muenster, Germany 2 Robert Koch-Institut, Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany 3 Institute for Medical Microbiology and Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases University of Leipzig, National Reference Laboratory for Anaerobes, Leipzig, Germany Introduction: In developed countries, wound botulism is a rarely occurring form of the diseases caused by Clostridium botulinum. In November 2005, several injecting drug users (IDU) with wound botulism were notified to North Rhine-Westphalia (NW) health authorities. An outbreak investigation was initiated to find the source and to prevent the occurrence of more infections. Patients and Methods: Alerts were issued to public health departments and emergency physicians, to IDU outreach organisations and through EU warning systems to find cases. For a survey, cases were defined as IDUs presenting with acute onset of flaccid paralysis or cranial nerve palsies between October and December 2005. As soon as the clinical condition improved, the patients who gave informed consent were interviewed during or after their hospital stay. Isolates of C. botulinum were cultivated from wound swabs and typed by PFGE. Results: Altogether, 16 case-patients were notified during the nine weeks between 13 October and 5 December 2005 living in eight different districts of NW. Five of the eight interviewed patients mentioned to have injected a dark brownish form of heroin recently, although not from an apparent common source. Likewise, five had injected the drugs intramuscularly or subcutaneously, and six had observed abscesses and skin infections prior to onset of botulism symptoms. From wound swabs of six patients neurotoxin B gene positive C. botulinum isolates were cultured. Further typing revealed one identical PFGE pattern for all isolates. Discussion: The clonality of the C. botulinum isolates and the results of the epidemiological survey, strongly suggests a common origin of the outbreak. Although it was impossible to identify the source, contaminated heroin seems to be most probable vehicle since other links between the cases (such as shared needles or dilution materials) could be excluded. The investigation was hampered by the fact that possession and usage of heroin is illegal and therefore some IDU were not willing to cooperate. Early recognition and notification of potential wound botulism cases is fundamental to allow timely interventions of Public Health Authorities. ___________________________________________________ KMV02 "A forgotten disease?" – Necrobacillosis A. Benz1, G. Borkenhagen1, C. Kortsik1, E. Siegel2, S. - R. Han2 1 Katholisches Klinikum Mainz, Klinik für Pneumologie Beatmungs- und Schlafmedizin, Mainz, Germany 2 Universitys Hospital Mainz, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Mainz, Germany Case history: A 24-year old patient was admitted with a high fever and signs of a severe gastroenteritis accompagnied by acute tonsillitis. Despite antibiotic therapy his condition worsened considerably and developed in septic shock syndrome, associated with pulmonary infiltrates, lung abscesses and pleural effusions. In several blood cultures, a gram-negative obligate anaerobe rod could be isolated which PCR-analysis confirmed as Fusobacterium necrophorum. Diagnosis: Necrobacillosis / Lemierre' s Syndrome (caused by Fusobacterium necrophorum. Bacterium:Fusobacterium necrophorum is a gram-negative rod with obligate anaerobic growth. Diagnosis: Since this condition is rarely observed, it is also called "the forgotten disease". This life-threatening infection usually occurs in young healthy adults. The most common course of this illness is postangial septicaemia or Lemierre' s syndrome: acute oropharyngeal infection with secondary pulmonary septic lesions. These rare clinical symptoms are very typical. Upon clinical suspicion, several anaerobe blood cultures should be obtained. Considering the high mortality rate of 1794 30%, a quick diagnosis with adequate antibiotic therapy is absolutely vital. Therapy: Even a specific and immediate antibiotic therapy will results in a slow clinical recovery response and requires a protracted treatment regimen. Due to the severeness of the illness as well as frequent associated metastatic infectious foci, a 4-6 week combination therapy of high-dose penicillin and metronidazole is recommended. Clinical Outcome: Continued adequate antibiotic therapy resulted in complete recovery and eradication of the severe lung alterations. ___________________________________________________ KMV03 First confirmed autochthonous case of human Babesia microti infection in Europe A. Hildebrandt1, K. - P. Hunfeld2, M. Baier1, A. Krumbholz1 S. Sachse1, T. Lorenzen3, M. Kiehntopf4, E. Straube1 1 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany 2 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Frankfurt am Main Germany 3 Institute of Transfusion Medicine, Jena, Germany 4 Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, Jena Germany Objectives: Babesiosis, caused by infection with Babesia species, can be acquired either by tick-bite or via transfusion of infected cellular components. The two most important Babesia species involved in human babesiosis are Babesia microti and Babesia divergens. Up to now all reported cases of Babesia microti in Europe represent imported infections that had been acquired outside Europe. Here, we report the first confirmed autochthonous case of human Babesia microti infection in Europe which occurred in a 42-year-old female patient suffering from acute myeloid leukaemia. Recently she fell ill with fever up to 39°C and signs of acute myocardial infarction after the first cycle of leukaemia specific chemotherapy. Methods:Suspicion of malaria was ruled out by microscopy and use of a dip-stick test. In patient material microscopy, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detection of Babesia species and serologic tests were performed initially and in follow-up controls. All blood donors to the patient were investigated for possible Babesia infection by microscopy, PCR and serological tests. Results: The diagnosis of Babesia microti infection was finally established by specific PCR and sequence analysis. Six weeks after initiation of specific treatment parasites were not longer detected by light microscopy and PCR. In correlation to this immunoflourescence assay (IFA) antibody testing revealed a seroconversion with IgG titers of 1:128. Donors proved negative for Babesia DNA but serological screening demonstrated borderline reactivity for Babesia microti (IgG-titer 1:32) in one out of 44 individuals. Conclusion: Neither the patient, nor the serological positively tested blood donor had travelled to North America. Therefore, the infection has to be considered as autochthonous and most likely transfusion-transmitted. It is important to note, that clinical symptoms can occur within several weeks after transfusion and, as in our case, Babesia infections may arise in geographic areas where human babesiosis has never been reported in the past. Further molecular epidemiological and seroepidemiological studies are urgently needed to get more information about the distribution and medical relevance of such pathogens in Europe. Figure 1: ___________________________________________________ KMV04 Emergence of linezolid resistance in a methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain M. Hentschke1, B. Saager2, M. Horstkotte1, S. Scherpe1 H. Kabisch3, R. Grosse3, P. Heisig2, M. Äpfelbacher1 H. Rohde1 1 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, Hamburg, Germany 2 University Hamburg, Pharmacognosy Biology and Microbiology, Hamburg, Germany 3 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Clinik of Pediatric Hematology and Onkology, Hamburg, Germany Linezolid is a second line drug for treatment of infections due to multi-resistant gram-positive bacteria. It acts by binding to the 23S rRNA in the ribosom initiation complex. The fact that the 23s rRNA is encoded by five to six gene copies are present in the genome of Staphylococcus aureus is believed to result in a strongly delayed development of resistance by accumulating point mutations. Indeed, linezolid-resistant strains of S. aureus have only rarely been detected world-wide. Here we report the isolation of the first linezolid-resistant methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) strain in Germany. It was isolated from a pediatric, bone-marrow transplantated patient that was treated with linezolid for prolonged time periods. The strain exhibited the typical G2576T mutation in three out of five 23S rRNA alleles, resulting in linezolid resistance (MIC 8 µg/ml). After discontinuation of linezolid therapy, subsequent MRSA isolates from the patient displayed linezolid-resistance for at least two more months. Our report emphasizes the importance to limit the duration of linezolid therapy to prevent emergence and spread of resistant bacterial pathogens. ___________________________________________________ KMV05 Community acquired MRSA ST8 („USA 300“) has arrived in Central Europe W. Witte1, C. Cuny1, B. Strommenger1, U. Nübel1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode Branch, Wernigerode Germany Objective: Characterization of MRSA exhibiting spa sequence type t008 (congruent with MLST ST8) from community and 95 nosocomial infections in Germany in order to assess the emergence and spread of the epidemic community MRSA “USA 300” in Central Europe. Methods: Multilocus sequence typing (MLST), grouping of SCCmec elements by means of PCR, PCR demonstration of lukS-lukF arcA (arginindeiminase, indicator for ACME-island; msrA (macrolide efflux), mphB (macrolide phosphotransferase) fosB. Results: MRSA exhibiting t008, MLST ST8 which are exhibiting resistance to oxacillin and to ciprofloxacin but lacking lukS-lukF, arcA, msrA, mphB are known from community acquired wound infections and nasal colonization in the Stuttgart area since 2000. Community acquired MRSA exhibiting t008, MLST8 and containing lukS-lukF, arcA, msrA, mphB have been recorded from deep seated infections of skin and soft tissue in Saarland, Rhineland-Pfalz, North-RhineWestphalia, and lower Saxony as well as in Tyrol (Austria) since 2004. In two cases spread to other patients occurred after admission of affected patients to surgical wards. ArcA, msrA, mphB are characteristic for community MRSA “USA 300” and were not detected in representatives of epidemic hospital MRSA and also not in other clonal lineages of lukS-lukF containing community MRSA. Conclusion: lukS-lukF containing MRSA carrying other acquired genes which are characteristic for MRSA “USA 300” have been recorded from several locations in Germany. For reliable early warning MRSA exhibiting spa t008 should be further characterised for containing lukS-lukF, arcA, and mphB. ___________________________________________________ KMV06 CTX-M Escherichia coli with reduced susceptibility to imipenem D. Jonas1, A. Buchwald2, K. Biehler1, C. Schneider3, S. Schütt4, C. Wendt4 1 University Medical Center Freiburg, Institute of Environmental Medicine and Hospital Epidemiology, Freiburg, Germany 2 University Medical Center Freiburg, Depatment of Clinical Chemistry, Freiburg, Germany 3 University Medical Center Freiburg, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg, Germany 4 University of Heidelberg, Institute of Hygiene, Heidelberg Germany Presently, the number of ESBL-positive E. coli, isolated from patients in hospitals and the community is increasing in many European countries. Carbapenems are recommended at least for empirical treatment of severe systemic infections by these strains. Here we describe the first case in Germany of a patient with an ESBL-positive E. coli isolate, which lost imipenem susceptibility under therapy. The first strain was isolated in November 2006 from a bronchoalveolar lavage taken from a 33-year old female patient with recurrent urinary tract infections after renal transplant at the beginning of the year, and subsequent immunosuppressive therapy. In the further course, the patient developed a necrotising HSV-2-hepatitis and was transferred for liver transplantation to a different university hospital. Here, the second ESBL E. coli with a reduced susceptibility to imipenem was noticed in a gall duct specimen. Genotypic identity of both strains was confirmed by AFLP. Both isolates were resistant to ceftazidime and cefotaxime with a decrease of the MIC in the presence of clavulanic acid by more than 3 dilution steps. However, the 2nd isolate showed an MIC of 4 µg/ml against imipenem in contrast to 0,25 µg/ml in the previous isolate. In both isolates the same beta-lactamase genes encoding for TEM-1, SHV-12 and CTX-M-9 group were detected. All of them could be mobilised by conjugation into an E.coli J53 recipient, which became ESBL-positive, but remained imipenem susceptible. Isoelectric focussing of beta-lactamases from both strains revealed the same banding patterns, which could be inhibited by prior overlaying of the gel with clavulanic acid. Next, outer membrane proteins were prepared from both strains and controls by ultracentrifugation technique. SDS PAGE analysis demonstrated the loss of a fragment 38 kDal in size, which presumably corresponds to the porins OmpF and OmpC based on their electrophoretic mobility and abundance. In times of increasing ESBL prevalence we demonstrated the 1st case of an E. coli strain in Germany losing imipenemsusceptibility with a concomitant loss of outer membrane proteins. The high prevalence of ESBL-producers might increase the risk of some of these strains becoming resistant to carbapenems, which are recommended for empirical therapy. ___________________________________________________ KMV07 Scedosporium prolificans in Germany: Patients with deep infections or long lasting colonisation from 1993 to 2007 and characterization of the clinical isolates K. Tintelnot1,2, G. Just-Nübling2, I. Sobottka3, A. Haas4 R. Horré5 1 Robert-Koch-Institut, Mycology, Berlin, Germany 2 JWG-University, Center of Internal Medicine, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 3 University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Institute for Microbiology, Hamburg, Germany 4 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute, Microbiology, Munich Germany 5 Federal Inst. for Drugs and Medical Devices, Bonn, Germany Scedosporium prolificans, a mold closely related to Pseudallescheria boydii, is a rare but emerging pathogen due to its complete resistance to traditional antimycotic treatment. 20 patients in Germany with deep infection or long lasting colonization by S. prolificans from 1993 to March 2007 have been reviewed retrospectively. The mortality rate in all 12 patients with invasive scedosporiosis and a severe underlying disease (AML, BMT, SOTX, AIDS, long term treatment with corticosteroids) was 100%. Another 8 patients, 6 of them with cystic fibrosis, one with chronic sinusitis and one after lung transplantation, were colonized without development of an invasive infection. Nevertheless long term colonization is a contradiction for lung transplantation in patients with Cystic Fibrosis. All clinical isolates and reference strains from Belgium, Spain, U.K., Australia and U.S.A. were analyzed by sequencing of the ITS and parts of the 18S and 28SrDNA regions and of the translation elongation factor EF1-alpha. No variability of the ITS gene and flanking regions within the species S. prolificans was detectable. Interestingly enough sequencing of the translation elongation factor EF1-alpha 96 revealed three different genotypes of S. prolificans, which might be useful for further epidemiological studies. ___________________________________________________ LMP01 PCR-DHPLC (polymerase chain reaction - Denaturing high performance liquid chromatography): A novel method for rapid monitoring and identification of single and mixed yeast cultures relevant for the food and beverage industry M. Hutzler1, O. Goldenberg2 1 Technical University Munich, Munich, Germany 2 Transgenomic, Cramlington, United Kingdom The rapid detection and identification of spoilage yeasts is of significant interest in quality control in the food and beverage industries. Spoilage yeasts are able to cause off-flavours, turbidity, additional CO2 and excess pressure in drinks products. Rapid, precise detection and identification of spoilage yeasts can prevent product spoilage and decrease health and economic risks. The potential of a novel PCR-DHPLC (Polymerase Chain Reaction Denaturing High Performance Liquid Chromatography) method was studied to detect the presence of and identify spoilage yeast populations in single and mixed yeast cultures related to the food and beverage industries. PCR was performed with universal primers amplifying the ITS1 and ITS2 rRNA genes of different yeast species, followed by DHPLC to separate the mixed PCR products. Applying this method, 21 out of 25 yeast species tested were clearly separated from each other, with the remaining four species forming two clusters. The species investigated included all Saccharomyces sensu stricto species. The Saccharomyces sensu stricto complex contains yeasts that are used for several fermentation processes such as beer, wine, cider, bio-ethanol and indigenous fermentations. The yeast species of the S. sensu stricto complex could be clearly separated by PCR-DHPLC using the aforementioned rRNA genes. It is proposed that this method can be used to monitor rapidly fermentation processes, controlled and spontaneous starter cultures as well as yeast-induced food and beverage spoilage. Additionally a PCR product was amplified by using a S. cerevisiae specific primer pair situated at a NTS region and separated by DHPLC to differentiate industrial Saccharomyces cerevisiae culture strains. These industrial strains showed different peak patterns. Therefore PCR-DHPLC can be a useful tool for rapid differentiation at both species and strain level. ___________________________________________________ LMP02 Selective Isolation of Enterobacter sakazakii in infant milk formula by supplementation of Ferrioxamin E S. Sanjaq1, M. Fischer1 1 Central Laboratories Friedrichsdorf, Microbiology Division Friedrichsdorf, Germany known but definitely higher than the usual contamination level. Retrospective analyses of E. sakazakii outbreaks caused by IMF have shown that in most cases a heavy mishandling of the prepared formula has been involved. In a previous study has been demonstrated that Ferrioxamin E act as a selective iron source for certain groups of bacteria such as Salmonella and Enterobacter. As a potent growth factor it has been used in several studies as supplements in standard enrichment and selection procedures to increase the speed and sensitivity of detection of members of the genus Salmonella in a number of food products. Hence, this study was performed to find the role of iron source on the media for E. sakazakii detection in infant milk formula by using Ferrioxamin E as an iron supplement under different treatment conditions. he application of Ferrioxamin E has been seen increasing the sensitivity of Salmonella detection especially for heat and dry stressed strains in respectively treated products. E. sakazakii is a bacterium of concern especially in powdered infant formula. This product range runs through a number of heat treatment steps and is characterized by an extremely low water activity. Possible E. sakazakii contaminations have to be regarded as highly heat and dry stressed. First investigations have shown an increase of the sensitivity for the detection of E. sakazakii in powdered products. ___________________________________________________ LMP03 Improvement and validation of RAPD in comparison to PFGE analysis of enterobacter sakazakii strains S. Sanjaq1, A. Lindenstrauß1, M. Fischer1 1 Central Laboratories Friedrichsdorf, Microbiology Division Friedrichsdorf, Germany Enterobacter (E.) sakazakii is an opportunistic pathogen causing meningitis, septicemia and enterocolitis in premature infants. Infant formula has been implicated as the source of E. sakazakii in several clinical outbreaks. The investigation of infection routes is usually performed by Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). The PFGE is a high sophisticated labor- and costintensive method. Therefore a previously developed randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) protocol was used, to evaluate a rapid, reproducible and low-cost alternative to PFGE typing of E. sakazakii strains, which can be used to follow contamination routes. The RAPD has been evaluated on repeatability and reproducibility. Especially the discriminatory potential of the applied method has been investigated for a number of strains far distinct in source and PFGE profile. The band pattern of RAPD-PCR reactions represents a genetic fingerprint that can be used to characterize E. sakazakii strains and trace contamination routes. Our findings indicate that RAPD is a useful and reliable tool for typing studies of E. sakazakii isolates. ___________________________________________________ Enterobacter (E.) sakazakii is an important opportunistic pathogen which can cause rare but severe infections in newborn and preterm infants. In the recent years a number of infections occurred by infant milk formula (IMF). The contamination level in IMF is usually very low and a growth of the pathogen in the IMF is necessary to reach the infection dose, which is not 97 LMP04 Studies on the growth kinetics of different bacteria with impedance technique S. Zhu1, M. Fischer1 1 Central Laboratories Friedrichsdorf, Microbiology Division Friedrichsdorf, Germany The microbiological risk assessment for food products includes the storage and handling of those products by the consumers. The risk associated with the product is partly due to the microbiological growth conditions provided by the food. This is especially true for specialised products like clinical nutrition and infant formula. Since the products are consumed by very vulnerable consumer groups. The products are manufactured and distributed in a very high quality state, sterile or as powdered products where bacterial growth impossible. The integral risk of specialised nutritional products is very low. The most critical point of bacterial contamination is the mishandling by the consumers, which may include the contamination of the prepared formula and a prolonged storage which allows bacterial multiplication. These points have to be included in the risk assessment and the handling instructions for the concerned products. The individual risk assessment for certain products is often based on the growth kinetics of selected model bacteria. However the collection of data for the growth kinetics is time consuming and labour intensive. The current study shows the surveillance of bacterial growth in products of specialised nutrition by impedance compared to the data of conventional microbiology. The impedance has been detected directly in the product under investigation inoculated with different bacteria species (E. sakazakii, B. cereus and Pseudomonas spp), which shows the growth kinietics in microbiological broths. The impedance has been detected directly in the product inoculated with different bacteria species (E. sakazakii, B. cereus, P. aeruginosa) and compared to the growth kinetics in microbiological broths for impedance testing. ___________________________________________________ LMP05 Detection of sulphite reducing Clostridia species in milk powder based products S. Zhu1, M. Fischer1 1 Central Laboratories Friedrichsdorf, Microbiology Division Friedrichsdorf, Germany Clostridia species are a common contamination of milk powder products. The group includes a number of harmless species but also pathogenic and opportunistic pathogenic species. Especially of concern for infants products is C. botulinum which can cause infant botulism following ingestion. The whole group of sulphite reducing clostridia (SRC) is used as an index parameter. However the detection of the SRC group is difficult due to the inhomogeneous composition of the group. The current ISO method covers all sulphite reducing bacteria which includes also Enterobacteriaceae species and some Bacillus species which grow aerobically. A heat treatment limits the detection to sporeformers, but makes the method also sensitive for a number of Clostridia species.The current investigations have explored the sensitivity of four agars (DCA, TSC, ISA, SIA) for 22 Clostridia species with and without heat treatment. ___________________________________________________ LMP06 Sterility test of aseptically filled products with luminescence M. Fischer1, A. Reidel1 1 Central Laboratories Friedrichsdorf, Microbiology Division Friedrichsdorf, Germany The sterility test of aseptically filled UHT products is a time consuming and labour intensive work. The products have to be incubated 10 day and checked for microbiological growth after that time. The usual procedure is a manual streak on different agars. There have been a number of alternative methods used especially for UHT milk. Among others the luminescens is one of the most promising procedures. The method has been shown as very reliable for UHT milk and other milk based products.The current investigation shows results of a validation trial for products of specialised nutrition. The validation has been performed for a number of different bacterial species on several contamination levels. The influence of a number of flavours on the detection limit has been checked. ___________________________________________________ LMP07 Comparative study of the culture method (§64 LFGB 00.0022), PCR and RNA-hybridisation for the detection of Listeria monocytogenes in foodstuffs. A. Muelverstedt1, C. Hartke1, H. Dorfmann1 1 Department of Food Hygiene and Diagnostics, Bad Langensalza, Germany For the extensive control of the microbiological risks in the food production industry, the EU-Commission introduced regulation (EG) Nr. 2073/2005 on 15. November 2005. This regulation dictates the investigation of following focal points: Salmonella spp. and Listeria monocytogenes as safety criteria in foodstuffs and E. coli as a process hygiene criterion. The detection limit for L. monocytogenes is ND/25g for consumable products at the production level, alternatively <102 CFU/25g of consumable products at retail. The official method for the detection of Listeria monocytogenes in foodstuffs (§64 LFGB L 00.00-22) requires the enrichment and culturing of the bacteria in selective media. Processing samples in this way may take up to five days for a positive result. The implementation of a PCR-based method in foodstuff analysis is one possible method to a dramatic reduction in the time required to process samples with comparable sensitivity and specificity to culture methods. Examination of foodstuffs by molecular biological methods pose some challenges, especially due to the heterogeneous protein and fat content of the sample; the addition of colouring agents and preservatives as well as the potential presence of concomitant bacterial and non-bacterial agents. This has resulted in the development and marketing of “alternative” methods for detection based on immunological or RNA-based methods over the past years. In the scope of this investigation five samples (negative by culture methods) of cheese and sausage, with variable fat and 98 protein contents, were tested prior to their expiration date. The samples were spiked with 10, 100, 1 000, 10 000 and 100 000 CFU/g L. monocytogenes and subsequently enriched in either Peptone Water, ONE-Bouillon, ½-Fraser or Fraser-Bouillon. The detection of L. monocytogenes was performed by the reference culture method, PCR and RNA-FastScan®. Additionally 78 samples were taken out of a routine production process and compared by all three methods. The results of this study are discussed below. ___________________________________________________ LMP08 Occurrence and properties of Listeria in the food chain A. Müller1, M. Schmid2, O. Meyer1, F. Meussdörffer1 1 University Bayreuth, Dept. Microbiology, Bayreuth, Germany 2 GSF-Research Center for Environment and Health, GmbH Department Microbs Plant Interactions, Neuherberg Germany The genus Listeria comprises the six species: L. monocytogenes, L. ivanovii, L. innocua, L. welshimeri, L. seeligeri and L. grayi. Of these, only two species, L. monocytogenes and L. ivanovii, have been shown to be pathogenic for men and animals respectively. Because of its adaptability and the complex infection cycle, L. monocytogenes has become a genetic model organism for intracellular life. Many genes involved in infection and cell spreading are located at the virulence gene cluster.Although L. seeligeri too carries homologues of the virulence genes arranged similarly as in L. monocytogenes, it is considered apathogenic due to its incapacity to express the corresponding proteins. Because of the ability of Listeria to tolerate high salt concentrations, relatively low pH and to survive and multiply at refrigeration temperatures, they are ubiquitous present in the environment. In this study the occurrence of Listeria spp. in the regional food chain was investigated by microbial analysis of samples from butcher shops, supermarkets and fecal samples. L. innocua and L. monocytogenes serogroups 1/2b,3b,7; 1/2a,3a and 4b,4d,4e were the dominating species in the production facilities, being particularly present in gullies. Other L. monocytogenes serogroups as well as L. welshimeri were detected infrequently. L. seeligeri was detected rather rarely too. However, different variants could be distinguished with respect to phenotype, metabolic properties and genetic traits as judged by PCR. Both variants differed also in their sensitivity towards ß-lactam antibiotics and the bacteriocin, nisin. Further distinct differences between variants were detected in the sequences of the iapgenes and the virulence clusters. Moreover, phospholipase activity was visualized after incubation on chromogenic media after incubation at 37°C. Accordingly, the protein pattern in culture filtrates differed depending on cultivation conditions. Our results indicate that L. seeligeri might be a versatile organism adapting quite efficiently to its environment. ___________________________________________________ LMV01 Characterization of novel toxic mycotoxins in Aspergillus nidulans C. Handrich1, J. Buenger2, G. Westphal1, E. Hallier1 M. Müller1 1 Georg-August-University, Arbeits- und Sozialmedizin Goettingen, Germany 2 Ruhr-University, BGFA, Bochum, Germany Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites of filamentous fungi, that can cause various toxic effects including cancer, immune suppression and teratogenicity. Acute and chronic pulmonary diseases were reported after inhalation of organic dust containing toxic moulds and mycotoxins. Exposure to these airborne contaminants is a major health hazard in waste treatment facilities. One of the most abundant mould species in German composting plants is Aspergillus nidulans, which produces the carcinogenic mycotoxin sterigmatocystin. The extract of A. nidulans caused serious toxic effects in the A-549 lung cell line, that could not be completely explained by its content of sterigmatocystin. [Buenger et al. (2004) Toxicology 202, 199]. The presence of additional mycotoxins or other toxic principles were detected by a structure activity-approach. Using an HPLC-diode array detector method the components in the A. nidulans-extract were separated and characterized within 50 minutes/analysis and collected as nine 5-minutes-fractions. Sterigmatocystin was identified in fraction 8 with a content of up to 28%. The fractions were tested for cytotoxicity in three established cell lines (A-549, L-929 and Hep-G2) using the neutral red assay (NRU). Fraction 9 showed the strongest cytotoxicity in A-549-pneumocytes. In addition, the mutagenicity of the 5-minutes-fractions was determined using the Salmonella typhimurium/mammalian microsome assay (Ames test) with the strains TA 98 and TA 100. The tests were performed with and without metabolic activation by a microsomal mixed function oxidase system (S9 fraction). Fractions 1-7 did not significantly increase the number of revertants, while fraction 8 and 9 in low concentrations caused a significant dose-dependent increase of revertants in both tester strains after S9 activation. The observed mutagenic effect of fraction 8 may be predominantly due to sterigmatocystin. Therefore the single compounds from fraction 9 were collected and investigated in detail by the NRU and Ames test. The fraction contains several cytotoxic and mutagenic substances, which will be further characterized by iontrap mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy. ___________________________________________________ LMV02 Occurrence of Aspergillus fumigatus and gliotoxin formation in meat H. Schulze1, O. Meyer1, F. Meussdoerffer1 1 University Bayreuth, Dept. Microbiology, Bayreuth, Germany The mold Aspergillus fumigatus is ubiquitous in the environment. However, it is known as causative of aspergillosis in immunocompromised people and producer of several mycotoxins, among them the immunosuppressive and cytotoxic gliotoxin. We have studied the occurrence of Aspergillus fumigatus in butcher shops. The mold was detected in 46% of 192 air samples from inside butcher premises and their vicinity 99 as well as in 26% of 73 spice mixtures. Aspergillus fumigatus was also detected in two out of 330 products tested in densities above 1,000 cfu/g (fresh weight). The presence of the gliotoxin gene cluster was demonstrated by PCR in each of the 13 isolates from different sources examined. Sequencing parts of the gliJ and gliZ regions of three isolates (two from spice mixtures, one from sausage) revealed no differences in these genes between the isolates. This indicates the potential of environmental Aspergillus fumigatus strains to form the mycotoxin under appropriate conditions. We consequently investigated the production of gliotoxin by the three isolates during growth on different substrates employing TLC and HPLC. While no gliotoxin was formed on rice, oats or cheese respectively, the toxin could be detected during growth of the Aspergillus fumigatus strains on minced meat. This indicates that gliotoxin might be formed in some foods. In particular in combination with pathogens known to affect immunocompromised people this might enhance the hazard to the consumer. ___________________________________________________ MPP01 The weak interaction of LcrV and TLR2 does not contribute to the virulence of Yersinia pestis D. Reithmeier-Rost1, J. Hill2, S.J. Elwin2, D. Williamson2 S. Dittmann1, A. Schmid1, G. Wilharm3, A. Sing4 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institut, Munich, Germany 2 DSTL, Porton Down, Porton, United Kingdom 3 Robert Koch-Institut, Wernigerode, Germany 4 Bavarian Health and Food Authority, Oberschleissheim Germany Yersinia pestis and the enteropathogenic Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia enterocolitica share the virulence-antigen LcrV. Previously, using reverse genetics we have proven that LcrV contributes to the virulence of Y. enterocolitica serotype O:8 by inducing IL-10 via Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2). However, both the ability of Y. pestis LcrV to activate TLR2 and a possible role of TLR2-dependent IL-10 induction by LcrV in Y. pestis are not yet known. To eliminate interference from additional protein sequences, we produced LcrVs without affinity tags from Y. pestis and from Y. enterocolitica O:8 (LcrVO:8). LcrVO:8 was much more potent in TLR2-activity than Y. pestis LcrV. To analyse the role of TLR2 in plague, we infected both wild-type and TLR2-/- mice subcutaneously with Y. pestis GB. While TLR2 -/- mice exhibited lower blood levels of IL-10 (day 2 post-infection) and of the pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF-a, IFN-g and MCP-1 (day 4) than wild-type mice, there was no significant difference in survival. The low TLR2-activity of Y. pestis LcrV and associated cytokine expression might explain why - in contrast to Y. enterocolitica O:8 infection - TLR2-deficient mice are not more resistant than wild-type mice in a bubonic plague model. ___________________________________________________ MPP02 The B-dependent yabJ-spoVG locus affects antimicrobial resistance and capsule formation in Staphylococcus aureus S. Meier1, B. Schulthess1, C. Görke2, C. Wolz2 B. Berger-Bächi1, M. Bischoff1,3 1 University of Zurich, Switzerland, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Zurich, Switzerland 2 University Hospital Tuebingen, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 3 University of Saarland, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Hommburg/Saar, Germany The alternative sigma factor B of Staphylococcus aureus controls the expression of a variety of genes including virulence determinants and global regulators and affects the resistance level formation of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) and glycopeptide intermediate resistant S. aureus (GISA). We report here that deletion of the B-dependent yabJ-spoVG locus in MRSA and GISA strains decreased the resistance levels against oxacillin and teicoplanin, respectively. Moreover, inactivation of yabJ-spoVG in the capsular polysaccharide type 5 (CP-5) producing strain Newman strongly impaired CP-5 production. Trans-complementation of the MRSA and GISA yabJ-spoVG mutants with yabJ-spoVG under the control of its native promoter restored the resistance levels to levels seen in the wildtype strains, while neither trans-complementation with yabJ nor spoVG alone reverted the resistance phenotype. Interestingly, trans-complementation with a yabJ-spoVG construct harbouring a frame shift mutation in the 5´-part of the yabJ open reading frame, yabJ1(Am)-spoVG, allowed to restore the resistance phenotype, while trans-complementation with a yabJ-spoVG construct harbouring a frame shift mutation in the 5´-part of the spoVG open reading frame, yabJ-spoVG1(Am), did not. Similarly, only yabJ-spoVG and the mutated yabJ1(Am)-spoVG construct restored CP-5 formation in the yabJ-spoVG derivative of strain Newman, while neither yabJ, nor spoVG, nor yabJ-spoVG1(Am) were effective. We therefore hypothesise that SpoVG is the major factor of the yabJ-spoVG locus that is of importance for capsule production and resistance formation in S. aureus and suggest that the yabJ-spoVG mRNA but not YabJ is necessary for full SpoVG expression and activity. ___________________________________________________ MPP03 Functional analysis of Bartonella henselae BadA domains T. Riess1, P. Kaiser1, D. Linke2, A. Lupas2, A. Schäfer1 V. Kempf1 1 Eberhard-Karls-Univerity, University Hospital, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Max Planck-Institute for Developmental Biology, Department for Protein Evolution, Tuebingen, Germany Bartonella henselae causes cat scratch disease and the vasculoproliferative disorders bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis hepatis in humans. One of the best characterized pathogenicity factors of B. henselae is Bartonella adhesin A (BadA). BadA belongs to the class of trimeric autotransporter adhesins and is constructed modularly, consisting of a head domain, 21 neck-stalk repeats and a membrane anchor. It is important for, e.g., the adhesion of B. henselae to extracellular matrix proteins and endothelial cells and for the induction of a proangiogenic host cell response. As the biological functions of certain BadA domains are not known so far, we want to elucidate the role of these domains in B. henselae-infections. For this purpose, in-frame deletion mutagenesis of badA was 100 performed followed by a functional analysis of the respective mutants. First, 21 neck-stalk repeats were deleted leading to the expression of a truncated BadA. The mutant strain B. henselae BadA?/Hn23 was analyzed (i) for surface exposure of truncated BadA, (ii) for autoagglutination, (iii) for adhesion to fibronectin (Fn) and collagen and (iv) for adhesion to endothelial cells. In contrast to B. henselae wildtype, B. henselae BadA?/Hn23 did not bind to Fn indicating a crucial role of the neck-stalk domain in this process. In all other functional assays, B. henselae BadA/Hn23 showed a similar phenotype as wildtype bacteria. These results suggest that mainly the head domain is important for the adhesin function of BadA. Further mutants carrying different deletions in the head- and neck-stalk domains will be analyzed in future. ___________________________________________________ MPP04 Pseudomonas aeruginosa metabolism and lactate production in sputum of cystic fibrosis patients D. Worlitzsch1, T. Bensel1, M. Borneff-Lipp1, G. Doering2 1 University Hospital Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Hygiene Halle, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karls-Univerity, University Hospital, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany In sputum from patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa metabolize anaerobically. For energy generation, P. aeruginosa can use pyruvate which is produced from glucose via anaerobic glycolysis. Since pyruvate can be converted to lactate and vice versa, we investigated if P. aeruginosa may benefit from externally produced lactate. In 22 CF sputum samples, in aerobically (0 through 24 hrs) and anaerobically (1 through4 days) grown cultures of P. aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, and in neutrophils from healthy donors L-lactate was determined spectrophotometrically, and total lactate gaschromatographically. After three days of anaerobic growth P. aeruginosa gene expression was determined using Affymetrix® microarrays. In all samples, exclusively L-lactate was found. Lactate in CF sputum came to 2.9 ± 3.1 mmol/L (range 0.2 to 14.1 mmol/L) with similar concentrations in sputum colonized with P. aeruginosa and S. aureus (3.2 ± 3.7 vs. 2.4 ± 1.5 mmol/L, p=0.30). During anaerobic incubation, neutrophils produced 3.2 mmol/L and S. aureus 2.8 mmol/L. P. aeruginosa did not at all generate lactate (detection limit: 0.1 mmol/L), neither with nor without oxygen. P. aeruginosa [1x107 cfu/ml] spiked with 10 mmol/L lactate did not consume lactate. The lactate dehydrogenase genes were anaerobically downregulated (PA0927 -11fold, PA2382 -3fold) or unchanged (PA4771 1.2 times). The genes encoding for pyruvate decomposition to acetyl CoA were upregulated by 208fold (PA3416) and 47fold (PA3417). We could show that P. aeruginosa does not benefit from externally produced lactate. We confirmed the important role of pyruvate metabolism for anaerobic P. aeruginosa energy generation. Whether lactate production of PMNs or S. aureus contributes to CF lung pathophysiology still remains to be investigated. Supported by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, Bethesda, Maryland, and the Mukoviszidose e.V., Bonn, Germany. ___________________________________________________ MPP05 FlpS is essential for the expression of the arginine deiminase system of Streptococcus suis M. Fulde1, P. Valentin-Weigand1, R. Goethe1 1 University of Hanover, Institute for Microbiology, Department of Infectious Deseases, Hanover, Germany Streptococcus (S.) suis belongs to the most important agents of infectious diseases in young pigs. As a zoonotic agent it also infects humans and causes meningitis and endocarditis. Very little is known about factors that contribute to pathogenesis in S. suis. Recently, we identified a new putative virulence factor of S. suis, the Arginine Deiminase System (ADS), which was expressed on the cell surface. ADS regulation is mediated by a multitude of environmental stimuli e.g. arginine, reduced O2 tension, and carbon catabolite repression (CCR). In this study, we analyzed the impact of oxygen on ADS expression. Oxygen tension in the medium from bacteria grown at 37°C without agitation decreased in correlation with the bacterial growth. Northern and Western blot analysis revealed an increase in ADS expression in parallel to decreasing oxygen levels. In contrast, when bacteria were grown with agitation at 250 rpm, the oxygen content in the medium remained at 100% and no transcriptional induction of the ADS was observed. In-silico analysis of the 5´-region of the AD operon revealed an open reading frame (ORF) with homologies to the CRP/FNR family of transcriptional regulators. Since it is known that members of this family contribute to oxygen-mediated gene regulation, we generated an flpS (for FNR-like protein of S. suis) deficient knock-out strain. Compared to the wild-type (WT), the mutant strain was not able to induce the ADS under anaerobic conditions. Furthermore, the mutant strain was significantly impaired in growth. Complementation of the mutant strain restored the WT phenotype. Since the ADS is a catabolic pathway yielding one mole of ATP we hypothesize that FlpS is essential for S. suis to overcome anaerobic stress conditions, and therefore, contributing to the biological fitness. ___________________________________________________ MPP06 Establishment of a specific test system for quantitatively detecting extracellular polysaccharides of Streptococcus mutans E.-M. Decker1, G. Maier1, M. Brecx1, C. von Ohle1 1 Eberhard-Karls-University, Dental School, Konservative Dentistry, Tuebingen, Germany The architecture and properties of (dental) biofilms are determined by microbial extracellular biopolymers in the form of a polymeric slime matrix (EPS). Aim of the study was to develop a specific method for quantitatively detecting extracellular polysaccharides of Strep. mutans occurring predominantly in human cariogenic biofilms. The glucan specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is based on the sugar specifity of the lectin concanavalin A labelled with peroxidase (Con A-POD) to recognize glucose polymers (glucans) synthesized by Strep. mutans under growth conditions involving sucrose. The evaluation of the lectin ELISA was realised using three standard sugars: dextran (pure glucan), xanthan (heterogenous 101 polysaccharide containing glucose, mannose, glucuronic acid) and the disaccharide sucrose. The standard sugars were coated on microtiter plates for creating a calibration curve. After a wash step the plates were incubated with Con A-POD. The colour development of the peroxidase reaction was induced by addition of ABTS and hydrogen peroxide. The optical density was monitored kinetically every five minutes for one hour by means of an ELISA reader at 405 nm. Three calibration curves were created for each standard carbohydrate. The data were log10 transformed followed by a logarithmic regression for curve fitting. Con A-POD showed the highest sensitivity for the highmolecular standard dextran with a detection limit of 30 ng/ml within the linear measuring range. The detection limit for xanthan was 1µg/ml revealed by Con A-POD. Sucrose did not cause concentration-dependent binding of Con A-POD. The correlation coefficient was 0.975 for dextran and 0.988 for xanthan. By means of the three standard carbohydrates it could be verified that the lectin ELISA detected glucose or mannose exclusively as polymers but not as low-molecular glucose. Based on this finding the new lectin test system may be qualified to detect extracellular polysaccharides of Strep. mutans from bacterial and human clinical samples. ___________________________________________________ MPP07 Proteome analysis of Burkholderia pseudomallei biosynthetic pathways mutants N. Meukow1, B. Voigt2, G. Flunker, M. Hecker2, I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 University of Greifswald, Institute of Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany The gram-negative saprophyte Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, an infectious disease which has emerged as an important cause of severe community-acquired infections in certain areas of the tropics. Burkholderiapseudomallei is capable of intracellular actin-based motility and has one of the broadest host ranges of any bacterial pathogen. Presently, there is no vaccine available to protect against infection with B.pseudomallei. By using transposon mutagenesis, we isolated mutants which harbour disrupted genes encoding enzymes involved in the different steps of nucleotide, amino acid, and fatty acid metabolism. Some of these mutants were highly attenuated in a mouse model of infection and were capable of inducing a high degree of protective immunity as live vaccines against wildtype challenge. Our current studies are aimed at i) the elucidation of B.pseudomallei biosynthetic pathways with special importance during infection and their possible interaction with the expression of virulence factors and ii) the identification of antigens and predominant mechanisms involved in protective adaptive immunity against B.pseudomallei infection. Therefore, we compared bacterial supernatants and cytosolic extracts of B.pseudomallei wildtype and respective mutants by using two-dimensional (2D) protein gel electrophoresis followed by a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) for protein identification. A number of differentially expressed protein spots which might play a role in virulence were identified. As a first step towards the analysis of B.pseudomalleiantigens, we performed immunoproteome experiments with sera from melioidosis patients and identified several immunogenic proteins. ___________________________________________________ MPP08 Characterization of structural and functional diversity of the plasmid encoded serine protease EspP in shiga toxinproducing Escherichia coli J. Brockmeyer1, M. Bielaszewska1, M. L. Bonn1, H. Karch1 1 University of Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany The infection with Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) can result in hemorrhagic colitis and the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), the leading cause of acute renal failure in children. At an early stage of the disease, laboratory parameters show a prothrombotic activation of coagulation factors, platelets and endothelium. We have previously shown, that the autotransporter EspP is able to cleave coagulation factor V and thus interferes with the blood coagulation cascade. This effect may contribute to the pathogenesis of hemorrhagic colitis and HUS during STEC infection. The aim of this study was to investigate, whether a structural polymorphism occurs in the espP gene, and if this is associated with functional variations such as altered secretion efficiency or differences in proteolytic activity of the encoded proteins. The espP gene in STEC of 55 serotypes was PCR amplified and investigated for SspI and RsaI restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) patterns. A subset of espP genes was sequenced to analyse genetic differences in detail. Secretion efficiency of EspP was assessed by western blot analysis using anti-EspP antibody after purification with affinity chromatography. The proteolytic activity was investigated by the analysis of cleavage patterns of EspP against pepsin and pNA-conjugated oligopeptides. Our data demonstrate that espP shows a significant degree of heterogeneity among the strains investigated, leading to loss of either proteolytic activity or transport function for a subset of strains. Despite this genetic diversity, the functional properties of EspP remained unchanged in the most virulent strains, supporting the role of EspP as a putative, serotype-independent, virulence factor of STEC. ___________________________________________________ MPP09 G-Streptococcal IgG-binding molecules have different impact on opsonization by C1q D. P. Nitsche-Schmitz1, S. Reißmann1, I. Sastalla1 H. M. Johansson2, I. - M. Frick2, G. S. Chhatwal1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Mircobial Pathogenicity, Brunswich, Germany 2 Lund University, Section for Clinical and Experimental Infection Medicine, Lund, Denmark Beta-hemolytic streptococci belonging to Lancefield group C and G (GCS, GGS) are human pathogens of emerging epidemiological importance. They cause a similar spectrum of 102 skin and soft tissue manifestations as group A streptococci, occasionally resulting in life threatening conditions such as necrotizing fasciitis. Recent epidemiological data on diseases caused by GCS and GGS underline that they are an emerging threat to human health. Among various virulence factors expressed by GCS and GGS isolates from human infections, Mand M-like proteins are considered important because of their anti-phagocytic activity. In addition, protein G has been implicated in the accumulation of IgG on the bacterial surface through non-immune binding. The function of this interaction, however, is still not known. Using isogenic mutants, lacking protein G or the M-like protein FOG, respectively, we could show that FOG contributes substantially to IgG-binding. A detailed characterization of the interaction between IgG and FOG revealed its ability to bind the Fc-region of human IgG and its binding to the subclasses IgG1, IgG2, and IgG4. FOG was also found to bind IgG of several animal species. Surface plasmon resonance measurements indicate a high affinity to human IgG with a dissociation constant of 2.4 pM. It has long been speculated about anti-opsonic functions of streptococcal Fc-binding proteins. The presented data for the first time provide evidences and, furthermore, indicate functional differences between protein G and FOG. By obstructing the interaction between IgG and C1q, protein G prevented recognition by the classical pathway of the complement system. In contrast, IgG that was bound to FOG remained capable of binding C1q, an effect that may have important consequences in the pathogenesis of GGS infections. ___________________________________________________ MPP10 Detection of Yop translocation of Y. enterocolitica in mice by using a -lactamase reporter system – Indication that the immune system may modulate Yop translocation in vivo A. Klein-Günther1, M. Köberle1, I. B. Autenrieth1, E. Bohn1 1 Eberhard-Karls-University,University Hospital of Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany Yersinia outer proteins are important virulence factors of yersiniae which are translocated into host cell via a type three secretion system. We established a system to detect Yop translocation mediated by Yersinia enterocolitica in a mouse infection model. For this purpose a plasmid was introduced which encodes for a YopE-beta lactamase fusion protein which is translocated into host cells. Beta-lactamase (Bla) activity which cleaves the substrate CCF4 can be detected by flow cytometry indicated by a blue fluorescence signal. Control experiments revealed that detection of bla-activity depends on YopE-bla secretion and translocation. In cell culture experiments bla-activity can be detected up to three hours after infection. Infection of cultured splenocytes with the reporter strain demonstrates that Yop translocation occurs without serious preferences to any cell type of the spleen resulting in a similar frequency of Bla-activity in B cells, T cells, macrophages, dendritic cells, granulocytes or NK cells. Two days after infection of C57BL/6 mice with a high infection dose about 3% bla-positive cells were detectable in splenocytes. The composition of bla+ positive cells comprises predominantly B cells and CD11b+ cells including macrophages, granulocytes and dendritic cells and only few T cells. The highest frequency of bla+ cells comprised macrophages, granulocytes and dendritic cells indicating that those are the cells which primarilly get actively in contact with bacteria during early phase of mouse infection. Infection experiments with mice deficient for important immune defense mechanismus against Yersinia infection, namely, IFN- Receptor-/-, TNF-Receptor-/-, or MyD88-/- mice were performed using conditions by which the bacterial load in the spleen two days after infection was comparable to those in C57BL/6 congenic mice. The frequency of bla-positive cells was significantly increased in these immunodeficient mice which leads to the speculation that different immune defense mechanisms may be involved to control either efficiciency of Yop translocation or stability of translocated proteins during mouse infection. Further experiments are on the way to prove these hypotheses. ___________________________________________________ MPP11 Internalization of the extracellular adherence protein (Eap) of Staphylococcus aureus by endothelial cells I. Joost1, L. von Müller1, K. T. Preissner2, M. Herrmann1 1 University Hospital des Saarlandes, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Homburg, Germany 2 University Hospital Giessen und Marburg GmbH, Institut für Biochemie, Giessen, Germany Introduction: The extracellular adherence protein (Eap) of S. aureus belongs to the SERAM family (secretable expanded repertoire adhesive molecules) and exhibits a broad spectrum of activity including various immunomodulating and antiangiogenic functions. While some of these functions can be explained by Eap interaction with cell adhesion molecules (ICAM-1), most recently, we have described Eap effects on the endothelial signalling system suggesting intracellular target(s) of Eap (Sobke et al., FASEB J 2006). Accordingly, in this study we have investigated whether or not Eap is endocytosed by endothelial cells as well as the mechanism of uptake and intracellular fate of Eap. Methods: Immunofluorescence microscopy was used to detect protein uptake by Ea.hy 926 cells and for colocalization studies. Cell fractions were subjected to Western blots analysis for detection of Eap in different cell compartments. FACS- analysis was used to determine uptake kinetics; furthermore, using pathway-specific uptake inhibitors, putative endocytotic pathways were elucidated. Results: Immunofluorescence microscopy showed the uptake of Eap at concentrations ranging from 1-100 µg/ml. Western Blot analysis revealed variable amounts of Eap in all tested fractions. Colocalization studies yielded partial colocalization with the EEA-1 (early endosomal antigen) but no colocalization with Lamp-1 (lysosomal associated membrane protein). Uptake of Eap occurs very fast, with the maximum uptake being observed at 3 min, yet a substantial amount of Eap remains bound to the cell surface. Uptake is completely abrogated at 4°C. After 24h the intracellular amount of Eap is greatly reduced albeit still detectable. Use of chlorpromazin (CPZ, 30 µM) revealed an inhibition of Eap-uptake; additional inhibitors are currently under investigation. Conclusions: Endothelial cells are able to take up S. aureus Eap in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. The 103 temperature dependence and speed of the uptake process suggests specific uptake mechanism rather than passive translocation, and chlorpromazine sensitivity indicates involvement of the clathrin-mediated pathway. Colocalization studies show a partial overlap with the early endosome but not with the late endosome. In essence, this demonstration of specific Eap uptake in concert with its profound effect on endothelial signalling provides new and exciting aspects on the role of Eap in S. aureus pathogenicity and a potential use of Eap in infectious and non-infectious disease. ___________________________________________________ MPP12 Identification and characterization of rOrf0, a novel LEEencoded effector protein of enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli C. Buss1, D. Müller1, G. Heusipp1, M. A. Schmidt1 1 Westfaelische-Wilhelms-University Muenster, Institute of Infectiology-ZMBE, Muenster, Germany The infection with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), atypical enteropathogenic E. coli (ATEC) and enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) results in the induction of attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions in epithelial cells, which are characterized by the loss of microvilli, the intimate adherence of the bacteria to host cells, and the induction of pedestal-like structures underneath the adherent bacteria due to a reorganization of the cytoskeleton. The phenotype is associated with the „Locus of Enterocyte Effacement“ (LEE), a pathogenicity island encoding a type III secretion system (TTSS) designed to deliver effector proteins into the host cell. Whereas the identification of LEE-encoded effector proteins is thought to be completed, the number of EPEC/EHEC effector proteins still increases by the identification of additional prophage or O-island-encoded substrates of the EPEC/EHEC TTSS. While sequencing the LEE locus of the clinical isolate ATEC 3431-4/86 we identified rorf0 as an additional LEE-encoded open reading frame, that encodes a yet undescribed EPEC/EHEC effector protein. Although absent in the prototype strains EPEC E2348/69, EHEC O175:H7 Sakai and EHEC EDL933, PCR analysis revealed that rorf0 is widely distributed among attaching and effacing pathogens. Furthermore, sequencing of effector loci indicated, that rorf0 is not necessarily associated with the LEE PAI, but is also found encoded on lambdoid prophages. Employing pull-down experiments, we identified IQGAP1 (IQ motif containing GTPase activating protein 1), an important scaffolding protein involved in actin organization during basic cellular processes like cell migration or adhesion, as a host cell interaction partner of rOrf0. During infection, both, rOrf0 and IQGAP1 are recruited to ATEC-induced pedestals, implying an involvement of both proteins in the ATEC-induced subversion of the host cell cytoskeleton. Currently, studies are under way to further characterize the IQGAP1/rOrf0 interaction and its contribution to the virulence of of EPEC and EHEC strains. ___________________________________________________ MPP13 Modulation of the canonical Wnt/ -catenin signalling pathway in Helicobacter pylori infection G. Xia1,2, T. Gnad2, U. Lendeckel2, M. Naumann2 1 Eberhard-Karls-University, University Hospital of Tuebingen Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 2 Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Institute for Experimentelle Medizin, Magdeburg, Germany The gastric human pathogen H. pylori settles about fifty percent of all humans and is implicated in the induction of chronic gastritis, peptic ulcers and gastric cancer. The mechanisms involved in these processes are not well understood. The pathogenesis is strongly dependent on a specialized type IV secretion system (T4SS), which builds a syringe-like structure and is encoded by the cag pathogenicity island (PAI). The T4SS translocates the bacterial effector protein CagA into host cells, thereby activating c-Met and inducing morphological changes and cell motility (1). The pathogen further activates a variety of host factors like the transcription factor NF- B (2) and the tyrosine kinase receptor EGF (3). In this study we show that the canonical Wnt/ -catenin signalling pathway, which is dysregulated in almost every human cancer, including gastric cancer, is modulated by H. pylori. Activation of the pathway leads to stabilization of catenin, translocation to the nucleus and subsequent transcriptional activation of target genes together with transcription factors of the Lef/Tcf family. References 1. Churin, Y. et al. (2003). J Cell Biol 161, 249-255. 2. Foryst-Ludwig, A. and Naumann, M. (2000) J Biol Chem 275, 39779-39785 3. Keats, S. et al. (2001) J Biol Chem 276, 48127-48134. ___________________________________________________ MPP14 A small RNA upstream of the ica operon in Staphylococcus epidermidis is possibly involved in biofilm regulation M. Eckart1, T. Sakinc2, W. Ziebuhr3 1 Julius-Maximilians-University, Institut für Molekulare Infektionsbiologie, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 Ruhr-University, Medizinische Microbiology, Bochum Germany 3 Queen' s University, School of Biomedical Sciences, Belfast Northern Ireland The human pathogen Staphylococcus epidermidis is known for its ability to form biofilms on implanted medical devices by synthesis of a polysaccharide intercellular adhesin (PIA). Genes involved in PIA production are organized in the icaADBC operon. IcaR is one of the regulators repressing ica-operon expression. We identified spontaneous mutants of strain 307 which show a reduced biofilm formation in an adherence assay, carrying an IS256 insertion upstream of the icaR gene. In this intergenic region, which has a size of about 1.4 kb, we were able to demonstrate the existence of a RNA transcript of 487 nt. The 5’- and 3’-ends of this RNA could be determined by 5’-3´RACE and primer extension, respectively. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed a promoter structure upstream of the transcription start and a Rho-independent transcription 104 terminator. But, neither a reasonable ribosomal-binding site nor a start codon was detectable. Therefore, we regard this transcript as an untranslated RNA which might be involved in biofilm regulation. We constructed an IGRica-sRNA deletion mutant by replacing the IGRica-sRNA gene with an ermB resistance cassette. The mutant showed the same diminished adherence phenenotype as the IS256 insertion mutants. To investigate the influence of the IGRica-sRNA on the expression of the biofilm genes, quantitative real time PCR experiments were performed. The relative gene expression of the repressor icaR, the Nacetylglucosaminyl-transferase icaA and the IGRica-sRNA was measured in the wildtype and the mutants. The obtained data point to an impact of the transcript in the regulation of PIAmediated biofilm formation in S. epidermidis. ___________________________________________________ MPP15 Muropeptide modification - amidation of peptidoglycan Dglutamate does not affect the proinflammatory activity of Staphylococcus aureus. D. Kraus1, H. Kalbacher2, J. Buschmann3, B. Berger-Baechi4 F. Goetz3, A. Peschel1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene Tuebingen, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karl-University, Medical and Natural Sciences Research Center, Tuebingen, Germany 3 Eberhard-Karl-University, Microbial Genetics, Tuebingen Germany 4 University of Zurich, Medical Microbiology, Zurich Switzerland Peptidoglycan muropeptides, potent proinflammatory components, are amidated in Staphylococcus aureus for unknown reasons. To study whether this modification may modulate the proinflammatory capacity, cytokine induction by isogenic S. aureus strains with different amidation levels and by synthetic amidated/nonamidated muramyldipeptides was compared. However, amidation did not significantly affect cytokine induction. This finding contributes to defining peptidoglycan receptor specificities and indicates that further rationales for muropeptide amidation have to be considered. ___________________________________________________ MPP16 Establishment and optimization of mixed biofilm test systems with periodontal pathogens K. Standar1, W. Muenter1, S. Redanz1, B. Kreikemeyer1 A. Podbielski1 1 University Rostock, Institute for Medical Microbiology Rostock, Germany Periodontitis gradually develops in the subgingival sulci when biofilm-organized physiological bacteria are stepwise exchanged by pathogenic species. Development of more elaborate therapies than mechanical removal of biofilms is hampered by difficulties for in vitro simulation of periodontitisspecific biofilms. In the present study, protocols for the generation and optimization of mixed species biofilms with both physiological and pathogenic bacterial species are to be established as a prerequisite to assess the beneficial effects of chemical substances, physical measures and probiotic microflora on such biofilms using functional and transcriptomic assays. In this study, protocols for two species biofilms under static culture conditions have been tested. For this purpose, Streptococcus mitis or S. salivarius were combined with Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (A.a.), Fusobacterium nucleatum (F.n.), Micromonas micros (M.m.), and Porphyromonas gingivalis (P.g.). As culture media, brain heart infusion (BHI) and chemical defined medium (CDM) were used alone or with supplements of artificial saliva and/or human serum. The bacteria were seeded simultaneously or one day apart into uncoated polystyrene wells and were cultured for up to 5 days under anaerobic conditions. Resulting biofilms were optically quantified by safranin stain and were inspected by fluorescence or scanning electron microscopy. Initially, more biofilm was formed in BHI + human serum under anaerobic conditions for all S. mitis combinations, while all mixtures with S. salivarius favoured CDM. However, when CDM was supplemented with 50 mM glucose or sucrose, in many cases biofilm formation was greatly improved. Transwell assays showed a positive influence on growth of A.a. by S. mitis and S. salivarius while there was a reducing effect on biofilm growth of F.n., P.g. and M.m. Successive seeding did not greatly alter biofilm amounts if artificial saliva was used. However, CDM/sucrose medium led to an increase in safranin stain for all combinations with S. salivarius. Instead, mixtures of S. mitis with F.n. and P.g. showed a reduction in biofilm amounts when CDM was supplemented with glucose. In summary, the influence of both streptococcal species on the remainder in these mixed biofilms is dependent on the medium composition and has to be determined for each combination under investigation. ___________________________________________________ MPP17 Evidence of a functional two-partner secretion system in Neisseria meningitidis C. Schmitt1, D. Turner2, M. Frosch1, O. Kurzai1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Institute of Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 University of Nottingham, Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Nottingham, United Kingdom Several large exoproteins in various gram-negative bacteria are predicted to be secreted via the Two-partner secretion (TPS) system. However, relatively few of these proteins have been investigated in detail. The most extensively characterized of these exoproteins, the filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA) of Bordetella pertussis, is an important virulence factor of Bordetella and constitutes the main component of the pertussis vaccine. In general, FHA and related proteins, termed TpsA for two-partner-secretion-protein A, are translocated across the outer membrane via a specific transporter termed TpsB. All three published meningococcal genomes contain ORFs encoding putative TpsA (in meningococci termed HrpA) and TpsB (termed HrpB) proteins as indicated by sequence similarities to known TPS systems. As we have shown previously, genes encoding HrpA and HrpB proteins are present in virtually all clonal complexes. However, a high degree of C-terminal sequence variation between tpsA genes of different clonal 105 complexes could be detected. To investigate the expression of meningococcal hrpA genes and to assess a possible role of the associated hrpB genes, a polyclonal rabbit antiserum was raised against the HrpA protein encoded by NMB1779 of strain MC58 (serogroup B, ST-32 complex). For that purpose, NMB1779 was expressed and purified in E.coli resulting in a protein with a molecular weight of approximately 210kDa. By Western blot analysis of whole cell lysates and concentrated supernatants of strain MC58 and its respective hrpA and hrpB deletion mutants, we provide evidence, that meningococcal HrpA are expressed, translocated across the outer membrane by their cognate transporter HrpB and mainly released into the environment. During this process, HrpA is proteolytically processed to a mature 180kDa form. A small percentage of mature HrpA remains associated with the bacteria and contributes to the interaction of meningococci with human epithelial cells. ___________________________________________________ MPP18 RNomics: Experimental identification of novel small nonprotein-coding RNAs in Staphylococcus aureus L. F. Abu-Qatouseh1, J. Seggewiß1, S. V. Chinni2, J. Brosius2 T. S. Rozhdestvensky2, G. Peters1, C. von Eiff1, K. Becker1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 University of Muenster, Institute of Experimental Pathology ZMBE, Muenster, Germany Background: Only in recent years, the importance of small nonprotein-coding RNAs (npcRNAs) has been fully appreciated. Most of these RNA transcripts regulate virulence gene expression in bacterial pathogens in response to host signals. However, very few npcRNAs have been identified in Grampositive species, including staphylococci. Here, we present for the first time the experimental identification and characterisation of small npcRNAs from a clinical strain pair of Staphylococcus aureus displaying the normal phenotype and the small-colony variant (SCV) phenotype. Methods: Total RNA from different growth phases of S. aureus clinical isolates was extracted and size-fractionated (from 10 to 500 nt). To identify small npcRNAs in isogenic clinical S. aureus strains exhibiting the normal and the SCV phenotype, two separate cDNA libraries were constructed. About 300 clones of the cDNA libraries were randomly chosen, sequenced, and analysed by BLASTN database search against S. aureus N 315 genome. For confirmation of the predicted npcRNA candidates, Northern blot analyzes were applied. Results: Thirty four putative candidates for novel small npcRNAs in S. aureus were identified. Most of these npcRNA candidates (59%) were located in the intergenic regions of predicted or hypothetical protein coding genes, in part in antisense orientation (24%). Interestingly, some of these small npcRNAs were specific to the S. aureus phenotype and were differentially expressed. Conclusion: Beside implications on the understanding of S. aureus virulence, novel npcRNA candidates in clinical S. aureus isolates may shed a light on phenotypic variations associated with S. aureus. Further investigation of the functional aspects of these novel npcRNAs might provide new strategies in the control of S. aureus infections. ___________________________________________________ MPP19 The broad host range bacteriophage H8 is T5-like and infects many Salmonella wild-type strains and escherichia coli through the ferric enterobactin receptor, FepA W. Rabsch1, L. Ma2, S. M. C. Newton2, M. Schallmey1 J. Laverde-Gomez1, P. E. Klebba2 1 Robert Koch-Institut, Bereich Wernigerode, Wernigerode Germany 2 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Oklahoma, Norman, USA H8 is a bacteriophage of an existing Lalko/Laszlo phage typing scheme of Salmonella Enteritidis and found by morphology and genomic structure to closely resemble the virus T5 of the Family Siphoviridae. The phage infects S. Enteritidis, S. enterica, E. coli and other Enterobacteriaceae by initial adsorption to the outer membrane protein FepA. Ferric enterobactin inhibits the binding of H8 to the E.coli cell surface, other ferric catecholate receptors (Fiu, Cir, IroN) do not participate in phage adsorption. H8 penetration into the cell is TonB-dependent, but exbB mutations in Salmonella and E. coli do not confer resistance to the bacteriophage. However, exbB and tolQ double mutants are resistant to H8 infection. Experiments with a collection of deletion and substitution mutants of E. coli FepA showed that bacteriophage adsorption and penetration utilizes many of the same charged residues in the receptor protein that promote the binding and transport of ferric enterobactin and colicins B and D. DNA sequence determinations of the complete H8 genome showed that it is 104,4 kb in size, and extensively homologous to that of bacteriophage T5. Sequence comparisons (AC171169) of receptor binding protein rbpH8 showed that relative to the Oad protein of T5 and the Hrs protein of BF23. Furthermore, the pore-forming tail proteins of H8 (Tpf), T5 (Pb2), T1 (P33) and 8 (J) are highly homologous along their entire length. This bacteriophage alone or in combination with other broad host range phages could play an important role in heterogenous biofilms control. ___________________________________________________ MPP20 Gene expression- and regulation of Staphylococcus aureus during nasal colonization M. Burian1, C. Wolz1, C. Goerke1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University Tuebingen, University of Tuebingen Institute for Med. Microbiology und Hygiene, Tuebingen Germany Staphylococcus aureus colonizes the nose of 30% of the human population. The anterior nares are the primary reservoir from which S. aureus can cause life-threatening infections. A specific interaction between bacterial molecules and the host tissue during nasal colonization has to be assumed. Most genes are tightly regulated. However, the regulatory circuits leading to adaptive gene expression during colonisation are largely unknown. In previous work, we were able to reliably follow gene expression in vivo by direct transcript analysis 106 (LightCycler RT-PCR) in specimens contain >104-105 CFU. In order to analyse nasal colonization in humans (S. aureus densities <103 CFU/swab) different methods were evaluated to lower the limit of sensitivity. By optimizing the efficiency of the RNA isolation and of the RT-PCR employing a two-step protocol reliable quantification down to 10 copies of specific transcript was achieved. Additionally, the use of random hexamer primers during reverse transcription permitted the quantification of different target genes from a single cDNA pool. To determine absolute amounts of specific transcripts RNA standard molecules were constructed for each gene in question. The expression of the constitutively expressed gene gyr is used as reference. To study differential gene expression during colonization nose swabs from five persistent S. aureus carriers were obtained and isolated RNA subjected to direct transcript analysis. The in vivo expression of the following genes is assessed i.) global virulence regulators like agr, sae and sigB ii.) genes coding for cell wall anchored proteins iii.) genes coding for secreted proteins and iv.) genes coding for enzymes necessary for the synthesis of extracellular polysaccharides (ica, cap). The in vivo results are compared with the transcriptional pattern of the respective isolates grown in vitro to the exponential and post exponential growth phase. Furthermore, transcript levels will be correlated with the expressed surface antigens detected by immunofluorescence. This approach will allow us to get insights into the regulatory adaptation of S. aureus during colonisation of its primary reservoir. ___________________________________________________ MPP21 The expression of major virulence genes of S. aureus is differentially modulated by the histidin kinase SaeS M. Mainiero1, T. Geiger1, C. Goerke1, C. Wolz1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University Tuebingen, University of Tuebingen Institute for Med. Microbiology und Hygiene, Tuebingen Germany Staphylococcus aureus can produce a wide range of accessory molecules which mediate specific interactions with the host-cell. Most of these factors are tightly regulated by global regulatory loci. Within this network sae appears to be a central downstream regulator which controls the expression of major virulence genes, e.g., hla (coding for a-hemolysin), hlb (coding for ß-hemolysin), coa (coding for coagulase), eap (coding for extracellular adherence protein) or fnbA (coding for fibronectin binding protein A). The sae operon consists of four ORFs, two of which code for a two-component system with a histidine kinase (SaeS) and its corresponding response regulator (SaeR). The N-terminal sensor domain of SaeS is characterised by two intramembrane helices separated by a short extracytoplasmatic domain. Sequence analysis revealed a single AS variation (L to P) within the first N-terminal intramembrane loop of SaeS from strain Newman compared to SaeS from other S. aureus strains. We analysed the effect of this AS exchange on target gene expression in different strains. The variation results in hyperactivation of the SaeS/R system, most probably due to constitutive phosphorylation of SaeS and consequently SaeR. However, the hyper-activation of SaeS results in overexpression of only some of the saeR/S target genes, e.g., fnbA, coa and eap. Interestingly, hla and hlb expression are unaffected by the SaeS mutation, indicating that these target genes are insensitive to SaeS activity. This was further confirmed using saeS deletion strains. In these strains, hla and hlb was shown to be activated by SaeR independent of SaeS. Other target genes such as fnbA, coa and eap are highly dependent on SaeS. We hypothesise, that SaeR phosphorylation is required only for a subset of SaeR target genes. ___________________________________________________ MPP22 Characterization of a Staphylococcus aureus double mutant defective in hemin biosynthesis and in the global redox sensing regulator (Rex) G. Sander1, S. Strompen1, A. Fischer1, J. Seggewiß1, K. Becker1, P. McNamara2, G. Peters1, R. A. Proctor2, C. von Eiff1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 University of Wisconsin Medical School, Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Madison, USA Small-colony variants (SCVs) of Staphylococcus aureus represent a slow-growing subpopulation with distinctive phenotypic and pathogenic traits. They are better able to persist in mammalian cells and are less susceptible to antibiotics than their isogenic wild-type counterparts. In past studies, sitedirected menadione- or hemin-auxotrophic S. aureus mutants displaying the SCV phenotype were constructed by interrupting genes of the menadione (menD) or hemin (hemB) biosynthesis. Sequence analysis showed that many virulence- and regulator genes as well as genes of the catalytic network include a putative binding sequence for a regulator protein called redox sensing regulator (Rex). This global regulator is predicted to be involved in regulation of respiratory chain components in response to oxygen stress. In order to characterize the metabolic network of SCVs and to figure out whether Rex is involved in the SCV phenotype, a rex/hemB double mutant was constructed. The rex mutant was constructed by deleting 20 nucleotides of the gene including the start codon and leading to a frameshift using the parent strain S. aureus SH1000. Then, hemB was interrupted in this mutant by inserting an erythromycin cassette into the hemB gene. The double mutant exhibited the phenotype of SCVs and showed the same slow growth rate in Tryptic Soy Broth as described for the S. aureus hemB mutant. In addition, the double mutant revealed a reduced susceptibility towards aminoglycosides and a different protein expression pattern compared to the wildtype and the rex mutant. In contrast to the parent strain, the rex mutant and the rex/hemB double mutant did not produce staphylococcal enterotoxin A, alpha-toxin, SplC (a serine protease), RNAIII, and SrrA (a response regulator controlling fermentation enzymes) as shown by Western Blot analyses and semi-quantitative RT-PCRs. In conclusion, these results show that Rex might play a role in regulating virulence- and regulator genes in response to oxygen stress and might be responsible for some of the biochemical and physiological characteristics obsverved in SCVs. ___________________________________________________ 107 MPP23 Mutations may be involved in the formation of menadioneauxotrophic small-colony variants (SCVs) of Staphylococcus aureus recovered from clinical specimens S. Strompen1, T. Cordes1, G. Sander1, A. Fischer1, J. Seggewiß1 R. A. Proctor2, G. Peters1, K. Becker1, C. von Eiff1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 University of Wisconsin Medical School, Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Madison, USA Small-colony variants (SCVs) of Staphylococcus aureus have been recovered from patients with chronic, persisting and/or relapsing infections. These variants are frequently auxotrophic for menadione or hemin, two compounds required in the biosynthesis of the electron transport chain components menaquinone and cytochromes, respectively. Two site-directed mutants generated by insertionally inactivating (i) the menD gene using an ermC cassette and (ii) the hemB gene using an ermB cassette displayed the phenotypic characteristics typical of clinical SCVs. Main features of both mutants included slow growth, decreased pigment formation, reduced susceptibility towards aminoglycosides, low coagulase activity, and reduced hemolytic activity. In order to analyze putative genetic events as a cause for the formation of the SCV phenotype, sequence analyses of the operons involved in both the menadione (menAFDXB, menCE, and menG operons) and the hemin biosynthesis (hemAXCDBL operon) were performed. For this purpose, SCVs recovered from patients with chronic infections and shown to be auxotrophic for hemin or menadione were used. In addition, the respective regions of the clonal identical parent strains (according to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis) were sequenced. In two menadione-auxotrophic SCVs, genetic defects were detected compared to their parent strains. In both cases, the mutations were located in the menB gene. One mutation was found to be a deletion of 9 base pairs leading to an alteration of four amino acids, whereas the other mutation was a single base pair deletion causing a frame shift and the introduction of a stop codon after 230 amino acids. Both genetic events are likely to lead to the production of inactive dihydroxynaphthoate synthase encoded by menB and, hence, an impaired menadione biosynthesis. However, no sequence alterations were detected in two menadione-auxotrophic SCVs and in five heminauxotrophic SCVs compared to their respective parent strains. Thus, mutations in one of the menadione biosynthesis genes may be responsible for the SCV phenotype, however, cannot explain the formation of SCVs in all cases. Subject to further studies, regulatory mechanisms might be also involved in the generation of SCVs. ___________________________________________________ MPP24 Attachment site tolerance of pathogenicity island recombinases A. Rakin1, U. Antonenka1 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institut, Munich, Germany Recombinases are responsible for the fate of horizontally acquired pathogenicity islands in the new host. They are sequence-specific and recognize unique attachment site(s) on the host chromosome. They utilize Lambda-like site-specific recombination using the bacterial (attB) and the elementencoded (attP) attachment sites for cointegation with the host genome. Here we address the specificity of the attB x attP reaction mediated by recombinases of asn tDNA recognizing genomic islands. Four asn tDNA-associated genomic islands, the HighPathogenicity Island (HPI) encoding iron acquisition system in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, the “pks island” (Ecoc57N) encoding a peptide-polyketide genotoxin in uropathogenic Escherichia coli CFT073, and two islands with unknown functions, HAI7 and HAI13, from the plant pathogen Erwinia carotovora were identified by bioinformatics in Enterobacteriaceae. The ability of island-encoded recombinases to use their own as well as “heterologous” attP sites for recombination was investigated. The functionality of recombinases was proven by their ability to promote excisive recombination of the integrated islands. The attP sites were recovered from circularized forms of the islands by PCR and cloned in a Pir-dependent suicide vector. Such plasmids were used in trans-recombination assay for cross-complementation with each of four recombination proteins in recA-deficient background. Only recombinases of two islands, HPI and Ecoc57N, supported recombination of both cognate and “heterologous” attP sites with asn tRNA genes. IntHPI mediated attPEcoc x asn tDNA and IntEcoc - attPHPI x asn tDNA reaction, but with reduced frequency. In contrast, integrases from HAI7 and HAI13 islands with even higher homology were unable to substitute one another in recombination. This might be explained by a higher discrepancy of the attPHAI7 and attPHAI13 attachment sequences. So, even minor sequence deviations in recombination sites involved in site-specific recombination could considerably decrease the ability of the laterally-acquired mobile elements to cointegrate with the host genome and serve as a restrictive factor for unlimited acquisition of pathogenicity islands. ___________________________________________________ MPP25 Analysis of the Pyp regulatory network controlling the transcription of hreP and the flp operon in Yersinia enterocolitica J. Schilling1, K. Wolters1, S. Faelker1, M. A. Schmidt1 G. Heusipp1 1 University of Muenster, ZMBE, Institute of Infectiology Muenster, Germany The coordinated expression of virulence genes in pathogenic bacteria is tightly regulated. In a previous genetic screen, we identified three genes (pypA, pypB and pypC; protein involved in the regulation of Yersinia hreP expression A, B, C), whose products control the expression of the virulence-associated HreP protease in the human pathogen Yersinia enterocolitica. PypA is an inner membrane protein with six or eight membrane domains. PypB belongs to the family of membrane-localized ToxR-like transcriptional regulators. PypC is a cytoplasmic protein and also has a DNA binding domain of typical transcriptional regulators. In analogy to the ToxR/ToxS/ToxT regulatory cascade of Vibrio cholerae regulating the expression of the 108 cholera toxin, PypA, PypB and PypC might constitute a regulatory network controlling hreP transcription in which PypA activates PypB or PypC, which then serve as transcriptional activators of hreP. We characterized the interactions of the pyp gene products on transcriptional level. PypB and PypC do not only regulate transcription of hreP, but also of pypB and pypC. Moreover, pypB and pypC are autoregulated. However, overproduction of neither Pyp protein results in increased transcription of the pypA gene. Furthermore, PypA has no effect on transcription of pypA, pypB or pypC. By deletion analysis we identified PypB binding regions in the hreP, pypB, and pypC promoter regions. In addition we could show that PypB induces the transcription of the flp operon responsible for type-IV-like pilus production. ___________________________________________________ MPP26 Identification of a new regulatory network in Yersinia enterocolitica K. Wolters1, J. Schilling1, S. Faelker1, M. A. Schmidt1 G. Heusipp1 1 University of Muenster, ZMBE, Institute of Infectiology Muenster, Germany HreP was previously identified as an in vivo expressed protease important for full virulence of the human pathogen Yersinia enterocolitica. So far, no in vitro conditions are known that lead to hreP expression under laboratory conditions. We established a transposon screen for regulators of hreP transcription in Y. enterocolitica and identified three genes, termed pypA, pypB, and pypC (protein involved in regulation of Yersinia hreP expression A, B, C) which induce hreP transcription after overproduction. All pyp genes have a low GC% content reminiscent of horizontal gene transfer. PypA is an inner membrane protein with 6 or 8 transmembrane regions, while PypB and PypC have DNA binding domains typical for transcriptional regulators. Similar to ToxR-like transmembrane regulators, PypB is located in the cytoplasmic membrane with an unusually short periplasmic domain. For PypB we could demonstrate that it directly binds to the hreP promotor region. Employing various pyp deletion strains we could further show that induction of hreP transcription after PypC overproduction depends at least partially on PypA. In Y. enterocolitica PypA is able to induce hreP transcription independently of PypB and PypC, while in E. coli PypA overproduction alone is not sufficient for hreP transcription. In addition to the characterization of this sophisticated signaling system, we are now able to analyze the HreP protease after expression in Y. enterocolitica, which will be helpful in understanding the role of HreP in pathogenesis of Y. enterocolitica. ___________________________________________________ MPP27 Staphylococcus species as potential virulence factors in bacterial skin infections F. Layer1, B. Ghebremedhin1, R. Hartig2, W. König1 B. König1 1 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany 2 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Institute of Immunology Magdeburg Background: The colonization and infection with staphylococci is a serious issue in skin disorders especially atopic dermatitis (AD). Human skin epithelium provides a mechanical barrier to invading bacteria and also participates in innate immune defence by producing cationic antimicrobial peptides, e.g. -defensins (hBD) and the cathelicidin LL-37. The aim of our study was to determine the potential virulence of staphylococci from AD patients in bacterial skin infections and to examine the innate immune response to infection through expression of antimicrobial peptides. Methods: Pathogenicity profiles of Staphylococcus spp. isolated from AD patients were determined by screening genes for staphylococcal enterotoxins (sea-see, seg-sej), toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (tst) and Panton-Valentine leukocidin (lukPV) by PCR. Furthermore we used a model of bacterial skin infection to test the pathophysiology of these isolates in a human keratinocyte cell line (HaCaT), including the induction of hBD1, hBD-2, hBD-3, LL-37, IL-6 and IL-8 (real time PCR, ELISA) and cellular invasion (fluorescence staining, confocal laser scanning microscopy). Results: Analyzing of toxin genes revealed various pathogenicity profiles for S. aureus, although we could not detect superantigenic exotoxins by coagulase-negative staphylococci. Exposure of keratinocytes to Staphylococcus spp. triggers the production of cytokines IL-6 and IL-8 and of defensins (hBD-1 mRNA (2- to 8-fold), hBD-2 mRNA (2- to 270-fold), hBD-3 mRNA (2- to 6-fold)) and the cathelicidin LL37 (2- to 6-fold), whereas the levels of this activity were different for all clinical isolates. Adherence and invasion to keratinocytes was shown for clinical isolates of S. schleiferi and S. aureus, but not for S. hominis, S. epidermidis and S. capitis Conclusions: In summary, staphylococci from AD patients showed various pathogenicity profiles, invaded keratinocytes and triggered the production of cytokines and antimicrobial peptides. Therefore our results mark them as potential pathogens in skin infections. ___________________________________________________ MPP28 The transcriptional regulator Rgg3 controls fibrinogenbinding of Streptococcus agalactiae and bacterial adherence to epithelial cells B. Schaller1, A. Tautzenberger1, B. J. Eikmanns1 D. J. Reinscheid2, F. Borges1 1 University of Ulm, Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology Ulm, Germany 2 University of applied science, Department of natural Science Reinbach, Germany 109 Streptococcus agalactiae is the leading cause of sepsis and meningitis in human neonates and emerged as an increasing cause of invasive desease in adults. Beside an important role as a pathogen, S. agalactiae is also a commensal bacterium of the human urogenital and gastrointestinal tracts. These different lifestyles require the presence of regulatory mechanisms in the bacteria that control the expression of virulence associated genes. The present work describes the functional characterization of the putative transcriptional Rgg-like regulator Rgg3 of Streptococcus agalactiae. Deletion of the rgg3 gene in S. agalactiae 6313 resulted in an increased adherence of the mutant to the human lung epithelial cell line A549 and to the human laryngeal epithelial cell line HEp 2.Futhermore the ability to bind immobilized human fibrinogen was increased in the rgg3 deficient mutant. These effects could be restored by the presence of a plasmid carrying the rgg3 gene in the strain S. agalactiae 6313 rgg3.Quantitative Real Time-PCR experiments revealed that Rgg3 does not control the expression of genes, encoding cell-wall anchored proteins with LPXTG motif, including the fbsA gene, which encodes the main fibrinogen receptor in S. agalactiae. Taken together, our findings suggest an important role of rgg3 in the regulation of novel genes in S. agalactiae. ___________________________________________________ MPP29 Cell wall-deficient (CWD) L-form variants of the food-borne pathogen Listeria monocytogenes S. DellEra1, C. Buchrieser2, M. J. Loessner1, M. Schuppler1 1 ETH Zurich, Institute of Food Science and Nutrition, Zurich Switzerland 2 Institute Pasteur, Laboratoire de Génomique des Microorganismes Pathogènes, Paris, France L-forms represent cell wall-deficient (CWD) variants of bacteria. Their main characteristic is the absence of a rigid cell wall, which is thought to result from an induction process interfering with cell wall synthesis. Although several reports exist on morphological, serological and biochemical properties of L-forms, next to nothing is known about the molecular background for this unusual and interesting transformation. We established a stable L-form line from L. monocytogenes strain ScottA, which was GFP-tagged by single copy insertion of a modified pPL2 vector into a tRNA gene. L-forms were obtained on agar plates supplemented with antibiotics. After serial passage the stable L-forms were cultivated in special soft agar medium devoid of antibiotics. Complete loss of the rigid cell wall was confirmed by confocal laser scanning microscopy and electron microscopy. Division of L-form cells leads to small, protoplast-like vesicles but also to multi-nucleated macrocells which appear to be surrounded by a single membrane. Immunological analyses confirmed loss of certain cell wallassociated proteins (e.g. Internalin A), whereas membraneanchored proteins, such as Internalin B, were shown to be still present. For transcriptome analysis and gene expression profiling total RNA was extracted from parental and L-form Scott A cells, and subjected to whole genome macroarray analysis. The results indicated to a different expression of numerous important genes corresponding to differences in morphology and physiology. Lform metabolism seems to be apparently down-regulated, whereas stress-related genes showed a strong up-regulation. This observation appears to result from adaptations to the cell wall-deficient state. GFP-labelled L-form cells were used to study the pathogenetic potential of L. monocytogenes L-forms by different methods (fluorescence microscopy, confocal timelapse microscopy, in vitro cell invasion assays). Our observations suggest that, under specific conditions, Listeria monocytogenes L-forms (i) can emerge and survive in the environment; (ii) can multiply and divide actively; (iii) may survive intracellular after engulfment by macrophages. ___________________________________________________ MPP30 Endemic MRSA MLST22 spa-type t310 (MRSA310) carries the lukF/S-PV genes on a phage highly related to phiPVL U. Reichholf1, P. C.1, C. Irtenkauf1, A. Patten2, C. Aichinger2 U. Reischl1, N. Lehn1, H. - J. Linde1 1 University Ratisbon, Inst. Med. Microbiol., Ratisbon Germany 2 Roche Diagnostics, Penzberg, Germany Background: MRSA carrying the lukF/S-PV genes for the Panton Valentine leukocidin (PVL) are emerging pathogens worldwide. MRSA310 with PVL was first demonstrated in Eastern Bavaria in 1995, and has since caused community- and hospital-associated infections. This study investigated the nucleotide sequence upstream and downstream of lukF/S-PV in MRSA310 and compared it to published phage sequences. Methods: MRSA310 was isolated from a 6 year old boy with an abscess on his shoulder. Typing was performed as described (www.mlst.net.; www.ridom.de). Total genomic DNA was extracted and sequenced using the Genome Sequencer 20 system (Roche Diagnostics, Penzberg, Germany). For resolution of ambiguous results appropriate primers were designed for block cycler PCR and sequencing. Sequence analysis was performed by BLAST tools (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). att sites were defined according to Kaneko, 1998. Results: lukF/S-PV genes were detected between putative attL and attR sites. A total of 41,436 phage related nucleotides (nn) was identified, flanked by the conserved 29 bp core sequence of attachment sites. Of all putative open reading frames (ORF), 47 (representing 32,304 nn) showed high homology (>96%) to phiPVL. Compared to phiPVL, the % nn and % amino acid (aa) identity and number of nn for selected genes were: Integrase 99/99 (1,206 nn), repressor 99/99 (771), ss-DNA binding protein 99/100 (471 nn), portal protein 99/100 (1,251 nn), capsid protein 99/99 (1,248 nn), holin 100/100 (303 bp), amidase 99/99 (1,455 nn), lukS-PV 99/100 (939 nn), lukF-PV 100/100 (978 nn). The putative phage is flanked upstream of the attL site by a 649 bp fragment with 99% identity to ORF SAB1349c from S. aureus RF122. Downstream of the attR site, the putative phage is flanked by a 186 bp ORF with 95% identity to ORF 1,380 of S. aureus USA300. Conclusion: In MRSA310 the lukF/S-PV genes are contained in the genome of a phage with high similarity to phiPVL. Considerable benefit to the host may be conferred by phiPVL or highly related phage. Functional studies are under way. ___________________________________________________ 110 MPP31 Association between biofilm formation, insertion element IS256, agr group specificity and antibiotic resistance profile in nosocomial Staphylococcus epidermidis strains B. Ghebremedhin1, F. Layer1, W. König1, B. König1 1 OvG University, Clinical Microbiology, Magdeburg, Germany Background Staphylococcus epidermidis is a normal saprophyte of the healthy human microflora, but it is also the most common cause of nosocomial infections associated with catheters and other medical devices. Isolates from device-associated infections are known for their pronounced phenotypic and genetic variability, and in this study we searched for factors that might contribute to this flexibility. Materials and Methods 113 Staphylococcus epidermidis isolates from different sampling sites were analysed for the presence of IS256 insertion element, agr group specificity, ability of biofilm formation, presence of icaADBC operon, and antibiotic resistance. The isolates were collected between June 2005 and February 2006. Results The study revealed that, in contrast to those of commensal strains, the genomes of clinical Staphylococcus epidermidis strains carry the gene of the insertion sequence IS256. Detection of IS256 (total n=58; 51%) was found to be associated with biofilm formation and the presence of the icaADBC operon (n=46; 41%) as well as with resistance profile penicillin-oxacillin-ciprofloxacin-erythromycin-clindamycin [PEN-OXA-CIP-ERY-CLI] - n=31 of 51 were IS256 positive in the clinical strains. This resistance profile was associated with the agr group II (n=22 of 43; 51%). Conclusions We noted that both pathogenic and commensal S. epidermidis strains can have different as well similar characteristics. However, the data suggest that IS256 is a characteristic element in the genome of multiresistant nosocomial S. epidermidis isolates that might be involved in the flexibility and adaptation of the genome in clinical isolates. The formation of biofilm is not significantly associated with the presence of the insertion sequence IS256 whereas the agr group II correlated with the presence of the insertion sequence IS256 gene. ___________________________________________________ MPP32 RhlR expression in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is modulated by the Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS) via PhoBdependent pathways V. Jensen1, D. Loens1, C. Zaoui1, F. Bredenbruch1 A. Meissner1, G. Dieterich2, R. Munich3, S. Haeussler1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Chronic Pseudomonas Infection Research Group, Brunswich Germany 2 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Department of Cell Biology, Brunswich, Germany 3 Technical University Brunswich, Department of Microbiology, Brunswich, Germany The expression of virulence determinants in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is coordinately regulated in response to both the social environment - commonly referred to as quorum sensing and to environmental cues. In this study we have dissected the various independent regulation levels for pyocyanin production which is influenced by the homoserine lactone- and Pseudomonas quinolone Signal (PQS)-mediated quorum sensing systems as well as by iron and phosphate availability. We demonstrated that the phosphate (Pho) regulon is involved in the transcriptional activation of rhlR and the augmentation of PQS and pyocyanin production under phosphate limitation. These results highlight the complexity of secondary metabolite production in P. aeruginosa via environmental cues and quorum sensing. Using a bioinformatic approach we have identified 237 putative PHO boxes in the whole P. aeruginosa genome suggesting an interconnection between environmental cues and virulence determinants. As a global transcriptional regulator PhoB is probably not only phosphorylated via its cognate sensor kinase PhoR but - apart from phosphate starvation - may be activated under various other environmental conditions, that warrant further studies. ___________________________________________________ MPP33 Distribution of the pks genomic island among Enterobacteriaceae C. Forestier1, E. Carniel2, U. Dobrindt3, T. Oelschlaeger3 J. Hacker3, J. Putze3 1 University of Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, France 2 Pasteur Institute, Paris, France 3 Unversity of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Wuerzburg, Germany Escherichia coli is a common commensal of the natural gut microflora. Healthy individuals are not affected by commensals but rather have a beneficial effect from those bacteria. Besides other bacteria like lactobacilli, E. coli strain Nissle 1917 is well known for its beneficial effects on the gut microflora. There is a constant communication between commensal/probiotic bacteria and their hosts but the exact modes of action remain still unclear. E. coli Nissle 1917 lacks virulence factors, is a good colonizer of the human gut and is a well-studied microorganism. EcN is therefore used as a model organism to investigate commensal and probiotic properties. Recently, a genomic island of approximately 54 kb was identified in E. coli, which codes for nonribosomal peptide synthases, polyketide synthases and hybrid nonribosomal peptide-/polyketide synthases. This pks genomic island is present in different E. coli strains, e.g. commensal strain E. coli Nissle 1917, NMEC IHE3034, UPEC CFT073 and commensal E. coli strains. The synthesized peptide-polyketide induces DNA double strand breaks in eukaryotic cells, blocks mitosis and induces megalocytosis. Genomic analysis of the pks genomic island revealed several indications for horizontal acquisition of this island, namely an elevated GC-content compared to the core genome of E. coli strain CFT073, presence of a tRNA-gene (asnW), presence of a P4-integrase and flanking of the island by direct repeats. This suggests 1) another source of the pks genomic island than E. coli and 2) a distinct function of the pks genomic island as it will most likely not be present in strains without a selective advantage for the host. To address these issues we started to investigate the distribution of this genomic 111 island among members of the Enterobacteriaceae by PCRscreening. Our results show that the pks genomic island is not exclusively present in E. coli strains but also in other strains of the family Enterobacteriaceae. ___________________________________________________ MPP34 D-serine deaminase of Staphylococcus saprophyticus; construction and analysis of an isogenic mutant T. Sakinc1, N. Michalski1, B. Kleine1, M. Kaase1, F. Szabados1 S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University of Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany D-serine is one of the most prevalent amino acids excreted in mammalian urine at reported levels of 3 to 40 µg/ml, and it can be found in mammalian blood as well. D-serine catabolism is biologically important because it is available in some environments as a readily utilizable nutrient source. D-serine is bacteriostatic to toxic to many living organisms and has inhibitory effects for growth. The dsd locus is comprised of dsdC, a positive transcriptional regulator, dsdX, a putative D-serine permease and dsdA, the Dserine deaminase (dehydratase) enzyme. These genes are responsible for the detoxification of D-serine. DsdA converts Dserine to ammonia and pyruvate and D-serine can be used as a sole carbon and nitrogen source. We have tested three staphylococci species S. aureus , S. epidermidis and S. saprophyticus. Only S. saprophyticus showed growth with D-serine in media. Furthermore, we amplified a part of the D-serine deaminase gene only from S. saprophyticus. In addition, we cloned whole D-serine locus and for further analysis, we constructed an isogenic dsdA knock-out mutant in S. saprophyticus. Therefore we conclude that D-serine deaminase is necessary for S. saprophyticus for survival and growth in urine and presence of this enzymatic activity may be a general phenomenon in uropathogenic bacteria. ___________________________________________________ MPP35 Detection of SdrI hydrophobicity with BATH - and SAT tests; effects of Ca2+ and EGTA S. Terjung1, B. Kleine1, S. Gatermann1, T. Sakinc1 1 Ruhr-University of Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany A hydrophobic surface might facilitate adherence of bacteria to the uroepithelium. The hydrophobic capabilities of S. saprophyticus, a known cause of urinary tract infections in young woman, have been examined both by BATH - and SAT -tests. Both methods indicated that the serine - aspartate repeat protein of S. saprophyticus, SdrI, is involved in the hydrophobicity of the bacteria, since the wild - type - S. saprophyticus - strain 7108 and a Sdr I revertant strain were hydrophobic whereas a SdrI-knock-out-strain was hydrophobic. Additionally, it could be shown that expression of the SdrI in S. saprophyticus CCM 883 and in S. carnosus clearly increased the hydrophobic properties of these strains. When EGTA was added, hydrophobicity was reduced, this indicates that Calcium binding by the EF - hands present in SdrI might stabilize the protein or induce a tertiary structure necessary for this characteristic. Our data clearly indicate that the collagen ? binding protein SdrI also conveys hydrophobic surface properties. However, as S. carnosus expressing the SdrI did not show collagen binding whereas S. saprophyticus CCM 883 did, another surface factor must be involved in this property. ___________________________________________________ MPP36 Non spa-typable Staphylococcus aureus strains are naturally occurring protein A mutants C. Baum1, B. Haslinger-Loeffler1, H. Westh2, K. Boye2 G. Peters1, B. C. Kahl1 1 University Hospital of Muenster, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 Hvidovre Hospital, Klinisk mikrobiologisk afd., Hvidovre Denmark Background: Protein A (spa) belongs to the covalently bound cell-wall associated proteins of Staphylococcus aureus with either 4 or 5 IgG Fc-binding domains, which inhibits phagocytosis and activates inflammation by activating TNFR1 signaling. Single locus DNA-sequencing of the repeat region of spa (spa-typing) is used for reliable and discriminatory typing of the pathogen. Rarely, strains cannot be spa-typed. In this study, we characterized 5 non spa-typable blood culture isolates on the molecular level. Materials and Methods: The entire spa gene of the non spatypable strains was sequenced. Transcriptional analysis of spa was performed by Northernblot and quantitative RT-PCR. Protein expression was assessed by Western ligand blot. SpA of 2 strains with mutations and of the standard strain CowanI was purified using an IgG column. The inflammatory role of SpA was analyzed by determining the IL-1ß activity of MNCs with an ELISA test. Results: Sequence analysis of spa confirmed the presence of the gene and its repeat region in all strains by using primers upstream and downstream of the binding sites used for spatyping. It was possible to identify the spa-types of 4 strains, in which whole IgG Fc-binding domains were deleted while in the 5th strain the spa-type could not be assigned due to deletions at the beginning of the repeat region resulting in a non-sense mutation. Transcription of spa was detected in all strains, while only 4 strains expressed SpA on the protein level. Sufficient amounts of SpA from CowanI and the 2 strains with SpA mutations were purified from 2L bacterial cultures, analyzed by Western ligand blot for specificity and quantified at OD280nm with one-point calibration. IL-1ß activity of MNCs by commercial SpA was dose dependent. Further studies are in progress to analyze the inflammatory roles of purified mutated SpA. Conclusions: Although all strains were not spa-typable using standard primers, spa was present albeit mutations. The fact that these strains were isolated from patients with invasive infections 112 indicates that in spite of these natural occurring spa mutations, the strains were still highly pathogenic. ___________________________________________________ MPP37 Characterization of adherence-mediating protein regions of Mycoplasma pneumoniae N. Schurwanz1, R. Dumke1, E. Jacobs1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden, Germany Mycoplasma pneumoniae (M.p.) is a common agent of community-acquired human respiratory tract infections such as atypical pneumonia or tracheobronchitis. Adherence of the bacterium to the ciliated epithelia cells is a precondition for colonization and subsequent induction of disease. Cytadherence process is mediated by a specialised tip-like attachment organelle. A set of unique surface proteins, including the adhesin P1 and the adherence-related proteins P30 and P65, is concentrated in this structure. To prevent infections due to M.p. by an efficient vaccine, an adherence-inhibiting immune response directed against adhesion proteins has to be generated. To prove the role of the P1 protein as major adhesin, specific antisera against the M.p. wild type strain M129 and a cytadherence-negative mutant, lacking the P1, were obtained by immunizing guinea pigs. A quantitative in vitro adhesion inhibition assay was used to detect the adherence of the wild type and the mutant to HeLa cells or MRC-5 lung fibroblasts. Adherence inhibition was investigated by pre-incubating the wild type with the obtained sera. We could show, that the adherence inhibitory effect of the mutant antiserum was much weaker than the influence of the wild type serum. With respect to the different codon usage in mycoplasmas we expressed defined regions of the P1, P30 and P65 gene as recombinant proteins (rp1-15, rp30, rp65). The binding properties of these peptides to HeLa or MCR-5 cells were quantified using an ELISA-based assay. 11 of 17 tested recombinant proteins were shown to bind efficiently to the cells. However, inhibition studies using specific rp-antisera for pre-incubating the peptides resulted in a reduced binding of only 6 peptides. Testing the rpspecific antisera in the adhesion inhibition assay seems to be a promising tool to identify protein regions which are directly involved in cytadherence and could be of interest to select candidates for immunization strategies. Besides the inhibition of M.p. adherence to the respiratory epithelium of the host an efficient elimination of the pathogen by the cellular immune response is important to prevent infections due to M.p. Therefore interactions of human monocytes or guinea pig alveolar macrophages with mycoplasmas, opsonized with rpspecific antisera, are now investigated. ___________________________________________________ MPP38 Role of sigma factors RpoS and RpoE in virulence of avian pathogenic Escherichia coli C. Ewers1, S. Günther1, E. - M. Antáo1, A. Bethe1, S. Kiessling1 I. Diehl1, T. Homeier1, G. Li1, S. Glodde1, L. H. Wieler1 1 Free University of Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany The alternative sigma factor RpoS is recognized as a global stationary-phase RNA subunit that controls the expression of a large number of genes involved in cellular responses to stress. Another sigma factor, sigma 24 (RpoE), originally identified as a factor required for survival on exposure to extremely high temperatures, acts primarily as a repair system for denatured proteins. While there is extensive knowledge on the role of sigma factors in Escherichia coli laboratory strains, only a limited number of studies account for the contribution of sigma factors to the pathogenicity of wildtype isolates. We analysed the sequence of the rpoS and rpoE regulons in avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC), which is the causative agent of colisepticemia in poultry. Based on virulence features and sequence types shared with human extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli, APEC are suggested to be zoonotic. To ascertain the role of sigma factors RpoS and RpoE in the virulence of APEC, knockout mutants of the encoding genes were generated and employed in animal experiments and real time PCR assays. Highly virulent APEC strain IMT5155 (O2:K1:H5), representing one of the most common phylotype (sequence type 95) of this pathovar, was used for genetic manipulations. Real time PCR analysis was performed on 18 virulenceassociated genes, coding for factors involved in adhesion (crlA, tsh), iron acquisition (fyuA, tonB, iroN, fur, sit, iutA, chuA, ireA), serum resistance (iss, ompA, colV), and invasion (ibeA, ibeB, ompA) as well as toxin gene vat. For the the rpoSknockout mutant we observed upregulation particularly in tsh, iutA and ibeA, while ompA, tonB, fur, chuA, iroN, and vat were found to be upregulated in the rpoE-knockout mutant by at least two-fold. Interestingly, the outer membrane gene ompA, which is known to be associated with invasion of the brain endothelium by new born meningitis E. coli, is about nine-fold upregulated in the rpoE-mutant. In vivo experimental data indicate that the rpoS mutation does not significantly affect the virulence of APEC strain IMT5155 in 5-week old chickens, as determined by clinical and organ lesion scores and the bacterial load in chicken organs 24 and 48h post infection; in contrast, a complete loss of virulence was seen in the rpoE-knockout mutant. The animals did not develop any clinical symptoms, the organ lesions were negligible, and bacteria were rapidly cleared from the lung as shown by calculation of cfu values. Our data show for the first time the pivotal role of sigma factors in the virulence and pathogenicity of avian pathogenic strains. ___________________________________________________ MPP39 Phage-related mechanisms underlying the differences in prevalence of Hlb-converting phages and PVL-encoding phages of Staphylococcus aureus C. Wirtz1, M. Zink1, C. Wolz1, C. Goerke1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University of Tuebingen,University Hospital Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen Germany In Staphylococcus aureus virulence factors are often encoded on bacteriophages. Typical S. aureus phages are the ß-hemoysin (hlb) converting phage 13, which carries the immune evasion molecules SAK, CHIPS and SCIN, and the PVL-encoding phage Sa2mw. While Hlb-converting phages are widely 113 distributed, PVL-encoding phages seem to be less frequent in S. aureus. When comparing S. aureus strain collections from infectious and colonizing situations we could confirm these differences in prevalence. The aim of our study was to determine phage-related mechanisms leading to this unequal distribution in the S. aureus population. Experiments were performed with lysogens of the prototypic strain 8325-4 to avoid host-dependent effects. First, we investigated whether 13 and Sa2mw differ in their ability to be mobilized from the bacterial chromosome. The amount of extra-chromosomal phage DNA was detected in the lysogens 8325-4 13 and 83254 Sa2mw, respectively by quantifying the newly formed attP sites of the phages using Real Time PCR. This method proved to be more sensitive than the commonly used phage plaque test. We could show that both phages were inducible with subinhibitoric concentration of the antibiotics mitomycin and ciprofloxacin but not by growth at 42°C or under anaerobic conditions. Overall, 13 showed about 5 times higher rates of induction compared to Sa2mw. Secondly, possible differences in the transfer rate of these phages between bacterial strains were determined in mixed culture experiments employing selectable resistance labelled phages and recipients. Phage 13 proved to be more transmissible than Sa2mw. Transmission was in both cases enhanced by adding ciprofloxacin. Next, we analysed whether both phages are able to form stable lysogens after transfer into different S. aureus strains. 13 integrated into its original host 8325-4 with the highest frequency and was also able to lysogenize an already phage containing strain (83254 13) to a lesser extend. Interestingly, also one clinical isolate (s64) was sensitive to 13. In contrast, Sa2mw re-integrated into strain 8325-4 with very low frequencies and the integration site was often aberrant. ___________________________________________________ MPP40 Legionella pneumophila – Phase-variable changes and delivery of its LPS components in host cells and in broth K. Reichardt1, E. Jacobs1, J. Helbig1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden, Germany Modulating effects of LPS components established by L. pneumophila are under consideration because strains of serogroup 1 carrying the so-called virulence-associated LPS epitope, recognized by the monoclonal antibody (MAb 3/1) of the Dresden Panel, cause most of the community-acquired legionellosis. Up to now it is unclear, if the LPS equipment of these strains only enhances the transmission of bacteria in aerosols or additionally modulates host cells. Therefore, we tested the MAb 3/1-positive strain Corby for its LPS pattern with two different MAbs. MAb 3/1 recognizes long and short chain LPS components whereas the second one, MAb 59/1, recognizes phase-variable short chain LPS components. By using ELISA and immunofluorescence, we examined broth cultures of different growth phases for shed and phase-induced LPS components. The received results of broth cultures revealed that LPS components recognized by MAb 3/1 are expressed continuously onto the bacterial surface and are partially delivered into the broth. In contrast, LPS components being positive for MAb 59/1 show an inhomogeneous and phase- variable expression which increased from 3% of the bacteria in the exponential up to 34% in post-exponential growth phase. Concomitant, samples of different host cells infected by strain Corby were analysed by immunofluorescence microscopy. Investigations of intracellular life evinced similarities to life in broth concerning the shedding and the phase-variability. Accessorily, we demonstrated that shedding of MAb 3/1positive LPS seems to regulate expression of MAb 59/1 epitopes which increased during the intracellular replication period. Furthermore, we have noticed that bacteria located in phagosomes express a LPS pattern which differs from that of single bacteria. While marginal located bacteria of replicative phagosomes as well as single bacteria express only MAb 3/1positive LPS, merely bacteria of the inner regions are positive for MAb 59/1 and attached to each other. Modulating effects of the LPS were demonstrated by an infection assay with intracellular delivered MAb 3/1 before infection with legionellae which shows a reduction of the intracellular multiplication rate. Our findings substantiate that the LPS expression is regulated environmentally and therefore the shedding of LPS is one of the equipment of L. pneumophila to modulate host cells. ___________________________________________________ MPP41 Characterization of an unorthodox sensor kinase in Pseudomonas aeruginosa C. Zaoui1, T. Becker1, F. Bredenbruch1, D. Loens1, S. Häußler1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Chronic Pseudomonas Infections, Brunswich, Germany Various classes of antibiotics trigger a Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS) dependent self-induced DNA release in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. In this study we show that signal transduction via an unorthodox sensor kinase of a twocomponent system is crucial for this process. The sensor kinase knock-out mutant did not respond to antibiotic stress with an enhanced DNA release and the mutation conferred an antibiotic tolerant phenotype. Transcriptome analysis of the sensor kinase mutant supplemented with PQS revealed that most of the genes belonging to the oxidative stress response -that have previously been described to be induced in the PAO1 wild type under PQS supplementation- were either not regulated or down-regulated. These results point at the involvement of the unorthodox sensor kinase in the sensing of cellular oxidative stress, and thus its participation in the activation of the oxidative stress response. In further studies we aim at identifying the signal(s) upon which the sensor kinase is activated, and currently perform phosphorylation assays in presence of various compounds that might be relevant for the activation of the sensor kinase. ___________________________________________________ MPP42 Pathotyping of Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolated from chronically infected wounds S. Schmoldt1, I. Özkaya1, M. Götzfried1, J. Heesemann1 M. Hogardt1 1 Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer-Institut, Munich, Germany 114 Chronic infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa are predestinated for the selection of host adapted P. aeruginosa variants. In this study, we investigated 130 P. aeruginosa isolates from 73 patients treated<!--[if !supportAnnotations]--> at the Munich university clinic suffering from chronically infected wounds with respect to their cell cytotoxicity, mutation frequencies, antibiotic resistance patterns and several established virulence-associated traits including the strainspecific endowment with one of the two major type IIIdependent exotoxins ExoS and ExoU. The exoU- and exoS-prevalence among these strains was found to be 38.0% and 62.0%, respectively. For comparison, the exoUprevalence among PA isolates from blood cultures and stool samples was determined and found to be 40% for blood culture isolates and 35.3% for stool isolates, suggesting an evenly distribution of exoU-positive strains among gut colonizers, wound isolates and invasive P. aeruginosa strains. Hypermutability tests revealed no clear mutator strains among P. aeruginosa isolates from chronically infected wounds. Most isolates were positive for the tested virulence-associated traits (siderophores, pyocyanin, swimming motility, twitching motility, elastase and protease), while extremely high and low producers were found. In agreement, a high variability in cytotoxicity of P. aeruginosa wound isolates against J774 macrophages was measured. Distinct cell cytotoxicity typically was found for exoU-positive P. aeruginosa isolates. However, several exoS -/exoU + isolates exhibited only very low cytotoxicity indicating a defect in ExoU production or secretion, while several exoS +/exoU - isolates exhibited a remarkable high cytotoxicity against J774 macrophages. In conclusion, the genotypic and phenotypic characterization of P. aeruginosa isolates from chronically infected wounds showed a broad heterogeneity. The expression and production of the type III secretion machinery was highly variable and seems to be a major virulence determinant of PA wound isolates. ___________________________________________________ MPP43 D- amino oxidase activity might be a virulence factor for urinary tract infections in S. saprophyticus F. Szabados1, N. Guengoer1, A. Orland1, N. Kanageswaran1 B. Kleine1, T. Sakinc1, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany The D-serine deaminase is present in uropathogenic E. coli strains, in contrast to non- uropathogenic E.coli and reverses the bactericidal effect of D-serine. In uropathogenic E. coli D-serine was shown to be an important regulator of uropathogenicity. It was our hypothesis that D-amino acid metabolism other than Dserine may be involved in uropathogenicity. To investigate the metabolic pathways of S. saprophyticus, we to establish a definite artificial urine growth medium for uropathogenic bacteria. This is the first description of a definite artificial urine for growth of S. saprophyticus. Definite amino acid ingredients in physiologic amounts have replaced complex additives such as tryptic soy broth. For further growth studies selected L-amino acids were replaced with D-amino acids. D-alanine inhibits growth of S. aureus and S. epidermidis in contrast to S. saprophyticus. Interestingly most staphylococci except S. saprophyticus lack D-amino oxidase genes. The inhibiting effect of these D-amino acids was increased in presence of low concentrations of glucose and the effect was concentration dependent. Although D-alanine is part of the peptidoglycan of most bacteria, growth of most staphylococci was inhibited by D-alanine in artificial urine. S. saprophyticus biofilm formation was impaired in certain Lamino acid compositions, indicating the impact of amino acid metabolism on biofilm formation under near physiologic conditions. Human urine contains high concentrations of D-amino acids. Dalanine and D-serine have an inhibiting effect on bacterial growth, indicating a possible host defence mechanism in the bladder. The bacterial D-amino oxidase may play an important role in uropathogenic bacteria not only by making new carbon and nitrogen sources accessible and survival possible n this harsh environment, but also as a possible regulatory factor for uropathogenicity in analogy to D-serine deaminase. ___________________________________________________ MPP44 Identification of transcriptional regulators associated with type II secretion systems of Yersinia enterocolitica B. Sutinoski1, M. A. Schmidt1, G. Heusipp1, K. Wolters1 J. Schilling1 1 University of Muenster, ZMBE, Institute of Infectiology Muenster, Germany The hallmark of an infection with the enteropathogen Yersinia enterocolitica is the type III secretion of effector proteins directly into the host cell cytoplasm. While type III secretion is very well studied, relatively little is known about the role of type II secretion systems (T2SS) in the pathogenesis of Y. enterocolitica. In other bacterial pathogens, T2SS have been shown to secrete proteins necessary for full virulence. Environmental conditions, growth phase, and quorum sensing mediate regulation of the expression of T2SS. We show that two previously described operons encoding T2SS of Y. enterocolitica, Yst1 and Yst2, are associated with transcriptional regulators. These regulators, which we termed PypC and PypC2, share 45% identity on amino acid level. Interestingly, both are transcribed in one operon with the genes encoding the respective T2SS. While Yst2 including the PypC regulator is also found in the other pathogenic Yersinia species Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis, Yst1 including PypC2 can only be found in Y. mollaretii, which is not a human pathogen. The PypC proteins show similarity to membrane-localized CadC-like transcriptional activators; however, a transmembrane domain could not be identified. Interestingly, BLAST searches of bacterial genomes identified a PypC-like protein with a transmembrane domain associated with the genes for a T2SS in Serratia proteamaculans, indicating that the PypC regulators of Yersinia might have evolved from CadC-like regulators but lost their membrane localization. In future analyses we will characterize the regulatory network underlying the expression of Yst1 and Yst2 as well as aim at identifying putative secretion substrates. ___________________________________________________ 115 MPP45 Identification of LrhA as a new regulator of Salmonella typhimurium virulence and motility genes D. Chikkaballi Anne Gowda1,2, P. Schwerk2, K. Tedin2 1 Humboldt-University, Institute for Biology, Berlin, Germany 2 Free University, Institute for Microbiology and Animal Epidemic, Berlin, Germany Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is a facultative intracellular pathogen, capable of invasion and survival in host cells. Invasion and survival involves numerous virulence factors, which are tightly regulated by complex environmental conditions and regulatory pathways. In previous gene expression studies in our lab, a mutant strain of Salmonella which is non-invasive and avirulent in mice, showed severe reductions in expression of nearly all genes previously shown to be involved in invasion and intracellular survival despite few changes in expression of global (house-keeping) regulatory genes. One exception to this general pattern was an over-expression phenotype for a putative transcriptional regulator, LrhA. An lrhA mutant was up to 2-fold more invasive than the wildtype strain for both epithelial cells and macrophage, but showed a similar rate of intracellular proliferation. A microarray analysis of LrhA over-expression revealed severe reductions in expression of most of the pathogenicity islands, including all the major regulators of SPI1 gene expression including hilA, hilC, hilD and rtsA. Transcriptional gene fusions also demonstrated at least two-fold repression of hilC, hilD and rtsA gene expression after LrhA over-expression. These results suggest that LrhA regulation of virulence gene expression could be indirect, through rtsA regulation. However, LrhA regulates other pathogenicity islands in addition to SPI1, where RtsA is not known to play a role in the regulation. Nucleoid binding proteins have been shown to selectively silence pathogenicity island genes acquired by horizontal gene transfer in Salmonella. Over-expression of LrhA resulted in essentially the same silencing of pathogenicity island genes without affecting flanking chromosomal regions, suggesting a similar preference for regulation of virulence genes. Taken together, these studies suggest LrhA is a potential DNA binding protein involved in the repression of both motility and virulence gene expression in Salmonella. Current studies are directed at determining interactions with other proteins in the regulatory hierarchy of virulence gene expression in Salmonella. ___________________________________________________ MPP46 Characterisation of cell wall hydrolases in Staphylococcus sp. M. Schlag1, R. Biswas1, S. Zoll2, F. Goetz1 1 University of Tuebingen, Microbial Genetics, Tuebingen Germany 2 University of Tuebingen, Institute for Bio-chemistry, Tuebingen Germany Peptidoglycan (PG) hydrolases or autolysins are a group of enzymes that catalyse the cleavage of murein at specific sites during cell separation and growth. Staphylococcus aureus produces two major PG hydrolases: the major autolysin (AtlA) and Aaa, an autolysin/adhesin protein. The atl gene product is a bifunctional protein that consists of an N-terminal N-acetyl Lalanine amidase (Ami) domain and a C-terminal endo-ß-Nacetylglucosaminidase (GL) domain linked by three internal repeat domains (R1, 2, 3). Proteolytic processing generates the two extracellular lytic enzymes (62 kDa Ami-R1, 2 and 51 kDa R3-GL) that can be found in the culture broth of S. aureus. In the mature protein repeats R1 and R2 are located at the Cterminal portion of the amidase (Ami-R1, 2) and repeat R3 is located at N-terminal portion of the glucosaminidase (R3-GL). In our studies, we have purified the Atl amidase, derived from the related organism Staphylococcus epidermidis. For that we have expressed the protein in E.coli along with one and two repeat regions as well as only the catalytic domain linked to Gluthiatione-S-transferase (GST) in E.coli. We were able to crystallize the catalytic domain of the AtlE amidase under different buffer conditions. The X-ray analysis is still in progress. Furthermore we intend to use purified amidase as a molecular tool to isolate defined peptidoglycan structures for immunological studies. ___________________________________________________ MPP47 Functional characterization of a new polyketide expressed in Escherichia coli S. Homburg1, J. Hacker1, U. Dobrindt1, G. Krumbholz1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Wuerzburg, Germany Polyketides are a remarkable class of natural products with an enormous range of functional and structural diversity. This group of secondary metabolites includes numerous important antibiotics, immunosuppressants, anticholesterolemics, as well as antitumor, antifungal and antiparasitic agents. Polyketide synthase genes have been identified from a variety of biological sources, such as bacteria, fungi, and plants. In the case of E. coli, comparative genomics led to the discovery of a 54-kilobase genomic island harbouring genes that show high similarities to known polyketide synthase and non-ribosomal peptide synthaseencoding genes. E. coli strains possessing this genomic island (including pathogenic and commensal E. coli) induce a contact dependent megalocytosis in cultured eukaryotic cells characterized by an enlargement of the cells and DNA double strand breaks. The discovery of this genomic island encoding a putative polyketide raises the question of function and advantageous properties for strains expressing the polyketide. To examine the biological role of the polyketide, its putative function as an antibiotic or iron uptake system has been studied. Furthermore, transcription of selected genes of the polyketide determinant was compared in response to different growth conditions using reporter gene assays. To understand the transcriptional organisation of the pks genomic island, the operon structure was determined by RTPCR. Several genes within the island were shown to be organized in polycistronic operons. In addition, primer extension analysis was performed to identify the transcriptional start points of genes of interest. To allow heterologous expression of the polyketide, the encoding determinant was 116 expressed in Pseudomonas putida. Our results provide a basis for further structural and functional analyses of the novel polyketide. ___________________________________________________ MPP48 Different effects of Helicobacter pylori VacA on human and murine T cells S. Prassl1, X. Sewald1, B. Gebert-Vogl1, M. Fabbri2, D. Busch3 P. Sebo4, R. Haas1 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Bacteriology, Munich Germany 2 DIBIT-Scientific Institute San Raffaele, Unit of Leukocyte Biology, Milan, Italy 3 Technical University of Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Immunologie und Hygiene, Munich, Germany 4 Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Institute of Microbiology, Prague, Czech Republic Helicobacter pylori is a bacterial pathogen that colonizes the stomach of about 50% of the world’s population. In most cases the initial colonization leads to a chronic infection with the bacterium which usually lasts for decades or even for life. To evade the immune system H. pylori expresses a set of virulence factors, among them the vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA), which plays an important role in modulating the immune response. The secreted mature toxin (95 kDa) shows different effects on different cell types. After binding and uptake into target cells, VacA causes vacuolation which means the formation of large acidic vacuoles inside the cell. Another effect of VacA is the inhibition of T lymphocyte activation by interfering with the Tcell receptor/IL-2 signalling pathway at the level of the Ca2+/Calmodulin dependent phosphatase calcineurin. IL-2 transcription and therefore the activation and proliferation of Tcells is inhibited. In a human T cell line as well as in primary human T cells a VacA dependent inhibition of T cell activation as well as vacuolation of the cells can clearly be shown. In contrast, murine T cells do not respond in the same way if exposed to the toxin. A weaker binding compared to the human T cells can be observed but there is no vacuolation and no inhibition of IL-2 production of the murine T cells. The human integrin subunit 2 is necessary for uptake of the toxin into the cell. Stable transfected murine T cells expressing the human Leukocyte Function Associated Antigen-1 (LFA-1; CD11a/CD18) or Mac1 (CD11b/CD18) gain sensitivity towards induction of vacuolation by VacA. Interestingly, the inhibition of IL-2 production can not be observed. Other intracellular components which differ in humans and mice may be involved. As a consequence, the suitability of the mouse model for H. pylori virulence studies has to be questioned. ___________________________________________________ MPP49 Role of capsular polysaccharides in decreased susceptibility to vancomycin in Staphylococcus aureus A. Jansen1, C. Szekat1, C. Wolz2, C. Goerke2, G. Bierbaum1 1 University of Bonn, Institute for Medical Microbiology Immunology and Parasitology, Bonn, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karl-University , Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany Intermediate vancomycin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus (CLSI: MIC=4-8 µg/ml) has been assigned to an increased cell wall thickness as a consequence of an activated cell wall biosynthesis and decreased autolysis. The mechanism of resistance was shown to be based on an enhanced amount of free d-Ala-d-Ala termini in the cell wall acting as false target sites. This way, the diffusion of the vancomycin molecules through the cell wall is impeded. In order to investigate the genetic basis of this resistance mechanism, the expression profiles of two vancomycin intermediately resistant S. aureus (VISA) strains were compared with a clonally related susceptible control strain employing microarrays. Surprisingly, the genes involved in type 5 capsule biosynthesis figured foremost in the microarray experiments. Thus, the role of the microcapsule in decreased susceptibility against vancomycin was investigated further. To this end, capsule production was determined in different growth phases of selected VISA and vancomycin susceptible S. aureus (VSSA) strains by immunofluorescent labelling and transcript quantification using real time PCR. Additionally, vancomycin susceptibility levels of capsule defective mutants of a VSSA and a VISA strain were analysed by MIC determinations, cultivation on vancomycin gradient agar and population analysis. As could be shown by the transcription levels of the essential gene capE, capsule expression of VISA strains SA137/93A, SA137/93G and Mu50 was increased in comparison with the susceptible S. aureus strains Reynolds, Newman and SA1450/94 in exponential as well as in stationary growth phase. The capsule defective mutant of VISA strain SA137/93G showed higher susceptibility to vancomycin, while the knock-out had no effect on susceptibility in the highly sensitive strain Reynolds. In conclusion, an increased production of capsular polysaccharides seems to contribute to intermediate vancomycin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus. ___________________________________________________ MPP50 Signalling activity of staphylococcal cell wall components J. Buschmann1, R. Biswas1, M. Nega1, T. Volz2 T. Biedermann2, F. Goetz1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University , Microbial Genetic, Tuebingen Germany 2 Eberhard-Karl-University , Universitys-Hautklinik, Tuebingen Germany One of the first lines of defence is the innate immune system. This type of immune response is stimulated by the recognition of conserved components of microorganisms called pathogenassociated molecular patterns (PAMPs). These PAMPs consist of molecules not found in the host, including bacterial cell wall components such as peptidoglycan (PG). Recognition of PAMPs by specific proteins called pattern recognition molecules (PRMs) activates inflammatory signaling pathways. The gram-positive bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is a major pathogen responsible for a variety of diseases. We are investigating the role of the staphylococcal cell wall components in signaling in human cell-lines and murine dendritic cells. Defined PG-structures of S. aureus are purfied by HPLC and the use of PG-hydrolytic enzymes. We want to find out which 117 staphylococcal envelope structures have the main function in host signaling and how this structures are interacting. ___________________________________________________ MPP51 The effect of moxifloxacin on post-stationary phase growing senescent Staphylococcus aureus population I. Chatterjee1, R. Rajbhandari1, M. Herrmann1 1 University of Saarland, Department of Medical Microbiology Homburg/Saar, Germany Introduction: Staphylococcus aureus infections can be difficult to treat due to their remarkable capability to persist in the host. Persistence and/or the evolution of resistance may be related to several complex regulatory and metabolic networks, which modifies transcription in response to environmental stress. As a result, S. aureus has shown resistance to many commonly used antibiotics. To understand how S. aureus persists during antibiotic-therapy and eventually emerge resistant, we decided to characterize the effect of a broad spectrum fluoroquinolone, moxifloxacin (MXF), on stationary phase senescent S. aureus and previously characterized clpC and sigB mutants (Chatterjee et al., 2005). Methods: Long-term growth and survival of S. aureus DSM20231 (WT) and its isogenic mutants (both MIC = 0.03 mg/ml) were analyzed up to 5 days in presence of sub-inhibitory concentrations of MXF (half the MIC), added at the beginning (at 0 h) of the survival assay. Real-time RT-PCR was used to examine the gene expression pattern of select S. aureus genes in presence of MXF. Additionally, assays for glucose and acetate concentration were performed. Results: Presence of MXF (0.5 x MIC; added at beginning of growth assay) was found to induce the transcription of cidC (encoding pyruvate oxidase) in the WT strain during poststationary phase (74 h). Moreover, an up-regulation of asp23 (SigmaB target gene) and a sigmaB-dependent HSP, clpL were also recorded in the WT, in presence of MXF. Additionally, the WT (+ MXF) also accumulated higher concentration of acetate as compared to the WT (- MXF). Consequently, the staphylococcal cells (+ MXF) were found to enter the death phase (³ 48 h) earlier as compared to the staphylococcal population (-MXF). In contrast to these phenotypes, both the clpC and the sigB mutants lacked an up-regulation of the asp23, cidC and clpL transcript levels and an induction of enhanced death-phase entry, in presence of MXF. Summary: Our observations suggest an effect of subinhibitory MXF concentration on global S. aureus regulation with the consequence of an early induction of the death phase during post-stationary phases. Moreover, the induction of early death phase by MXF was evident in S. aureus only in presence of both ClpC and SigB (+ ClpC + SigB dependent manner). Collectively, our observation may explains the effect of MXF in treating and eradicating staphylococcal population in chronic infections such as endovascular & bone diseases. ___________________________________________________ MPP52 Characterization of the type III secretion system chaperone SycO of Yersinia enterocolitica S. Dittmann1, A. Schmid1, G. Wilharm2, J. Heesemann1 1 University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich Germany 2 Robert Koch-Institute, Wernigerode, Germany Y.pestis, Y.pseudotuberculosis, and Y.enterocolitica are the three human pathogenic species within the genus Yersinia. These Gram-negative bacteria share a type III secretion system (T3SS) which allows them to translocate effector proteins into the host cell. These so-called Yops (Yersinia outer proteins) inhibit the immune response and enables them to survive and proliferate in the host. It has been shown that most of these effectors build a complex with their specific Yop chaperone (Syc) in the bacterial cytosol and are at least partially folded before secretion. We succeeded in purifying recombinantly expressed SycO in its outright form by ammonium sulfate precipitation followed by size exclusion chromatography to near homogeneity. Further, we confirmed dimerization by cross-linking experiments and found a new interaction partner. In addition we present evidence that this chaperone, like SycH, is integrated into the Yop regulatory network. ___________________________________________________ MPP53 Cross-talk between the type three secretion system and metabolism in Yersinia enterocolitica A. Schmid1, W. Neumayer1, G. Wilharm2, J. Heesemann1 1 University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich Germany 2 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode, Germany Pathogenic Yersinia spp. (Y. pestis, Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica) share a protein transport machinery, called type three secretion system (T3SS), with other gram-negative pathogenic bacteria. This machinery is encoded on the pYV plasmid and enables the bacteria to circumvent the innate immune system by injecting so-called Yop (Yersinia outer protein) effectors directly into the cytosol of host cells. YscM1 of Y. enterocolitica (LcrQ in Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis) and the paraloguos YscM2 (missing inY. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis) with 57% identity to YscM1/LcrQ have been reported to be functionally equivalent negative regulators of the T3SS. Using recombinant GSTYscM1 and GST-YscM2 in a pulldown assay to determine new interaction partners we found an approximately 95 kDa protein associating with both YscM1 and YscM2. This protein was identified as the chromosomally encoded enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) by mass spectrometry. We were able to confirm binding of recombinant PEPC to recombinant YscM1 and YscM2 by native gel electrophoresis. The enzymatic activity of the PEPC in the presence of YscM1 or YscM2 was determined by coupling the PEPC reaction to an NADH oxidating reaction. We could show that in the presence of increasing amounts of YscM1 PEPC activity decreases gradually. In contrast, increasing amounts of YscM2 had no effect. In addition we could demonstrate that 118 YscM1 acts synergetically to the known PEPC inhibitors citrate and aspartate and antagonistic to the PEPC activator acetyl coenzyme A. As the PEPC is required for cells growing on glucose as sole carbon source we performed growth experiments with the Y. enterocolitica wildtype overproducing YscM1 or YscM2 in M9 minimal medium. We could demonstrate that the overproduction of YscM1 leads to an attenuation in growth. ___________________________________________________ MPP55 Ex-vivo detection of extracellular adherence protein (Eap) of S. aureus in wounds I. Joost1, D. Blass1, M. Burian2, C. Görke2, M. Herrmann1 1 University Hospital des Saarlandes, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Homburg, Germany 2 University Hospital Tuebingen, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany MPP54 Comparison of the interaction between THP-1 cells and cell wall components of Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis E. Borrmann1, H. Köhler1, B. Burkert1, A. Hinsching1 B. Rohrmann1, C. Muselmann1 1 Federal Institute for Animal Health, Molecular Pathogenesis Jena, Germany Introduction: S. aureus is one of the most important pathogens found in wounds. Previously, we have observed that the S. aureus Eap exerts a strong antiangiogenic effect (Athanasopoulos et al., Blood 2005) through inhibition of MAPK signalling (Sobke et al., FASEB J 2006), resulting in delayed wound closure. Accordingly, it is possible that Eap plays a major role in delayed healing of S. aureus infected wounds. However, while it is shown that all clinical S. aureus strains contain eap, quantitative expression of eap under authentic conditions in the wound has not yet been studied. Accordingly, we wish to determine in situ eap expression directly obtained from human specimen. Methods: To establish ex-vivo analysis of eap expression, nasal swabs from volunteers were obtained and snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen. RNA preparations were performed from cultured S. aureus as well as from direct swab specimen at RNAse free conditions. c-DNA was generated by reverse transcription. Sequence modified RNA standards were engineered for the house-keeping gene gyrB and two different standards for eap, reflecting two genetic distinct subtypes. eap expression levels were compared to gyrB by qRT-PCR. For control, expression was also analyzed in non-S.aureus species Results: We confirmed that eap expression differs between different growth phases, i.e. during the exponential phase 8-20 fold elevated eap transcript levels were detected compared to gyrB transcripts, whereas during stationary growth the level the amount of eap transcripts remains substantially below the gyrB. First data obtained with colonization specimen suggest that the amount of eap expression in situ corresponds to that of the in vitro condition with 2-16 fold elevated eap transcripts compared to gyrB transcripts. Other bacterial organisms (putatively encountered in wounds) revelead no detection of RNA. Conclusions: Here we present the successful establishment of a protocol determining in situ eap expression in S. aureus. The application of the protocol for authentic wound infection is currently in progress in our laboratory. This protocol provides the basis to determine the expression of eap in situ, and allows for important evidence to the pathomechanistic consequences of S. aureus wound infection. Such evidence may open new preventive or therapeutic aspects directed against S. aureus Eap in acute or chronic wound or soft tissue infection. ___________________________________________________ Paratuberculosis (John’s disease) is a chronic granulomatous enteritis in ruminants caused by Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (MAP).The crucial process in the pathogenesis of this disease is the internalization of MAP by intestinal macrophages, survival and intracellular multiplication. Although the zoonotic potential of MAP has controversially been discussed in several reports, an aetiological association between MAP and Morbus Crohn could not be proved unequivocally until now. A unique pattern of all mycobacteria is the structure and composition of the cell envelope consisting of the plasma membrane and the wall. The specific cell wall structure is believed to play an important role in the successful persistence of MAP in macrophages. Lipoarabinomannan (LAM), one of the biologically active cell wall components, is a multiglycosylated form of the mannosyl phophatidyl-inositol. It is known that LAM’s from diverse mycobacterial species differ in the modification of terminal arabinose residues. These modifications influence the macrophage response and so the effect on the immune system. The interaction between the human monocyte cell line THP-1 and LAM isolated from MAP as well as from M. smegmatis was investigated. Both LAM’s were produced after cultivation of both MAP and M. smegmatis using a Triton X-114 phase separation technique (Severn et al., 1997). In combination with nuclease and protease digestion and subsequent purification by ultracentrifugation the isolation procedure delivered LAM’s from bacterial cells without contaminating protein or DNA. The purity of the products was tested by electrophoresis. For the determination of the impact of these molecules on modulating the macrophage response the production of mRNA of the cytokines TNF-alpha, IL-1 and IL-10 were determined by PCR. The biological active proteins IL-1 and IL-10 were measured using ELISA and TNF-alpha using a cell test. First results show that both mycobacterial species differ in their effect on THP-1 cells. Severn, W.B., Jones, A.M., Kittelberger, R., de Lisle, G.W., Atkinson, P.H.: Improved procedure for the isolation and purification of Lipoarabinomannan from Mycobacterium bovis strain AN5. J. Microbiol.Methods, 28 (1997) 123-130. ___________________________________________________ MPP56 PQS production promotes tolerance towards SDS M. Müsken1, T. Becker1, S. Häußler1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Chronic Pseudomonas Infections, Brunswich, Germany In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, diverse virulence determinants and the formation of biofilms are regulated via the action of a 119 hierarchical cell-cell communication system which integrates two classes of signal molecules, the N-acylhomoserine lactones and the 4-quinolones. While the homoserine lactone molecules diffuse freely between the cells, the Pseudomonas Quinolone Signal, 2-heptyl-3-hydroxy-4-quinolone (PQS), is packaged into membrane vesicles that serve to traffic this molecule within a population (Mashburn and Whiteley, Nature, 2005). As PQS directly promotes its package into the membrane vesicles and PQS non-producing strains do not form membrane vesicles, we hypothesized that a membrane-targeting antimicrobial agent may exhibit an increased efficiency against PQS non-producers. This might account for the previously observed effect that biofilms of PQS negative strains are more sensitive to the detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) (Allesen-Holm et al., Mol. Micro., 2006). We investigated the influence of 0.2 % SDS to planktonic cultures. By measuring the optical density and determining bacterial viability by counting the colony forming units (CFU), we provide evidence for a higher tolerance of the wild-type towards SDS as compared to a PQS non-producing mutant. Our results indicate that a PQS-dependent formation of membrane vesicles may be an essential envelope stress response. Moreover, since it has recently been shown that the exogenous addition of rhamnolipids or SDS mediate central hollowing of bacterial microcolonies and promote bacterial dispersal from biofilms, a PQS differential within the microcolony forming subpopulations might play a central role in the dynamics of biofilm development and dispersal processes. ___________________________________________________ MPP57 Characteristics of site-specific modified Legionella pneumophila Pad mutants in the protozoan host Acanthamoeba castellanii F. Reschke1,2, L. Igel1,2, E. Kuhlisch2, P. C. Lueck1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden, Germany 2 Technical University of Dresden, Medical Statistic and Informatics, Dresden, Germany Legionella pneumophila is a gram-negative bacterium commonly isolated from lakes, streams, potable water supplies and cooling towers. In these aquatic settings L. pneumophila cells act as a facultative intracellular parasite, able to invade and replicate within free-living amoebae. Thus, these protozoa may serve as important reservoirs for the bacteria in an aquatic environment. L. pneumophila can be transmitted from there by aerosolization and may lead to Legionnnaire`s disease, a severe form of atypical pneumonia or the milder form named Pontiac fever. L. pneumophila expresses the 16kDa protein Pad (L.pneumophila amoebal adhesin) which is involved in the uptake of the bacterium in the amoebal host, Accanthamoeba. spp. It is a Legionella pneumophila-specific fitness factor exposed at the surface of the bacterial cell with a length of 136 amino acids. A monoclonal antibody (MAb 61/1) and a polyclonal antiserum against the protein can block the uptake of Legionella within amoeba. Epitope mapping by peptid-spot-synthesis showed a binding site at aminoacid11-20 (C1) for MAb 61-1. Site-directed mutation in the putative epitope C1 with pLIHis11, pLI-Thr12, pLI-Leu13, pLI-Ile14, pLI-Phe15, pLI-Ile16, pLI-Phe17, pLI-Gly18, pLIGln19, pLI-Pro20 result in different binding ability of Mab 61-1 in comparison with the wildtype (Corby) and the pad knockout mutant (Cp7). In cell-culture-assays Acanthamoeba castellanii was infected with the wildtype, the knocked-out mutant (CP7) and the sitespecific modified mutants with a cell to bacteria ratio of 1:100. Immunfluorescence microscopy and culture assay showed that the uptake of the mutants and the binding ability of Mab 61/1 relate to each other. However, the intracellular replication of the bacterial clones was not affected. We suppose that the C1-epitope of the Pad-protein is involved in the uptake of L. pneumophila by Acanthamoeba castellanii but not to the intracellular replication. ___________________________________________________ MPP58 Metabolic pathways and intracellular persistence associated with thymidine-dependent small colony variants of Staphylococcus aureus J. Zander1, S. Besier1, S. Saum2, F. Dehghani3, S. Loitsch4 V. Brade1, T. A. Wichelhaus1 1 University of Frankfurt, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 University of Frankfurt, Institute of Molecular Biosciences Frankfurt am Main, Germany 3 University of Frankfurt, Institute of Anatomy II, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 4 University of Frankfurt, Department of Medicine II, Frankfurt am Main, Germany ___________________________________________________ MPP59 Inactivation and regulation of a new Na+/H+-dicarboxylate symporter operon of Pseudomonas aeruginosa found to be up-regulated during chronic cystic fibrosis lung infection. C. Henke1, J. Heesemann1, M. Hogardt1 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Bacteriology, Munich, Germany P. aeruginosa is the major pathogen during chronic infection of the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung. It has been suggested that the persistence of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung is associated with its growth as biofilm-like macrocolonies in the microaerophilic and viscous CF mucus. Usually, CF respiratory secretions contain high concentrations of mucin, lipids, DNA and amino acids. Comparison of the proteoms and transcriptomes of sequential P. aeruginosa mutator and non-mutator CF isolates revealed a significant up-regulation of the genes PA0119, PA0120 & PA0121 whose predicted products are associated with the amino acid/dicarboxylate uptake and biofilm formation which suggested a major contribution of amino acid availability to the successful survival of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung. The PA0119 gene encodes a protein with high identity to a membrane associated C4-dicarboxylate Na+/H+ symporter DctA of Rhizobium meliloti. We showed that PA0119 is organized in an operon with two putative GntR-like transcriptonal regulators: PA0120 and PA0121. To determine the regulation of these genes under varying conditions the upstream region of PA0119 was cloned into a lacZ-reporter plasmid. Highest reporter 120 activity was observed during early to late stationary growth phase and when P. aeruginosa was grown on fumarate, aketoglutaric acid, aspartate, succinate or glutamate. Inactivation of PA0120 resulted in an increased reporter activity, suggesting a negative regulation on PA0119. PA0119 reporter assays using P. aeruginosa rpoS-mutant, rhlI- and rhlR-mutants yielded decreased promotor activity as compared to wildtype PA01 indicating a RpoS & Quorum Sensing dependent regulation of the PA0119-PA0121 operon. These data indicate that the PA0119-PA0121 dicarboxylate transporter operon probably contribute to the growth and survival of P. aeruginosa in the nutritional rich environment of the CF lung. ___________________________________________________ MPP60 Functional studies on the IL-8 degrading surface protease of Streptococcus pyogenes S. J. Kaur1, S. R. Talay1, R. Graham1, R. Frank1, E. Hanski2 G. S. Chhatwal1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Microbial Pathogenicity, Brunswich, Germany 2 The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Institute of Microbiology, Jerusalem, Israel Group A Streptococcus (GAS) is an important human pathogen which causes various diseases including pharyngitis, meningitis, necrotising fasciitis and streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. Popularly known as ‘flesh eating bacteria’ GAS can cause diseases ranging from minor to life threatening. Proteins secreted by Streptococcus pyogenes are potential vaccine candidates against this bacteria. The GAS surface protein called ‘SpyCEP’ (Streptococcus cell envelope protease) has proven to be a potential protective antigen against GAS infection. SpyCEP, also known as ScpC can degrade an important chemotactic factor, IL-8 and thus retard neutrophil influx at the site of infection during necrotising fasciitis. To elucidate the properties of this protease, recombinant expression of ScpC was performed and purified protein was used for identifying and testing chromogenic substrates for ScpC. Contrary to what has been proposed, ScpC did not cleave known trypsin substrates. A chromogenic substrate including the cleavage site of IL-8 was synthesised and tested with ScpC. In vitro adherence and invasion assays using human epithelial cells and a scpC knock out mutant of S. pyogenes suggests a role of ScpC in invasion of host cell. ___________________________________________________ MPP61 Analysis of the adaptation of adhesins of Staphylococcus aureus during chronic airway infection of cystic fibrosis patients M. Knauer1, S. Deiwick1, K. Wardecki1, B. Kahl1 1 University Clinics Muenster, Medical Microbiology, Muenster Germany Background: During persistent airway infection of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients Staphylococcus aureus isolates can be affected by various mutations of regulator and virulence genes. To accomplish colonization, S. aureus possesses a number of adhesive genes, which all possess regions with different numbers of repeats. Aims: To assess the degree of genotypic adaptation, 77 S. aureus isolates of two patients (6.9 and 26.1 years old), who were chronically infected by S. aureus for 4.3 and 11.8 years, were further investigated. Methods: Single or multiplex PCR were performed for the different adhesins: fnbA, fnbB, clfA, clfB, cna sdrD, sdrC, sdrE. Molecular typing was performed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and determination of agr-specificity groups. Results: By PFGE, the first patient harboured 6 and the second 3 different S. aureus strains with subtypes due to fragment pattern differences. The strains of the first patient belonged to agr group I (4 strains), III and IV (1 strain each) and the strains of the second patient to agr group I, II and IV. By PCR, all strains were positive for fnbA, fnbB, clfA, clfB, sdrC and 62/77 positive for cna. There were different sizes of amplicons in some strains and their subtypes for cna, fnbA, fnbB, clfA and clfB. 17 strains were negative for sdrD and 6 for sdrE. Conclusions: By PCR analysis, strains were identified, which showed differences in amplicon sizes of special adhesins indicating changes in the repeat area assumingly due to adaptation of the microorganism to the hostile environment during longterm persistence. ___________________________________________________ MPP62 Expression and cell wall anchoring of Pls is required for reduced adherence and cellular invasiveness of Staphylococcus aureus M. Hussain1, K. M. Juuti2, G. Peters1, P. I. Kuusela3, B. Sinha4 1 University of Muenster, Medical Microbiology, Muenster Germany 2 University of Helsinki, General Microbiology, Helsinki Finland 3 University of Helsinki, Bacteriology and Immunology, Helsinki Finland 4 University of Wuerzburg, Hygiene and Microbiology Wuerzburg, Germany Background: The surface protein Pls (plasmin-sensitive) of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) reduces adhesion to immobilized host proteins and host cell invasion by an unknown mechanism, requiring pls gene expression. Here, we tested the effect of Pls expression in two different MSSA backgrounds. Methods: The pls–negative MSSA isolates Cowan and 6850 were transformed with plasmids carrying WT pls (pPLS4), pls LPDTG (lacking the sortase motif; pPLS5) and pls SD (lacking the SD repeat region; pPLS6). Transformants were then tested for adherence to immobilized fibrinogen (Fg) and fibronectin (Fn) and, invasion of 293 and EA.hy 926 cells (flow cytometric assay), and compared to the respective WT strains. Gene expression was monitored by real time RT-PCR. Results: In Pls-expressing strains (pPLS4), adhesion to immobilized Fg and Fn was reduced by ~ 80% and ~ 75%, respectively. Invasion of 293 cells and EA.hy 926 cells was reduced by up to 85% compared to WT strains. Surprisingly, Pls expression upregulated fnbA and spa transcription, but 121 downregulated clfA and hla transcription. Competition experiments using purified Pls protein (25 µg/mL) did not affect invasiveness, as opposed to purified FnBPA (25 µg/mL; reduction to ~ 10% of WT). Invasiveness of strains 6850 (pPLS5; no LPDTG sortase motif) and 6850 (pPLS6; no SD repeat region) was only moderately reduced (to ~ 80% and ~ 85% of WT, respectively). Conclusions: Expression of Pls appears to reduce adherence and invasiveness independently of an MRSA/SCCmec background. Cell wall anchoring of Pls appears to be required for reduced invasiveness, which occurs despite upregulation of fnbA transcription. Thus, Pls may modulate invasion by steric hindrance, rather than by competitive binding or altered adhesin expression. ___________________________________________________ abrogated suggesting a profound impact of LTA on physicochemical properties of bacterial surfaces. ___________________________________________________ MPP63 A Staphylococcus aureus mutant with strongly reduced lipoteichoic acid (LTA) content: LTA governs bacterial surface properties and autolysin activity I. Fedtke1, D. Mader1, G. Nicholson2, K. Henseler1, F. Goetz3 U. Zaehringer4, A. Peschel1 1 Eberhard-Karl-University , Medical Microbiology and Hygiene Tuebingen, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karl-University , Organic Chemistry, Tuebingen Germany 3 Eberhard-Karl-University , Microbial Genetics, Tuebingen Germany 4 Research Center Borstel-Center for Medicine and Biosciences Immunochemistry and Biochemical Microbiology, Borstel Germany The epidermal cell differentiation inhibitor B (EDIN-B) of Staphylococcus aureus belongs to a family of exotoxins that ADP-ribosylate and thereby inactivate Rho GTPases. The gene coding for EDIN-B (edinB) is located on the etd-pathogenicity island which consists of 7 ORFs including the coding sequence for the exfoliative toxin D (etd) and a putative endopeptidase (orf2). We found that patients suffering from blood stream infections due to edinB-positive S. aureus exhibited anti-EDINB antibodies. Thus, edinB is expressed in vivo and might play an important role in S. aureus infections. Therefore we investigated the prevalence and organisation of the etdpathogenicity island in clonal independent S. aureus blood culture isolates. Eight of the 121 (6,6 %) clinical isolates were tested positive for the etd-pathogenicity island. By sequence analysis of the etd-pathogenicity island in these and number of additional edinB-positive S. aureus strains three genotypes according to the presence or absence of specific genes as compared to S. aureus TY114 can be differentiated, with genotype I being the most prevalent.The regulatory principles of edinB expression on the transcriptional and translational level were assessed in S. aureus RN6390, Newman and their respective agr and sarA deletion mutants. The influence of these regulator elements on edinB expression was analysed in exponential and in stationary growth phase by semi-quatitative transcription analysis, demonstrating that sarA is an essential positive regulator of edinB expression, while no direct effects of agr on edinB transcription were detected. In apparent contrast to the results of transcription analysis, EDIN-B amounts in supernatants of RN6390agr were higher than in the wild type. However, this discrepancy was abolished by the addition of a2macroglobulin to the growth medium, indicating that agr indirectly, via its positive effect on exoprotease expression, has as a negative impact on EDIN-B protein levels. These findings underline the tight interplay of regulatory components and their influence on potential pathogenicity factors. Future studies will concentrate on the functional analysis of exoproteins encoded on the etd-pathogenicity island. ___________________________________________________ Staphylococcus aureus, a leading cause of community- and hospital-acquired infection, produces two subclasses of teichoic acids (TA). These are polyanionic molecules found in the cell envelope of Gram-positive bacteria only. While wall TA (WTA) is covalently linked to peptidoglycan and dispensable in S. aureus, lipo-TA (LTA) is anchored via a glycolipid in the outer leaflet of the cytoplasmic membrane and was recently identified as essential. LTA and WTA seem to contribute to the virulence potential of this major pathogen, but many studies are based on mutants with structural alterations in both, LTA and WTA, and do not allow to define LTA-specific effects. Deletions of the gene responsible for the biosynthesis of the glycolipid used as LTA anchoring structure resulted in the lack of glycolipids and LTA is anchored via diacylglycerol. Interestingly, in S. aureus SA113 the LTA content was reduced to 13% (both in culture supernatants and cell-associated) and although LTA is essential the residual LTA allowed the mutant to grow normally indicating that this amount is sufficient at least under laboratory conditions. The same mutation, however, led in S. aureus RN4220 supernatants to two to threefold increased LTA amounts. Characterization of these mutants offered for the first time the opportunity to discriminate effects due to reduced LTA content or lack of glygolipids. Our data reveal that LTA may be less important in protein attachment than previously thought while LTA controls autolysin activity and has a profound impact on the viability in late stationary phase. Moreover the ability of the LTA mutants to form biofilms on plastic was completely MPP64 The etd-pathogenicity island in Staphylococcus aureus: Organisation and regulation G. Franke1, H. Rohde1, A. Böckenholt1, C. Wolz2, M. Sugai3 M. Äpfelbacher1 1 University Hospital of Hamburg-Eppendorf, Microbiology Virologie und Hygiene, Hamburg, Germany 2 Eberhard-Karl-University , Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany 3 Hiroshima University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Department of Bacteriology, Hiroshima, Japan 122 MPP65 Characterization of virulence gene expression in different Staphylococcus aureus mastitis isolates C. Wolf1, I. Burghardt1, C. von Eiff2, S. Holtfreter3, B. Bröker3 P. Rainard4, W. Petzl5, M. Hecker1, S. Engelmann1 1 Institut für Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 Institute for Medical Microbiology, University Hospital Muenster, Germany 3 Institute for Immunology and Transfusionmedicine, Greifswald Germany 4 Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Laboratoire de Pathologie Infectieuse et Immunologie, Nouzilly, France 5 Klinik für Wiederkäuer mit Ambulanz und Bestandsbetreuung der LMU Munich, Oberschleissheim, Germany Staphylococcus aureus is a Gram-positive pathogen and regarded as an important pathogenic bacterium of bovine and human mastitis which is characterized by inflammation of mammary glands. This bacterium is noted for its diversity in the equipment with virulence factors which are supposed to contribute to the pathogenesis. Extracellular as well as surface associated proteins represent a reservoir of virulence factors. Thus, the comprehensive analysis of these proteins of S. aureus may reveal whether there are virulence factors that might be specific for mastitis isolates. Moreover, proteins involved in the particular interaction of S. aureus with the respective host (human or cattle) are of great interest. In the present study, 23 S. aureus isolates of either human (7 isolates) or bovine (16 isolates) origin were analyzed. For genetic and epidemiological studies, we utilized the well established Multi-Locus-Sequence-Typing (MLST) technique. Moreover, the agr type and the presence of some virulence genes (e.g. superantigens, eta, etd) were determined by using Multiplex PCR. The proteomics approach is a useful tool for analyses of virulence gene expression in different isolates. The comparison of the extracellular protein patterns revealed a high heterogeneity between human and bovine strains as well as within strains from the same origin. Altogether 9 extracellular proteins were found in at least 80 % of the bovine isolates e.g. autolysin (Atl), alpha-hemolysin precursor (Hla), aureolysin (Aur), SspA and SspB. 17 extracellular proteins could be detected in less than 20 % of the bovine isolates, including Leukotoxin E subunit (LukE), three staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEC2, SEC-bov and SEL) and the toxic shock syndrome toxin TSST-1. ___________________________________________________ MPP66 Investigation of the structure and transfer of the Yersinia high-pathogenicity island in Klebsiella pneumoniae O. Benedek1,2, S. Schubert1 1 Max-von-Pettenkofer-Institute, Ludwig-MaximiliansUniversity, Munich, Bacteriology, Munich, Germany 2 University of Pécs, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Pécs, Hungary The structure and function of the Yersinia-High Pathogenicity Island (HPI) is well-characterised in human pathogenic Yersiniae and in extraintestinal E. coli. In spite of the fact that the island is widely distributed in further members of the family Enterobacteriaceae, its genetic organisation and transfer mechanisms have not yet been studied in details. A recent discovery of a unique type HPI in E. coli ECOR31 resembling integrative-conjugative elements (ICEEc1) indicates the possible role of conjugative transfer in dissemination. From a collection of HPI-positive enteric bacteria isolated from extra-intestinal infections we identified five distinct K. pneumoniae strains bearing an unusually structured, ICE-like HPI. Although these Klebsiella-HPIs share common features, they are not identical since they suffered different truncations and deletions. Furthermore, our sequencing data reveal that their most downstream region is not only completely different from the one of ICEEc1, but there is an individual variation among the distinct K. pneumoniae strains. Moreover, we were able to detect an episomal interspecies transfer of the ICE-like Klebsiella-HPIs to E. coli and Citrobacter sp. utilizing Klebsiella wild type plasmids. These plasmid-borne ICE-like HPIs, however, appear to be rather unstable in its new hosts. ___________________________________________________ MPP67 ClpV, a novel Hsp100 member of pathogenic proteobacteria G. Boenemann1, A. Mogk1 1 University of Heidelberg, ZMBH, Molecular Biology Heidelberg, Germany AAA+ proteins are ATPases that are associated with diverse cellular activities. These ring-forming ATPases are able to transform chemical energy into biological activity. One of their subfamilies are Hsp100/Clp heat shock proteins, which are key players in the protein quality control network of cells and function in the degradation and refolding of misfolded or aggregated proteins. Recently, a new class of Hsp100/Clp proteins was identified and termed as ClpV proteins as they are present in many pathogenic bacteria (V for virulent), but are absent in their non-pathogenic relatives. Although these proteins show a similar domain organization than ClpB proteins, they lack disaggregation activity and cluster in a separate phylogenetic tree with remarkable distance to ClpB. Strikingly, clpV is organized in a conserved gene cluster in bacteria that live in intimate contact with eukaryotic cells. The genes of this cluster are hardly characterised, but seem to encode a potential secretion system. Diverse studies within the last few years could show that mutational inactivation of different genes of this cluster affect host selectivity, cell invasion and cytotoxicity. Particularly, the analysis of corresponding genes in Vibrio cholerae, termed as the virulence associated secretion (vas) genes showed their importance in virulence towards the amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum and mammalian macrophages. This new type 6 secretion system involves extracellular translocation of proteins that lack N-terminal hydrophobic leader sequences and Hcp and VgrG were determined as substrates. In our own studies we show that clpV in Vibrio cholerae is essential for Hcp secretion. Currently we are analyzing the role of clpV in more detail, beside identifying its interaction partners to better understand the molecular mechanism of this new secretion system. ___________________________________________________ 123 MPP68 Effects of D-Serine on growth of Staphylococci under minimal medium T. Sakinc1, S. Friedrich1, N. Michalski1, B. Kleine1 F. Szabados1, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany D-Serine catabolism is biologically important because D-serine is available in some environments as a readily utilizable nutrient source, but it can also have inhibitory effects on growth. Despite the fact that D-serine is toxic to many living organisms, it is one of the most prevalent amino acids excreted in mammalian urine at reported levels of 3 to 115 µg/ml, and it can be found in mammalian blood as well. We are interested in the mechanisms for uptake of D-serin in staphylococci. For that, we generate a defined minimal medium without yeast extract for growing staphylococci. Therefore we used the protocol from Pattee et al.,1975 as basic and stepwise reduce the concentration or left components out. We could reduce known medium to ten amino acids and included only 2 mg/ml glucose and a defined salt solution, minerals and vitamins. Growth assays were done with 10 strains each of S. saprophyticus, S. aureus and S. epidermidis in defined minimal medium with or without D-serine. In addition, we also tested the growth conditions in PY-media. Our experiments suggest that only S. saprophyticus could show growth in both media. For S. epidermidis and S. aureus D-serine is an inhibitory factor or even toxic. ___________________________________________________ MPP69 Characterisation of the S. saprophyticus surface associated lipase: Biochemical properties and catalytic triad B. Kleine1, S. Friedrich1, F. Szabados1, S. Gatermann1 T. Sakinc1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Department of Medical Microbiology, Bochum, Germany S. saprophyticus, an important cause of urinary tract infection especially in young women, expresses the surface-associated lipase Ssp. We recently cloned Ssp and described its activity depending on pH and concentration of calcium. Here we finished our characterisation regarding to substrate preference, dependence on temperature as well as its stability in front of different pH and temperature. In a spectrophotometrical assay with p-nitrophenyl esters Ssp prefers short?chain substrates in homology to other staphylococcal lipases. The temperature optimum is around 30°C with a long stability at this temperature but even after 5 min. at 100°C we could recover about 80% activity. Ssp is stable at physiological pH-values in the urine up to 9 but loses its activity fast at pH-values above 10. First in vivo experiments regarding the virulence of Ssp reveal a significant difference between the wild-type strain 7108 and the ssp knock-out mutant. To determine if the lipolytic activity of Ssp or just the high amount of proteins responsible for this we used PCR-based site-directed mutagenesis. We replace the serine482 in the putative catalytic triad Ser-His-Asp of Ssp with cysteine, Asp 673 with serine and His712 with proline. With these experiments we can validate the position of the catalytic site with analysing its activity and probably the role of the lipolytic activity of Ssp in the infection process. ___________________________________________________ MPP70 Virulence-associated genes of the flagellar regulon of L. pneumophila T. Schulz1, S. Jacobi1, C. Albert-Weissenberger1, K. Heuner1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular, Infection Biology, Germany Legionella pneumophila is the causative agent of Legionnaires´ disease, an atypical pneumonia. After inhalation of infectious aerosol L. pneumophila is able to replicate within alveolar macrophages of the human lung. L. pneumophila is commonly found in aquatic habitats and replicates inside of protozoa. The expression of virulence factors is genetically linked to the expression of the flagellum (motility) in L. pneumophila. We showed that the flagellin (FlaA) and the alternative sigma factor FliA are involved in the invasion and replication of Legionella in host cells. We identified most of the yet known regulators and genes of the flagellar regulon. FliA is also involved in the expression of virulence traits of L. pneumophila. In preliminary studies we identified and analysed genes of the FliA regulon. In addition, we started to analyse the expression of fliA. Unlike the wild type strain, the flaA mutant of L. pneumophila is able to proliferate in bone-marrow derived mouse macrophages. It seems as if FlaA is recognized by the cytosolic Naip5 receptor of the macrophages. We now try to identify the amino acids of FlaA involved in this process. ___________________________________________________ MPP71 Contribution of the lipase Ssp and the SdrI of Staphylococcus saprophyticus to virulence in experimental urinary tract infections of mice S. Gatermann1, K. Kline2, M. Ingersoll2, S. J. Hultgren2 T. Sakinc1 1 University of Bochum, Med. Microbiology, Bochum, Germany 2 Washington University School of Medicine, Molecular Microbiology, St. Louis, USA Staphylococcus saprophyticus causes urinary tract infections especially in young women without predisposing medical conditions. Previously we have described that its urease contributes to virulence in experimental infections of rats. In addition, S. saprophyticus expresses a number of surface proteins such as a surface-associated lipase (Ssp) and an SDrepeat protein (SdrI) that binds collagen. In this work we used specific isogenic mutants deficient in expression of the lipase or the SdrI in experimental infections of mice to show that both surface-associated proteins are involved in the pathogenesis of urinary tract infections caused by S. saprophyticus. Ten mice were infected in each group and cfu of S. saprophyticus were determined at 2 and 7 days post infection. At 2 days the ssp and sdrI mutants showed significantly fewer bacteria in bladders and kidneys than the wild-type strain. After 7 days only the colony counts in the kidneys differed 124 significantly. In addition, IL-1 and IL-12, markers for macrophage activation, were significantly reduced in kidneys infected with the mutants, indicating that both antigens contribute to macrophage activation. The ssp mutant did not show reduced recruitment of macrophages into kidneys whereas macrophages were less prevalent in kidneys infected with the sdrI mutant. Therefore SdrI might be involved in macrophage recruitment and activation whereas Ssp might be involved in activation only. Our data indicate that both the lipase (Ssp) and the collagenbinding SdrI of S. saprophyticus contribute to pathogenesis of experimental urinary tract infections. Our data also provide the first experimental evidence that a lipase plays a role in infection and that this enzyme may also contribute to pathogenesis of urinary tract infections. ___________________________________________________ MPP72 Lipopolysaccharide shed by Legionella pneumophila arrest phagolysosomal maturation in host cells E. M. Seeger1, M. Thuma1, E. Jacobs1, J. Helbig1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Medical Faculty, Institute Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Dresden, Germany Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of Legionnaires’ diseases, multiplies in amoeba and its equipment for bypassing the lysosomal pathway is also very strong in monocytic host cells. L. pneumophila gains ability to arrest phagolysosome fusion when cultured in broth to transmissive (infective) growth phase. Several gene loci of L. pneumophila were confirmed to be involved in host cell modulation, but there exist no certain evidences for LPS components. To elucidate the role of LPS in this mechanism, we investigate its influence inside the natural host cell Acanthamoebae castellanii, but also inside U937 cells, human monocytes, and A/J mouse macrophages. For this, we have cultured L. pneumophila strain Corby in broth to replicative (not infective) or transmissive growth phase. Shed LPS enriched outer membrane vesicles (OMV) and molecular LPS, respectively, were separated by size filtration and coated on latex beads carrying the LPS-specific monoclonal antibody MAb 3/1. After staining of host cell lysosomes by FluoresceinDextran, these beads were added for phagocytosis. Built lysosomal or non-lysosomal phagosomes were counted. As proved in an other study with A/J mouse macrophages using purified OMV, which contain beside LPS also proteins involved in pathogenicity, in our study all other host cells used were evaded significantly the lysosomal degradation up to five hours. Furthermore, we could substantiate for the first time that arresting the phagolysosomal maturation can be induced by LPS shed in molecular form during the transmissive growth phase characterized by expression of virulence traits. Most interestingly, LPS shed during the replicative growth phase has the same impact. Therefore, it can be concluded, that intraphagosomal shed LPS contributes to modulation of host cells during the early intracellular life of legionellae. ___________________________________________________ MPP73 Identification of Staphylococcus aureus ser/thr kinase substrates by phosphoproteome analysis S. Donat1, S. Fuchs2, S. Engelmann2, S. Rakette3, T. Stehle3 K. Ohlsen1 1 University of Wuezburg, Infection Biology, Wuerzburg Germany 2 University of Greifswald, Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 3 Eberhard-Karl-University , Structure Biology, Tuebingen Germany Signal transduction pathways are essential for the regulation of gene expression in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Signal transduction in prokaryotes was considered to occur primarily by histidine protein kinases that activate transcription by the phosphorylation of cognate response regulators (two component system). In contrast, signal transduction in eukaryotes occurs via phosphorylation on serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues. Until recently, it has been believed that this type of phosphorylation is restricted to eukaryotes. However, whole genome sequencing revealed that kinases using this type of phosphorylation are more widespread than previously thought. Almost all prokaryotes also encode so called ESTPKs (eukaryotic-type ser/thr protein kinases). Especially in the genome of bacteria with complex live cycles like Mycobacterium, Streptomyces, Myxococcus and Cyanobacterium several putative ESTPKs have been identified. Compared to their eukaryotic counterparts, the signal to which ESTPKs respond, the mechanism of signal transduction, and their substrates remain poorly understood. Staphylococcus aureus also encodes an ESTPK that shows homology to PknB of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The aim of our work is to characterize this ESTPK and to find in vivo substrates of the PknB kinase. Therefore we constructed a deletion mutant of pknB in S. aureus strain 8325. We performed a phosphoproteome approach, in which we compared via 2DGE the set of phosphorylated proteins of the wild type with that of the isogenic mutant. Here we found around six proteins, which are less or no more phosphorylated in the ?pknB mutant, for example trigger factor, translation elongation factor, and proteins involved in the central metabolic pathways. Further, we investigated the phosphorylation ability of PknB. Therefore, we constructed a plasmid for the overexpression of the catalytic domain in E. coli. The purified protein is a functional protein kinase and was able to phosphorylate a model substrate, MBP. The kinase activity was also tested in an autophosphorylation assay. The phosphorylation depends in both cases on divalent cations. PknB1-274 showes a clear preference for Mn2+ versus Mg2+ ions. ___________________________________________________ MPP74 Discovery of a generalized O-linked glycosylation pathway in Neisseria gonorrhoeae W. Egge-Jacobsen1, S. Vik1, F.E. Aas1, J. H. Anonsen1 M. Koomey1 1 University of Oslo, Kristine Bonnevies House, Department of Molecular Biosciences, Mass Spectrometry & Proteomics, Oslo Norway 125 Type IV pili of Neisseria gonorrhoeae (Ng), filamentous surface protein structures critical to the colonization of their human host, are known to undergo differential posttranslational modifications. By top down and bottom up mass spectrometry we could show that PilE is modified with phosphoethanolamine (PE) and phosphocholine (PC) at serine 68 (S68) and 156 (S156), respectively. Furthermore PilE is glycosylated with an disaccharide composed of an acetylated hexose residue linked to a proximal 2,4-diacetamido-2,4,6-trideoxyhexose sugar (AcetylHexDATDH) at S63. By immunoblotting of whole cell extracts from Ng with rabbit antibodies raised against wild-type glycosylated PilE we discovered that many proteins in addition to PilE are carrying the exact same glyco moiety, suggesting a general O-linked glycosylation parthway in Ng. 2D gel electrophoresis of Ng membrane fractions in combination with immunoblotting allowed us to identify 8 further glycoproteins by mass fingerprinting. Based on relatedness to known proteins, they are homologs of proteins known to have a potential role in redox potential and oxidative stress respond, and should be localized to the cytoplasmic membrane. All 8 proteins have a four AA long sequence in common and for three of those proteins the AspN or trypsin derived peptides carrying the glyco modification have already been identified, by monitoring the specific oxonium ion signal of 433 m/z formed by in-source fragmentation and CID. However, the exact position of the modification could only be determined by performing ETD (Electron Transfer Dissociation), identifying serine residues within or close to the four AA long sequon as Oglycan attachment site. Therefore in addition to the two already described generalized protein glycosylation systems (which like eukaryotic systems target a broad array of substrates) in Campylobacter jejuni (Nlinked system which targets at least 21 proteins in the periplasm) and in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (O-mannosylation system for exported proteins) we here describe a third system in Ng. ___________________________________________________ MPV01 Nutritional factors and structural components determining Streptococcus pyogenes biofilm formation and development C. Lembke1, A. Podbielski1, B. Kreikemeyer1 1 University of Rostock, Institute for Medical Microbiology Rostock, Germany Streptococcus pyogenes (group A Streptococcus, GAS) persistently colonizes the throat or skin of its human hosts. Currently, this behavior is explained by the bacterial capability to internalize into epithelial cells and to stay there protected from various human defense mechanisms. We have recently shown that GAS can form monospecies biofilms. Biofilms shield their inhabitants from forces of the human defense system and/or antibiotic therapies. This trait could be an alternative reason for the long term persistence of GAS. Little is known about structure and components of GAS biofilms. Here we show that GAS biofilm formation is strictly a strain-specific capacity and does not correlate with GAS serotypes. Scanning electron (SE) and confocal laser scan microscopy (CLSM) studies revealed variations in structure and number of cell layers of various GAS strains. Thus, we examined components of the extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) of the GAS biofilms by applying sets of chromatographical / spectrometrical techniques. First results identified rhamnose and ribose polysaccharides as EPS components. Additionally, we added specific nutrient components, enzymes and antimicrobial substances to different GAS biofilm developmental stages to investigate effects on the biofilm structure. We could demonstrate destruct effects of selected carbohydrates, artifical saliva, or human serum supplements of the growth media. DNase treatment demonstrated that extracellular DNA is essential for initial biofilm establishment. GAS biofilm cells proofed to be less sensitive than planctonic cells when exposed to chloramphenicol, kanamycin or tetracycline. Finally, we employed defined GAS mutants to monitor gene effects on biofilm forming capacity. By using dpp and emm gene mutants we revealed that streptococcal dipeptide permease is necessary for initial biofilm development, whereas the M protein does not contribute to early developmental stages. Moreover, biofilm formation is subject to antagonistic regulation processes when studying corresponding Mga and RofA global regulator mutants. In summary, our study will uncover the role of GAS biofilm formation for bacterial persistence in human hosts and may open up new avenues for therapeutical approaches to eliminate persistent GAS. ___________________________________________________ MPV02 PavB is a novel multifunctional adhesin of Streptococcus pneumoniae contributing to colonization M. Rothe1, D. Somplatzki1, I. Jensch1,2, S. Ebert3 S. Bergmann2,1, R. Nau3, S. Hammerschmidt2,1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Research Center for Infectious Diseases, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer Insitut, Munich Germany 3 University of Goettingen, Department of Neurology Goettingen, Germany The genomic analysis of Streptococcus pneumoniae identified a putative surface-exposed multidomain protein. This protein (SP0082 in TIGR4 and SPR0075 in S.p. R6) contains N?terminally a leader peptide and C-terminally a LPXTG-motif, which anchors the protein in a sortase-dependent manner to the cell wall. The major part of the protein is composed of conserved repetitive sequences, each of approximately 150 amino acids, which have been suggested to interact with immobilized fibronectin. The repeats were named streptococcal surface repeats (SSURE) and the protein is termed pneumococcal adherence and virulence protein B (PavB). Our molecular analysis of 23 genes encoding PavB in different pneumococcal serotypes indicated that the molecular mass of PavB varies among pneumococcal strains. Strikingly, the identified numbers of SSURE differ from the annotated numbers and are responsible for the differences in the molecular mass of PavB. The repeat domain has no recognizable homology with any other known protein. Binding experiments with His6?tagged 126 SSURE peptides (2 or 5 SSURE) indicated a specific interaction of these peptides with fibronectin, plasminogen, and thrombospondin-1. Moreover, mice infection experiments indicated that PavB contributes to pneumococcal colonization. In an experimental meningitis model no differences were observed for the wild?type and the pavB?deficient mutant. In contrast, in a mouse sepsis and pneumonia model the pavB?deficient mutant was significantly less virulent compared to the isogenic wild-type. Moreover, the pavB-deficient mutant showed a delay in transmigration to the lung as shown by determination of bacterial vegetation and imaging the dissemination by use of the IVIS Imaging System 100 (Xenogen). In conclusion, PavB is a multifunctional pneumococcal adhesin which is involved in the first stage of infections, namely, colonization of the airways. ___________________________________________________ MPV03 Nasal colonization, the major source of Staphylococcus aureus infections, is a multifactorial process involving surface protein and wall teichoic acid-mediated interactions T. Kohler1, E. Kulauzovic1, C. Weidenmaier1, A. Peschel1 1 University Hospital Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany Most of the severe bacterial infections originate from the endogenous microflora of human body surfaces. However, the molecular basis of colonization, e.g. of the human nose by Staphylococcus aureus has remained incompletely understood. Several surface-exposed proteins and wall teichoic acid (WTA) polymers have previously been implicated in S. aureus attachment to nasal epithelial cells. Here we dissect the role of these molecules in colonization using S. aureus srtA (sortase A) and tagO mutants deficient in surface protein and WTA display, respectively. The two mutants were affected in interaction with different types of epithelial ligands (keratin vs. scavenger receptor-like molecules) and in binding to nasal cells. Moreover, both mutants exhibited nasal colonization defects in a cotton rat model, albeit at different colonization stages. These data indicate that S. aureus nasal colonization involves several types of receptor/ligand interaction, which may be useful targets for new preventive and therapeutic strategies. ___________________________________________________ MPV04 Characterization of the promoter activities of the regulatory sae operon in Staphylococcus aureus T. Geiger1, M. Mainiero1, C. Goerke1, C. Wolz1 1 University Hospital Tuebingen, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Tuebingen, Germany Staphylococcus aureus possess several regulatory systems which allow the organism to use physiological parameters as signals for specific gene expression. The two component system SaeR/S is considerably involved in the activation of major virulence factors. However, little is known about the signals leading to saeR/S activation. There are two additional open reading frames (ORF3 and ORF4) located upstream of saeR/S. Altogether four overlapping transcripts, from three different transcription starting points are expressed, indicating three putative promoters (P1, P2 and P3). We aimed to characterize these three putative promoters using a -galactosidase reporter system. Putative promoter regions were cloned in front of a promoterless lacZ gene, located in an integration vector which integrates into the lipase gene of S. aureus. The promoter assay reveals that the first sae promoter (P1) upstream of ORF4 is the main sae promoter with the highest activity. No promoter activity could be detected for the putative sae promoter (P2) localized in front of ORF3. Results obtained by RACE and Northern hybridization using constructs in which the upstream region of saeR/S were partially deleted confirmed that the most abundant transcript starting in front of ORF4 is generated by mRNA processing. The putative sae promoter P3 upstream of saeR/S is a weak secondary promoter. Further investigations revealed a cis-enhancer element located upstream of P3 indicating an unknown activator binding site for the P3 promoter. Comparison of promoter activities between wild type and sae-mutants demonstrate that P1 is strongly auto-activated by sae, the P3 promoter is constitutively expressed independent of sae and the P3 promoter including the enhancer element is auto-repressed by sae. Interactions with other regulators show that the P1 promoter is inhibited by the alternative sigma factor B. Additionally, P1 is inhibited by low pH and high NaCl concentrations (1M) but activated by subinhibitory concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. In summary, we could show that there are only two active promoters in the sae operon. The main promoter P1 is strongly autoregulated and reactive to external signals such as H2O2, pH and NaCl. ___________________________________________________ MPV05 Molecular analysis of the thymidine-auxotrophic small colony variant phenotype of Staphylococcus aureus S. Besier1, A. Ludwig1, K. Ohlsen2, V. Brade1 T. A. Wichelhaus1 1 University Hospital of Frankfurt am Main, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Infection Control, Frankfurt am Main Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Wuerzburg, Germany Thymidine-auxotrophic small colony variants (SCVs) of Staphylococcus aureus can be frequently isolated from the chronically infected airways of patients suffering from cystic fibrosis. To date, little is known regarding the molecular basis underlying the formation of this special phenotype, but the auxotrophism for thymidine suggests a perturbed pyrimidine pathway with an impaired dTMP synthesis. The formation of dTMP from dUMP with concomitant conversion of 5, 10-methylenetetrahydrofolate to dihydrofolate is catalyzed by the thymidylate synthase. Sequence analysis of the thymidylate synthase-encoding thyA gene of six clinical thymidine-auxotrophic S. aureus SCVs revealed that all isolates had mutations within this gene. In five isolates the function of the thymidylate synthase was definitely impaired: three of them showed a truncation of the thyA coding sequence by nonsense or frame-shift mutations, in one further isolate the active site of the enzyme was affected by an internal 12-bp deletion, and another isolate had a 173 bp-deletion spanning the 5’-terminal region of thyA and the preceding DNA sequence. The sixth isolate showed 127 two amino acid substitutions within the thyA gene product. To confirm the importance of impaired thymidylate synthase synthesis or activity for the formation of the thymidineauxotrophic SCV phenotype, we constructed a thyA knock-out mutant of a wild-type S. aureus strain. This mutant showed all characteristics of clinical SCVs, such as slow growth, decreased pigment formation, reduced hemolytic activity, auxotrophism for thymidine, resistance to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazol, and reduced plasma coagulase activity. Complementation of the thyA knock-out mutant with intact thyA in trans nearly restored the normal phenotype. In conclusion, these data confirm at the molecular level that impaired thymidylate synthase function is causative for the formation of the thymidine-auxotrophic SCV phenotype in S. aureus. ___________________________________________________ MPV06 S. saprophyticus strain ATCC 15305 invades the urothelial cell line 5637 F. Szabados1, B. Kleine1, A. Anders1, M. Kaase1, T. Sakinc1 I. Schmitz2, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany 2 Ruhr-University Bergmannsheil, Institute for Pathology Bochum, Germany Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) and S. saprophyticus may cause acute and chronic urinary tract infections. Certain UPEC strains, for example UTI89, are known to invade cells from urothelial cell lines. This invasion is initiated in UPEC via pilus adhesion and is described as an important pathogenicity factor of acute and chronic infections. Within a cell, the bacteria are usually protected from anti-infective therapy and the bacteria can maintain the infection from there. S. saprophyticus shows strong adhesion to urothelial and Hep2 cells, we therefore investigated the ability of S. saprophyticus for invasion into the urothelial cell line 5637 using a FACS-based method to detect internalization. The bacteria were stained with FITC and were incubated for one hour with the cells, gentamicin and lysostaphin was added for one hour. The cells were washed and treated with trypsin to remove adhering bacteria and to detach the eukaryotic cells. For further discrimination, a gating strategy was used, because bacteria were smaller in size and FITC stained. We could show invasion by S. saprophyticus strain ATCC 15305 in this assay, compared to S. carnosus strain TM300 and S. epidermidis strain ATCC 12228 where no invasion was documented. S. saprophyticus ATCC 15305 was detected in a significant higher amount above the 3-times detection threshold of non-invasive controls of S. carnosus TM300 and S. epidermidis ATCC 122228. The internalization of S. saprophyticus was less compared with S. aureus Cowan I strain. These results were validated in a classical gentamicin protection assay, in histological stains and transmission electron micrographs. In these experiments, we found strong evidence for invasion of uropathogenic S. saprophyticus ATCC 15305 in a validated FACS invasion assay. To bear analogy to UPEC strains these results suggest a new mechanism for pathogenicity of coagulase-negative S. saprophyticus ATCC 15305 in urinary tract infections in addition to other suspected or proven pathogenicity factors. ___________________________________________________ MPV07 Development of antibody-based therapy targeting immunodominant antigens of Staphylococcus aureus K. Ohlsen1, U. Lorenz2, T. Schäfer1, B. Lorenz1, C. Erck3 J. Wehland3, A. Thiede2, J. Hacker1 1 University of Wuezburg, Infection Biology, Wuerzburg Germany 2 University of Wuezrburg, Surgery, Wuerzburg, Germany 3 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Cell Biology Brunswich, Germany The use of antibodies for the treatment of staphylococcal infections is currently under investigation in academics and industry. We developed a murine monoclonal antibody targeting the immunodominant antigen IsaA and applied the antibody in two animal infection models. The study revealed that application of an anti-IsaA MAB lowers the infection burden both in acatheter-related infection model and in a model of soft tissue infection.In vitro studies suggest an enhancement ofantibody-mediated phagocytosis of S. aureus by neutrophils in the presence of IsaA-binding antibodies. Moreover, the antibody may interfere with the function of IsaAthatshows homology to lytic transglycosylases which areinvolved in the completion of the nascent cell wall of S. aureus. Overall, the results strongly support the idea that implementation of antibodies against IsaA can serve as an alternative strategy to combat infections caused by S. aureus. ___________________________________________________ MPV08 Characterization of a murine Staphylococcus aureus pneumonia model J. Koehler1, K. Breitbach1, S. Vogelgesang2, K. Rogasch3 M. Hecker3, S. Engelmann3, I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich Loeffler Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany 2 University of Greifswald, Institute of Pathology, Greifswald Germany 3 University of Greifswald, Institute of Microbiology, Greifswald Germany Staphylococcus aureus is a major pathogen of hospital-acquired pneumonia. Additionally, there are reports that the prevalence of severe clinical courses of community-acquired S.aureus pneumonia, often due to multiresistant strains, is increasing. Currently, there is little knowledge on S.aureus virulence factors which are important in causing lower respiratory tract infection. Moreover, the host factors which are crucial in the defense of S.aureus lung infection are largely unknown. In this study, we developed a murine model of S.aureus pneumonia and compared different strains of mice. Intranasal infection of BALB/c mice with S.aureus Newman led to severe bronchopneumonia with a massive influx of neutrophils as demonstrated by lung histology and bronchoalveolar lavage. BALB/c mice were more susceptible compared to C57Bl/6 mice, resulting in a significantly higher mortality after infection. 128 Depletion of neutrophils prior to infection showed that these cells are essential for the early control of lung infection in both BALB/c and C57Bl/6 mice. Intranasal infection of BALB/c mice with a S.aureus Newman saeS mutant resulted in no mortality, indicating that the two-component system SaeRS which regulates the expression of a number of virulence factors is important in pulmonary infection. Moreover, the saeS mutant showed an impaired ability to persist in the lung of BALB/c mice after infection with a sublethal dose, when compared to the wildtype. In conclusion, we have established an experimental system which should enable us to further analyze host defense mechanisms as well as S.aureus virulence factors in pulmonary infection. ___________________________________________________ MPV09 Global transcriptomic and proteomic analysis of a Staphylococcus aureus clpC mutant: implications for physiology, metabolism and survival during late stationary phase I. Chatterjee1, C. F. Batzilla2, S. Schmitt3, S. Engelmann4 M. Hecker4, W. Ziebuhr2, K. T. Preissner3, G. A. Somerville5 M. Herrmann1 1 University of Saarland, Department of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Homburg/Saar, Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular Infectious Biology, Wuerzburg, Germany 3 University of Giessen, Institute for Biochemistry, Giessen Germany University of Greifswald, Institute for Microbiology and 4 Molecular Biology, Greifswald, Germany 5 University of Nebraska, Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA Introduction: Clp ATPases are molecular chaperones influencing cell physiology functions including an aconitasemediated profound effect on post-stationary growth, acetate catabolism and entry into death phase (Chatterjee et al., 2005, 2007). To get a comprehensive picture of the role of ClpC on physiology, metabolism and late-stationary phase survival in S. aureus, a clpC mutant strain was constructed in strain S. aureusDSM20231 and was used to study the global regulation during post-stationary phase. Methods: DNA microarray analysis was used to determine differential gene expression patterns of the WT and its clpC mutant during late stationary phases of growth. Cytoplasmic protein extracts were obtained from WT and clpC mutant, and were subjected to high resolution 2-D protein electrophoresis followed by MALDI-TOF MS. As the clpC mutant lacked TCA cycle activity, we performed intracellular redox assay to determine the redox status of both strains between 24-96 h. Results: DNA microarray analysis of the S. aureus clpC mutant and its isogenic WT denoted differentially expressed genes involved in different functions. Importantly, genes involved with physiology and metabolism (eg. qoxABCD, sdhAB, odhA), transcriptional regulation (eg. codY, gapR and glnR), ribosomal proteins and other genes (eg. srrA, rsbU) were all up-regulated in late-stationary phase surviving clpC mutant. Interestingly, proteins induced in the clpC mutant or in the WT also indicated towards the modifications of global staphylococcal physiology involving energy metabolism and stress regulation. Increased protein levels in the clpC mutant were IlvA (member of isobranched chain fatty acids biosynthesis family), AhpCF, ArcA, SA1272 (alanine biosynthesis), and LacD. In WT, among others OdhB and GudB were up-regulated. As our clpC mutant was seen to lack TCA cycle activity, we wanted to see if the lack of ClpC could also alter the redox status during post-stationary phase of growth. Accordingly, redox assay was performed and as anticipated, the intracellular concentration of NADH and NAD+ were markedly reduced in the S. aureus clpC mutant. Conclusion: The results of this ongoing study further confirm that the ClpC ATPase is involved in a broad spectrum of staphylococcal energy metabolism and stress regulation functions and that ClpC may be a key element for staphylococcal physiology, particularly during prolonged times of bacterial life such as encountered in sessile and/or persistent staphylococcal populations. ___________________________________________________ MPV10 Essential roles of environmental iron and iron-mediated regulation in Helicobacter pylori resistance against oxidative stress, metronidazole and gastric acid S. Bereswill1, M. Kist2 1 Charité-Universitysmedicine Berlin, Microbiology and Hygiene, Berlin, Germany 2 University Hospital Freiburg, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg, Germany During persistent gastric infection and chronic inflammation Helicobacter pylori is continuously exposed to drastic changes in the environmental iron concentration and to toxic oxygen radicals produced by immune cells. Because radical formation is catalysed by iron and H. pylori controls the cellular iron concentration via repression of iron uptake by the Fur protein, we investigated roles of iron and Fur in resistance against oxidative stress, metronidazole and acid by growth of H. pylori wildtype (wt) strains and fur mutants in media supplemented with iron, urea and oxidative agents. Oxidative stress was generated with peroxide, paraquat and sodium-nitroprusside (SNP). The latter release superoxide anions and nitric-oxide (NO) upon resolution in growth media. The results indicated that after preloading with 0.5 mM iron, Fur was essential for resistance to superoxide, NO, peroxide and metronidazole, as indicated by significant growth reduction, as compared to the wt strain. In the H. pylori wt strain 26695 addition iron to the growth medium did strongly inhibit urease-mediated acidresistance. At pH5 the addition of 0.5 mM iron reduced the urea-dependent growth to about 50%. The iron-mediated reduction of urease-dependent acid-resistance was more pronounced in the corresponding fur mutant, which showed no growth in the presence of iron and urea at pH5. These findings confirm the important role of iron-mediated homeostasis in gastric adaptation of H. pylori and help to explain the complete colonization defect of H. pylori fur mutants in the Mongolian gerbil-based infection model. ___________________________________________________ 129 MPV11 The molecular mechanism of c-Src and Abl tyrosine kinase activation by the Helicobacter pylori type IV secretion system encoded in the cag pathogenicity island D. Zabler1, N. Tegtmeyer1, S. Brandt1, I. Tammer1, S. Gieseler1 W. König1, M. Rohde2, S. Backert1 1 Otto-von-Guericke-University, Medical Microbiology Magdeburg, Germany 2 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Microbial Pathogenesis, Brunswich, Germany The pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori-associated diseases depends on a specialized type IV secretion system in the cag (cytotoxin-associated genes) pathogenicity island which encodes a pilus structure for the injection of the CagA effector protein into target cells. Within the infected AGS gastric epithelial cells, CagA becomes phosphorylated on tyrosine residues and initiates actin cytoskeletal rearrangements and cell scattering. We have demonstrated recently that injected CagA can be phosphorylated in vivo and in vitro by Src and Abl tyrosine kinases both of which are crucial mediators of H. pylori-induced phenotypical outcome. However, the molecular mechanism by which H. pylori activates Src and Abl are unknown. Here, we show that H. pylori activates a integrin>focal adhesion kinase (FAK)>Src>Abl signaling pathway. Upon activation, FAK is autophosphorylated at tyrosine residue Y-397 in an integrindependent manner which then serves as a high-affinity binding site for the SH2 domain of Src resulting in an active FAK-Src signaling complex. Incubation of AGS gastric epithelial cells with wild-type H. pylori but not type IV secretion mutants led to the transient activation of FAK, Src and Abl, as indicated by the accumulation of phosphorylated FAK-PY-397, Src-PY-418 and Abl-PY-412, respectively. Furthermore, the subsequent activation of the three tyrosine kinases correlated with the timedependent occurence of phosphorylated CagA in infected cells, supporting the notion that integrin activation by H. pylori and subsequently the activation of FAK, Src and Abl rapidly results in tyrosine phosphorylation of injected CagA. These findings have important implications on the role of integrins in H. pyloriinduced infections. Taken together, our results suggest that H. pylori has evolved a mechanism to use at least three of several functionally redundant tyrosine kinases which play an important role in the pathogenesis of this bacterium. ___________________________________________________ MPV12 Helicobacter hepaticus HHGI1 is a pathogenicity island associated with colitis in IL-10-/- and RAG2-/- mice T. Sterzenbach1, Z. Ge2, J. Schulze1, B. Brenneke1, M. Whary2 B. Rickman2, A. Rogers2, Z. Shen2, N. Taylor2, C. Josenhans1 S. Sürbaum1 1 Hanover Medical University, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Hanover, Germany 2 Massachusetts Institute for Technology, Division of Comparative Medicine, Cambridge MA, USA Helicobacter hepaticus belongs to the enterohepatic group of Helicobacters which persistently colonize the intestinal tract of humans and various animals. H. hepaticus lives in the upper bowel and hepatobiliary tract of animals where it can lead to hepatitis and liver cancer. In several strains of immunocompromised mice an infection with H. hepaticus causes colitis, colon carcinoma, and chronic inflammation of the intestinal tract, which resembles inflammatory bowel disease in humans, and therefore is used as a model for the study of these diseases in its natural host. Little is known until now about the factors of H. hepaticus responsible for its colitogenic properties. The only pathogenicity factor which has been studied in detail is the cytoletal distending toxin CDT. The complete genome sequence of H. hepaticus revealed a putative pathogenicity island named HHGI1 coding for a type IV secretion system and several other virulence-associated genes. Type IV secretion systems play an important role for many bacterial species regarding their pathogenesis and host interaction. The HHGI1 island is missing in some natural isolates of H. hepaticus, and we could recently show that HHGI1-deficient strains lead to a weaker degree of hepatitis than HHGI1-containing strains in A/JCr mice. In our present study, we wanted to verify that the HHGI1 island is involved in the development of colitis in different models of immunocompromised mice. Results: A mutant lacking a major part of the HHGI1 island (HH_PAIdel1-mutant) and mutants in several genes encoding components of the predicted type IV secretion system were constructed by allelic exchange mutagenesis. The HH_PAIdel1mutant led to a significantly reduced degree of typhlocolitis and hyperplasia in IL-10-/- C57BL/129 mice, accompanied by reduced expression of IFN- and TNF- and lower levels of TH1-associated IgG2c antibodies. In a short term infection model in IL-10-/- BALB/c mice, it could be confirmed that caeca and colonic cells of HH_PAIdel1-infected mice secrete lower amounts of IFN- and IL-12p40 than mice infected with the wild type, accompanied by reduced levels of IgG2a antibodies. In RAG2-/- 129S6/Sv mice which do not possess functional Tand B-cells, therefore lacking an adaptive immune system, the HH_PAIdel1 mutant also induced a reduced degree of colitis in the caecum. Our data confirm that the HHGI1 island is an important factor in pathogenicity and host immune modulation. ___________________________________________________ MPV13 Investigation of in vivo gene regulation of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 D. S. Schmidt1, S. Nicolaisen2, A. Bleich3, A. Smoczek3 H. Blöcker4, I. Deyneko4, M. Hartmann5, F. Gunzer6 1 Technical University of Dresden, Faculty of Medicine Carl Gustav Carus, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden, Germany 2 Hanover Medical School, Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 3 Hanover Medical School, Institute for Laboratory Animal Science and Central Animal Facility, Hanover, Germany 4 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Department of Genome Analysis, Brunswich, Germany 5 Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover Medical School, Hanover, Germany 6 Technical University of Dresden, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Faculty of Medicine Carl-GustavCarus, Dresden, Germany 130 Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 (EcN) is a fecal isolate which is used as a probiotic and comprises a therapeutic alternative for the treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases. Clinical trials comparing EcN to standard medication used for therapy of ulcerative colitis revealed an equal effectiveness of the probiotic in maintaining remission, associated with less or no side-effects. EcN is a good colonizer in the gut of humans and animals. Specific characteristics of the strain are the production of microcins or a semirough LPS, for example. However, the molecular mechanisms which are responsible for the beneficial behaviour of EcN during passage and colonization are not very well understood. Investigation of in vivo gene regulation in EcN will provide important information for a better understanding of the strains probiotic traits. Therefore, we constructed a promoter trap library. Mechanically sheared fragments of EcN genomic DNA were randomly cloned in front of a promoterless gfp on a plasmid and transformed into EcN. Plasmids containing functional promoters would lead to GFP expression in these clones. To identify in vivo active promoters, the library was fed to Balb/c mice followed by FACS sorting of green fluorescent bacteria in the feces. Sequencing of the cloned promoter fragments and a BLAST search against the EcN genome as well as a computer based analysis of the promoter regions revealed genes with potential in vivo activity. Selected genes from a collection of in vivo regulated ones were chosen as candidates for further analysis. ___________________________________________________ MPV14 Regulation of virulence factor expression by DNA methylation in Yersinia enterocolitica S. Faelker1, J. Schilling1, M. A. Schmidt1, G. Heusipp1 1 University of Muenster, ZMBE, Institute of Infectiology Muenster, Germany In -proteobacteria, methylation of DNA at GATC sequences by the DNA adenine methyltransferase (Dam) regulates various physiological processes. In addition, differential methylation of DNA influences the binding of transcription factors, thereby affecting transcriptional regulation. DNA methylation by Dam interferes with the coordinated expression of virulence functions in an increasing number of pathogens. While analyzing the effect of Dam on virulence of the human pathogen Yersinia enterocolitica, we observed various altered phenotypes, including type III secretion of Yop effector proteins under nonpermissive conditions and increased invasion into eukaryotic cells. We could previously show that the effect of Dam on type III secretion is mediated posttranscriptionally via the degradation of the regulatory protein LcrG by the ClpP protease, but the molecular mechanism behind increased invasion remained unknown. As invasion and motility are coordinately regulated in Y. enterocolitica, we analyzed the motility of a Dam overproducing (DamOP) strain and found it to be highly motile. In DamOP strains, the operon encoding the master regulator of flagella biosynthesis, flhDC, is upregulated. We show that the increased invasion is not due to enhanced expression of known and putative Y. enterocolitica invasion and adhesion factors like Invasin, YadA, Ail, Myf fibrils, Pil or Flp pili. This indicates either that additional so far not identified invasion factors are upregulated following DamOP or that invasion factors are easier accessible to cellular receptors. Indeed, we show that DamOP results in an increased amount of rough lipopolysaccharide (LPS) molecules lacking O antigen side chains, implying that a reduced steric hindrance by LPS might contribute to the increased invasion of a Y. enterocolitica DamOP strain. Our data indicate that Dam targets regulatory processes modulating the composition and function of the bacterial surface. ___________________________________________________ MPV15 Salmonella typhimurium exploits inflammation to compete with the intestinal microbiota B. Stecher1, R. Robbiani1, A. Walker2, A. Westendorf3 M. Barthel1, M. Kremer4, A. J. Macpherson5, C. von Mehring6 W. - D. Hardt1 1 ETH Zurich, Institute of Microbiology, Zurich, Switzerland 2 Sanger Center, Wellcome Trust, Genome Campus, Cambridge United Kingdom 3 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Department of Mucosal Immunity, Brunswich, Germany 4 Ludwig-Maximilian-University of Munich, Pathology, Munich Germany 5 Mcmaster University, Hamilton, Canada 6 University of Zurich, Molecular Biology, Zurich, Switzerland Most mucosal surfaces of the mammalian body are colonized by microbial communities (microbiota). A high density of commensal microbiota inhabits the intestine and shields from infection (‘colonization resistance’). The virulence strategies allowing enteropathogenic bacteria to successfully compete with the microbiota and overcome colonization resistance are poorly understood. Here, we investigated manipulation of the intestinal microbiota by the enteropathogenic bacterium Salmonella Typhimurium in a mouse colitis model: We found that inflammatory host responses induced by S. Typhimurium changed microbiota composition and suppressed its growth. In contrast to wild type S. Typhimurium, an avirulent invGsseDmutant failing to trigger colitis was outcompeted by the microbiota. This competitive defect was reverted if inflammation was provided ‘in trans’ by mixed infection with wild type S. Typhimurium or in mice (IL10-/-, Villin-HA+CL4TCR) suffering from inflammatory bowel disease. Thus, inflammation is necessary and sufficient for overcoming colonization resistance. This reveals a new concept in infectious disease: In contrast to current thinking, inflammation is not always detrimental for the pathogen. Triggering the hosts immune defense can shift the balance between the protective microbiota and the pathogen in favour of the pathogen. ___________________________________________________ MPV16 Identification of intracellular signalling cascades mediating Salmonella invasion into epithelial cells B. Misselwitz1, S. Dilling1, R. Sacher2, B. Snijder2 L. Pelkmans2, W. - D. Hardt1 1 ETH Zurich, Microbiology, Zurich, Switzerland 2 ETH Zurich, Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, Zurich, Switzerland 131 Salmonella spp. are a major cause of food born diseases. Central to Salmonella pathogenicity is its ability to invade gut epithelial cells. To this end, Salmonella spp. inject virulence factors (so called effectors) into the cytoplasm of the host’s cells. The most important effectors responsible for Salmonella invasion are SopE, SopE2, SopB and SipA. These effectors can either directly or indirectly activate actin polymerization, causing an uptake of the bacteria by the host. Even though several intracellular targets of these effectors have been identified, the complexity of signaling mechanisms leading to Salmonella uptake has not been addressed. To investigate the invasion mechanism we have established a new microscopy based Salmonella invasion assay that enables us to perform high throughput experiments. Moreover, using Salmonella single effector mutants expressing only one of the important Salmonella effectors we can test invasion mediated by only one protein without interference of the others. We are currently testing a 50 kinase library and plan to proceed to testing a genome wide library. With our experiments we will identify cellular signaling cascades important for an efficient invasion of Salmonella. ___________________________________________________ MPV17 Functional characterisation of the non-fimbrial adhesin SiiE C. Wagner1, M. Hensel1 1 University Hospital Erlangen, Institute of Microbiology Erlangenm, Germany The complex pathogenesis of infections with Salmonella enterica is a result of different interactions between pathogen and host cells, where so-called pathogenicity islands (PAI) play a major role in the infectious processes. Recently it has been shown that Salmonella pathogenicity island 4 (SPI4) has an important, but so far unknown function in adhesion to, and invasion of polarised, microvilli-forming epithelial cells. SPI4 genes code for the components of a type I secretion system (T1SS), its substrate protein SiiE, which serves as a nonfimbrial adhesin to mediate the adhesion and two accessory proteins, SiiA and SiiB, whose function is not defined so far. SiiE is the largest protein of the proteome of Salmonella with a molecular weight of about 600 kDa. SiiE has a predicted domain structure, consisting of a N-terminal part which forms ß-sheets and coiled-coil domains, followed by 53 highly repetitive Igdomains with an insertion of about 60 residues between the last two Ig-domains and a C-terminal part without characteristic structural elements. To understand the binding process of SPI4dependent adhesion, it is important to characterise SiiE and to dissect the functions of the various SiiE domains more precisely. Proteins secreted by T1SS are commonly dependent on a Cterminal signal sequence. This led us to investigate the Cterminal part for the ability to mediate the secretion of SiiE. By means of truncations of the C-terminus of SiiE, it could be shown that the signal sequence for the recognition and secretion of SiiE by the T1SS is located maximal 9 residues apart from the C-terminus of SiiE and that the ultimate residues of the signal sequence were essential for the secretion, as the Cterminal truncations of SiiE proteins abolished the secretion. Furthermore it could be shown that the secretion was dependent on SPI4-encoded T1SS, as a siiF mutant was not able to secrete full-length SiiE. Besides bearing the signal sequence, another function of the C-terminal part has been suggested: the recognition and binding of a putative host cell receptor, which is currently under investigation. Regarding other domains of SiiE, the N-terminus is supposed to anchor the protein to the bacterial cell, and the numerous Ig-domains might be essential to elongate the adhesin to protrude above LPS-length and to ensure a certain distance. ___________________________________________________ MPV18 Serotype-dependent escape of Yersinia enterocolitica YopE from degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway M. Hentschke1, K. Truelzsch2, J. Heesemann2 M. Äpfelbacher1, K. Ruckdeschel1 1 University Hospital Eppendorf, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Hamburg, Germany 2 Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich, Germany Pathogenic Yersinia spp. engage a type III protein secretion system that translocates several Yersinia outer proteins (Yops) into the host cell to modify host immune responses. The degradation of injected bacterial virulence proteins through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is one strategy of the infected host cell to resist the bacterial attack. The cytotoxin YopE is a known target protein of this proteolytic system.We investigatedYopE protein species belonging to different enteropathogenic Y. enterocolitica serogroups towards ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. Our data indicate that YopE from the highly pathogenic Y. enterocolitica serotype O8 is subjected to proteasomal destabilization, whereas YopE from the serogroups O3 and O9 evades degradation. The accumulation of YopE from the serotypes O3 and O9is accompanied by an enhanced cytotoxic effect. Using Yersinia strains that specifically produce YopE from either Y. enterocolitica O8 or O9 we found that solely YopE from serogroup O8 is modified by polyubiquitination. We determined twoN-terminal lysinesin serogroup O8 YopE not present in serogroup O9 YopE that serve as polyubiquitin acceptor sites. Insertion of either lysine in serotype O9 YopE enabled its ubiquitination and destabilization. These results define a serotype-dependent difference in the stability and activity of the Yersinia effector protein YopE that could be important for Y. enterocolitica pathogenesis. ___________________________________________________ MPV19 Chlamydia trachomatis induced RANTES production through the activation of the NF-kB host signalling pathway K. Sommer1, O. Dittrich-Breiholz2, M. Kracht2, A. Klos1 1 HanoverMedical School (MHH), Medical Microbiology Hanover, Germany 2 HanoverMedical School (MHH), Department of Pharmacology, Hanover, Germany Chlamydia trachomatis is a highly successful pathogen that causes a wide variety of disease in humans including pelvic inflammatory disease, sterility, and blindness. Pathology associated with this obligate intracellular bacterium is due to inflammation-associated tissue damage and scaring from 132 repeated or chronic infection; however, the mechanism by which the inflammatory response is induced is poorly understood. Chlamydial infection produces intense inflammation, in part through induced chemokine synthesis. RANTES, a CC chemokine, is known to be activated and regulated by NF-kB, a critical modulator of immune function. We hypothesize that RANTES is induced through activation of the NF-kB host signalling pathway within chlamydia infected cells. In chlamydial infected HT1080 cells, NF-kB activation was characterized by translocation of NF-kB from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, increased DNA binding activity, and NF-kB regulated gene expression. NF-kB activation was dose and time dependent. UV inactivation of Chlamydia significantly reduced the level of NF-kB activation. Degradation of IkB protein was detected late in chlamydial infection, and overexpression of the dominant negative form of IkB-alpha significantly suppressed NF-kB activation and RANTES expression induced by chlamydia. RANTES protein and mRNA were detected late in the infection from cells infected with replicating chlamydia, but not with UV-inactivated bacteria. The induction of RANTES was not dependent on a secreted soluble factor of infected cells and therefore associated with an internal cellular signalling pathway. Our observations imply that NF-kB activation is a biological significant aspect of chlamydial pathogenesis. We conclude that an effector-protein produced by C. trachomatis at mid-developmental stages induces RANTES within infected HT1080 cells through activation of host signalling pathways related to NF-kB. The present study provides a basis for understanding molecular pathways of pathology and immune evasion associated with disease caused by C. trachomatis. ___________________________________________________ MPV20 Functional analysis of the Coxiella effector AnkG A. Lührmann1, C. R. Roy1 1 Yale University School of Medicine, Section of Microbial Pathogenesis, New Haven, USA Coxiella burnetii, the causative agent of Q fever, a worldwide zoonosis, is an obligate intracellular pathogen. After uptake into its host cell this pathogen resides in a phagolysosomal compartment. Coxiella modifies this organelle into a very large vacuole that permits bacterial replication. Although it is unknown how Coxiella actually creates its replicative niche, its clearly an acitve process requiring bacterial proteins synthesis, suggesting bacterial products may be directly involved. One mechanism by which Coxiella might be able to manipulate its host cell is by delivering bacterial effector proteins into the host cell using a chromosomally-encoded type IV secretion system. I was able to demonstrate, that a subset of Coxiella proteins, which contains muliple ankyrin repeat domains, are effectors of the type IV secretion system. One of these effector proteins, AnkG, shows a vesicular pattern with association to mitochondria when ectopically expressed. To determine the function of AnkG, host interacting proteins were isolated by affinity purification on a column having a purified AnkG protein attached covalently to Affi-Gel. Host proteins that bound specifically to the AnkG affinity column were identified by mass spectrometery. I was able to confirm interactions between AnkG and the host protein gC1qBP (glycoprotein complement component 1, q subcomponent binding protein) by coimmunoprecipitation as well as immunofluorescence. The function of gC1qBP, a protein that resides predominantly in the mitochondria matrix, is unknown. Currently, I am investigating how these interaction influences normal host cell function and more importantly, how Coxiella benefits from this binding. This analysis should provide unique insight into how Coxiella modulate the host cell to ensure survival and multiplication. ___________________________________________________ MPV21 Chlamydial Protease-like Activity Factor (CPAF): A Factor of chlamydial pathogenicity S. Paschen1, J. Vier1, J. Christian1, S. Ying1, G. Häcker1 1 Technical University Munich, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Munich, Germany Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular bacteria and important human pathogens. Chlamydia is known to induce massive changes in the infected host cell, including altered gene transcription, both inhibition of apoptosis and induction of nonapoptotic cell death and structural alterations culminating in the release of newly formed bacteria. The molecular basis of how Chlamydia achieves this is largely unknown. CPAF is a protease that translocates at later stages of the infection from the chlamydial inclusion into the cytosol. Although a few CPAF substrates are known, and although the presence of a free protease in a human cell’s cytosol can be expected to be of consequence, it is unclear what the contribution of CPAF to the cellular effects of chlamydial infection is. During infection, CPAF is processed by intramolecular cleavage, and this event is required for its activity, precluding the study of the protease outside chlamydial infection. We have recently devised an experimental system where CPAF can be activated through ‘induced proximity’, i. e. the experimental oligomerisation of a CPAF protein by pharmacological cross-linking of its fusion partner, gyrase B, in intact cells. We used this system to test for the physiological consequences of CPAF-activation in uninfected cells. The activation of CPAF caused the cleavage of the known CPAF substrates and allowed the identification of new cellular targets of the protease. CPAF-activation led to the death of the cell and induced massive morphological changes, possibly due to the cleavage of cytoskeletal components. Intriguingly, caspase-activity was also measured upon prolonged activity of CPAF, indicating the potential of CPAF to activate the apoptotic pathway. These studies show the capacity of CPAF to cause massive changes to the host cell and suggest that this protease is a good candidate for a major pathogenicity factor of Chlamydia that causes changes to the host cell towards the end of the bacterial cycle. ___________________________________________________ 133 MPV22 Infection with Anaplasma phagocytophilum inhibits IFNsignalling in human neutrophils U. Bussmeyer1, A. Sakar1, K. Broszat1, G. van Zandbergen1 C. Bogdan2, W. Solbach1, F. von Löwenich2, T. Laskay1 1 University of Luebeck, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Luebeck, Germany 2 University of Freiburg, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Freiburg, Germany Anaplasma phagocytophilum (Ap) is a tick-borne obligate intracellular bacterium that survives and multiplies inside polymorphic neutrophilic granulocytes (PMN). Previous findings demonstrated that the bacterium actively subverts antimicrobial effector mechanisms of PMN including the oxidative burst after priming with IFN- . The present study aimed to investigate whether an infection with Ap leads to a more general impairment of IFN- signaling in PMN that enables intracellular survival of the bacterium. The capability of Ap to interfere with IFN- -mediated activation of PMN was assessed by measuring MIG and IP-10 secretion. Neutrophils secreted substantial levels of both chemokines when stimulated with IFN- for 18h. Infection of PMN with Ap markedly decreased the secretion of MIG and IP-10 by PMN. To obtain first insights into the molecular events leading to the diminished secretion of IFN- -induced chemokines, the phosphorylation of STAT1 was investigated. Western blot analysis revealed that IFN- -induced STAT1 phosphorylation was diminished in Ap-infected PMN. In further experiments flow cytometry analyses showed a markedly decreased expression of the IFN- receptor alpha chain CD119 on the surface of Ap-infected PMN. Moreover, using quantitative RTPCR a strong upregulation of the negative regulator SOCS3 was observed in infected cells. Taken together our data show that infection with Anaplasma phagocytophilum results in a decreased CD119 surface expression, diminished tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT1 and augmented SOCS3 gene expression in infected cells and, consequently, results in compromised IFN- -responsiveness of infected PMN. Impaired IFN- signaling in infected cells is likely to contribute to intracellular survival of Ap in PMN. ___________________________________________________ MPV24 Identification of a new conjugation/ type IVA secretion system (Trb/Tra) of Legionella pneumophila K. Heuner1, C. Albert-Weissenberger1, E. Schunder1 M. Steinert2, G. Glöckner3 1 Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Wuerzburg Germany 2 Institute for Microbiology, Brunswich, Germany 3 Leibniz-Institute for Age Research, Jena, Germany In the genome sequence of Lp Corby a new conjugation/ T4ASS (trb/tra) was identified. This system is not present in the yet sequenced genomes of Lp but similar loci were identified by DNA hybridization in various non-pneumophila species of Legionella. It is known, that L. pneumophila is able to horizontally transfer chromosomal DNA, but no element or mechanism could be identified so far, responsible for this observation. L. pneumophila can conjugate RSF1010-related plasmids in an icm/dot-dependent manner and lvh also contributes to the ability to mobilize a plasmid. We will report about two similar versions of trb/tra present in the genome of L. pneumophila Corby, localized on two different genomic islands (Trb-1, 42,710 bp and Trb-2, 34,434 bp). Trb-1 and Trb-2 are integrated within the tRNAPro gene (lpc2778) and the tmRNA gene (lpc0164), respectively. Both islands exhibit an oriT region and both can be excised from the chromosome forming episomal circles. The genomic island Trb-1 can be transferred horizontally to another Lp strain by conjugation and integrates site-specific into the genome of transconjugants. This mechanism explains for the first time horizontal DNA-transfer in Legionella, which is not due to natural competence for DNA transformation. Thus, here we demonstrate a putative mechanism of horizontal transfer of large chromosomal DNA regions in Legionella. ___________________________________________________ MPV25 The cell-associated phospholipase PlaB of Legionella pneumophila is a major virulence factor E. Schunder1 1 University, Molekulare Infektionsbiologie, Wuerzburg Germany Legionella pneumophila is an aquatic environmental bacterium which replicates inside of protozoa. After inhalation of contaminated aerosol, Legionella is able to replicate in alveolar macrophages and can cause an atypical, severe pneumoniaLegionellosis. Phospholipases are known to contribute to bacterial pathogenicity, because they hydrolyze cell membranes, generate second messengers, lysophospholipids and destruct the lung surfactant. Recently, the PlaB phospholipase has been identified and characterized as the major cell-associated phospholipase A with additional lysophospholipase and hemolytic activity. Experiments in guinea infection model clearly verified that PlaB is a major virulence factor in vivo, which contributes to bacterial spreading during infection. Contrary to the yet known phospholipase activities of Legionella pneumophila, PlaB does not belong to the known enzyme classes and therefore may represent a new class of enzymes. ___________________________________________________ MPV26 Life within the cytosol - Molecular analysis of the intracellular life style of Burkholderia pseudomallei K. Eske1, K. Breitbach1, H. Schalimow1, I. Steinmetz1 1 University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute of Med. Microbiology, Greifswald, Germany The gram-negative environmental saprophyte Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, an infectious disease of humans and animals which is now known to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in certain areas of the tropics. Burkholderia pseudomallei is able to invade host cells, escapes from endocytic vesicles, multiplies intracellularily, and induces the formation of actin tails and membrane protrusions, leading to direct cell to cell spreading. Recently, we identified a 134 number of B.pseudomallei genes which are essential for this intracellular life cycle (Infect. Immun. 2006. 74:3576-3586). In this study, we extented the identification of B.pseudomallei genes responsible for the different steps of the intracellular life cycle by screening 2344 B.pseudomallei transposon mutants for reduced ability to form plaques on cell monolayers as a result of reduced intercellular spreading. 44 mutants showed impaired plaque formation but no growth defect in culture medium. Determination of the transposon insertion sites revealed the disruption of genes encoding for metabolic, structural, and hypothetical proteins. Mutants were further characterized with respect to intracellular invasion, survival and replication, intracellular motility, and in vivo virulence. In a mouse model of infection, up to now 10 mutants were shown to be highly attenuated, including a mutant with a defect in an immunophillin with peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity. In summary, we have identified a number of novel virulence genes which are important for the intracellular life style of B.pseudomallei. ___________________________________________________ MPV27 The Salmochelin siderophore receptor IroN contributes to invasion of urothelial cells by extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli in vitro F. Feldmann1 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich, Germany Extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) strains possess a diversity of specific virulence factors that enable them to cause infections outside the gastrointestinal tract. These infections range from asymptomatic urinary tract infections (UTIs) to life-threatening diseases, such as pyelonephritis or sepsis. The acquisition of iron (Fe3+) is a critical step in the pathogenesis of UTIs, as the concentration of free Fe3+ is extremely limited at the sites of infection in mammalian hosts. In order to acquire iron from the host organism, ExPEC strains have developed a variety of iron uptake mechanisms, such as the synthesis and transport of small iron chelators, called siderophores. Previous studies revealed that several siderophore systems are more prevalent in ExPEC than in commensal strains and play an important role in the pathogenesis of UTIs. The presence of different iron uptake systems in ExPEC strains prompted us to look for further functions of the siderophore systems in the pathogenicity of ExPEC strains. Furthermore, lately it has become evident that siderophore systems of ExPEC strains may contribute to other virulence traits, such as adherence and invasion. This is of particular interest, as it has recently been shown that ExPEC strains are able to form intracellular, biofilmlike structures in epithelial cells of the bladder in mice. In this study we clearly demonstrate that the salmochelin siderophore receptor IroN is involved in the invasion of urothelial cells by ExPEC in vitro. Thus, IroN may play a dual role in the establishment of urinary tract infections, displaying an iron uptake receptor as well as an internalization factor. ___________________________________________________ MPV28 New Legionella pneumophila genes essential for amoeba colonization P. Aurass1, B. Pless1, K. Rydzewski1, A. Flieger1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, NG5, Berlin, Germany Legionella pneumophila is an intracellular bacterium and normally inhabits fresh water systems where amoebae are a site for replication and transmission. When the bacteria accidentally enter the human lung, they infect lung cells and cause a severe pneumonia, Legionnaires’ disease. Colonization of amoebae by Legionella evolutionary existed a long time before association with humans occurred and bacterial human-to-human transmission is unknown; therefore amoeba interactions basically shaped Legionella intracellular survival strategies. Understanding of amoeba exploitation by Legionella is for several reasons interesting: a) amoeba colonization is a common strategy of many microorganisms, however little is known on the precise mechanisms; b) danger for increased environmental Legionella presence arises within the context of global warming because temperatures > 25°C support Legionella amplification in amoebae; c) Legionella exploitation of amoebae and lung macrophages shows similarities; therefore identification of amoeba colonization strategies allows insights into mechanisms applied for mammalian cells; and d) Legionella pneumonia renders more severe when bacteria together with amoebae enter the lung, mostly because amoeba-released bacteria are more invasive. To discover novel Legionella genes for amoeba colonization, we generated a L. pneumophila transposon Tn-5 mutated clone bank of about 26.000 clones, each with a single random mutation. To handle the big number of different clones, we developed an Acanthamoeba-based infection assay which allowed fast screening of L. pneumophila clones for replication defects. As a result we on the one hand found 21 genes, including icm/dot virulence genes, already known to promote Legionella infection of macrophages and/or amoebae. On the other hand, we identified the high number of 49 novel genes. Those genes comprised potential regulator, transporter, or enzyme genes, and also 15 genes with unknown function. ___________________________________________________ MPV29 Geno- and phenotypic analysis of asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli isolates J. Zdziarski1, B. Wullt2, C. Svanborg3, J. Hacker1, U. Dobrindt1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 University Hospital of Lund, Dept. of Urology, Lund, Denmark 3 Lund University, Dept. of Laboratory Medicine, Div. of Microbiology, Immunology and Glycobiology, Lund, Denmark Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU) results from the frequently long term urinary tract colonization by Escherichia coli without causing typical symptoms of urinary tract infection (UTI). The role of multiple virulence-associated factors of uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) involved in the development of symptomatic and chronic UTI has been elucidated so far, but only little information is available on characteristics of ABU isolates. We compared the geno- and phenotypes of eleven ABU isolates to 135 characterize this group of organisms in more detail. ABU isolates represent a heterologous group of organisms. Accordingly, they differed markedly in genome content, i.e., the genome size as well as the presence of typical UPEC virulenceassociated genes. Multi locus sequence typing suggested that certain ABU strains evolved from UPEC variants that are able to cause symptomatic UTI by genome loss. Reductive evolution by point mutations, DNA rearrangements and deletions resulted in inactivation of genes coding for several UPEC virulence factors thus supporting the idea that a reduced bacterial activation of host mucosal inflammation supports the ABU lifestyle of these E. coli isolates without activation of local and systemic inflammatory response pathways. ___________________________________________________ MPV31 Exploitation of vitronectin for pneumococcal adherence and invasion via v 3-integrins S. Bergmann1,2, A. Lang1, C. R. Rennemeier1, K. T. Preissner3 S. Hammerschmidt1,2 1 University of Wuerzburg, Research Center for Infectious Diseases, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer Institute, Munich Germany 3 Julius-Liebig-University, Institute for Biochemistry, Giessen Germany The human glycoprotein vitronectin (VN) is a multimeric extracellular matrix (ECM) protein which exists in two conformations. Within the blood plasma VN circulates as globular monomer within blood plasma and the multimeric isoform is predominantly present in the ECM. Pneumococci bind multimeric VN and recruit the monomeric isoform of vitronectin from human plasma as shown by flow cytometric and immunoblot analysis. Infection studies with human epithelial cells and human brain-derived microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC) demonstrated a significant increase in pneumococcal adherence and invasion in the presence of host-cell bound VN. This effect was dose-dependent and sensitive to protease-treatment of the bacteria, indicating a proteinaceous bacterial receptor. Flow cytometric analysis and cell culture infections demonstrated that the interaction of pneumococci with soluble VN and host-cell bound VN is inhibited by heparin and heparan sulfate. This suggests that the heparin binding domains of VN mediate the interaction with VN. In cell culture blocking experiments, antibodies recognizing and significantly 3-integrins v 3-integrins inhibited internalization of pneumococci in nasopharyngeal epithelial cells. In addition, vitronectin-mediated internalization of pneumococci was inhibited by pharmacological inhibitors cytochalasin D, latrunculin, and jaspaklinolide, respectively. Finally, vitronectin-mediated uptake of pneumococci in fibroblast deficient for the integrin?linked kinase (ILK) was significantly lower compared to ILK-expressing fibroblasts. In conclusion, our data provide evidence that pneumococci engage vitronectin as a molecular bridge thereby linking the bacteria with the v 3-integrin receptors on the host cells. Moreover, the ILK and actin cytoskeleton are essential molecules during vitronectin-mediated pneumococcal invasion. ___________________________________________________ MPV32 Pertussis toxin enhances the translocation of pathogenic bacteria in a human blood-brain barrier model K. Böcker1, J. Schulte1, C. Wewer1, L. Greune1, V. Humberg1 K. - S. Kim2, M.A. Schmidt1 1 Westfaelische Wilhelms-University Muenster, Institute of Infectiology - ZMBE, Muenster, Germany 2 Johns Hopkins University, Department of Pediatrics Baltimore, MD, USA The respiratory tract infection whooping cough caused by Bordetella pertussis can be accompanyed by complications such as encephalopathies and neurological disorders. A decisive virulence determinant of Bordetella pertussis, pertussis toxin (PT), contributes to these sequelae by influencing the integrity of the blood-brain-barrier (BBB). Human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC) were cultured on Transwell filters and used as an in vitro model for the BBB. We hypothesized that the PT-mediated increase in BBB permeability might lower the threshold for pathogenic bacteria to traverse the BBB. To address whether secondary infections of the CNS might develop faster or more serious we used E. coli K1 the most common strain that causes neonatal meningitis in our in vitro BBB model system. Indeed, following treatment with PT we observed an increased traversal of these bacteria across the HBMEC monolayers. E. coli K1 alone did not alter the permeability of the BBB model system. Enhancement of translocation could not be detected in studies with the non-pathogenic E. coli strain C600. Interestingly, in TEM images no invasive E. coli K1 was found within the endothelial cells- However, E. coli K1 was found between the HBMEC, indicating the paracellular way for traversal of the HBMEC monolayer. In addition, no effect of PT on invasion of E. coli K1 was observed. Furthermore, an increased migration/translocation of HL60 macrophage-like cells through PT-treated HBMEC monolayers was examined. As in these cells we were able to demonsrtate live E. coli K1 the translocation of E. coli K1-loaded macrophages resembles the “Trojan horse mechanism”, a possible alternative mechanism used by these pathogens to infect the CNS in vivo. ___________________________________________________ MPV33 Interactions between murein (peptidoglycan) synthases and the divisome in Escherichia coli U. Bertsche1, E. Breukink2, W. Vollmer3 1 University of Tuebingen, Microbial Genetics, Tuebingen Germany 2 University of Utrecht, Center of Biomembranes and Lipid Enzymology, Utrecht, Netherlands 3 University of Newcastle upon Tyne, nstitute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom The murein (peptidoglycan) sacculus represents the stressbearing structure in the cell envelope of most bacteria. Even though it is a major target for antibacterial treatment, the knowledge about its synthesis and the involved proteins is still very limited. During cell division and cell separation, which is a major requirement for the spreading of diseases, murein synthesis in Escherichia coli is focused on the septation site to form two new polar caps. 136 We applied in vivo chemical cross-linking/coimmunoprecipitation and affinity chromatography experiments to study physical interactions between the proteins involved in murein synthesis during cell division. This revealed the existence of direct interactions between murein synthases, cell division proteins, and murein hydrolases, which cleave the septum for daughter cell separation. The murein synthase PBP1B, which catalyzes both the transglycosylase and the transpeptidase reaction during murein synthesis, was shown to interact with the essential cell division protein PBP3 (FtsI), a monofunctional transpeptidase [1]. In addition both proteins interact with FtsN, a major component of a cell division specific multiprotein complex called the divisome. Tested by an in vitro murein synthesis assay the activities of PBP1B [2], were positively stimulated by the interaction with FtsN. We propose that septal murein synthesis occurs by multi-enzyme complexes containing murein synthases and murein hydrolases, which are controlled by the divisome. [1] Betsche, U., Kast, T., Wolf, B., Fraipont, C., Arasman, M. E., Kannenberg, K., von Rechenberg, M., Nguyen-Disteche, M., den blauauwen, T., Hoelthe, J.V., and Vollmer, W. (2006) Mol. Microbiol .61(3), 675-690 [2] Bertsche, U., Breukink, E., Kast, T., and Vollmer, W. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 208(45), 38096-38101 ___________________________________________________ MPV34 Role of agrD for biofilm formation and virulence in L. monocytogenes C. U. Riedel1,2, I. R. Monk2, P. Casey2, C. G. M. Gahan2 C. Hill3 1 University of Ulm, Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology, Ulm, Germany 2 University College Cork, Alimentary Pharmabiotic Center and Microbiology Department, Cork, Ireland 3 University College Cork, Alimantary Pharmabiotic Center and Microbiology Department, Cork, Ireland Autoinducing peptides are used in cell density dependent quorum sensing of Gram positive organisms. One example is the agr system, which is involved in virulence gene expression in staphylococci. The Agr system is composed of four gene operon with agrB involved in the proteolytic processing/export of the gene product of agrD, a post transitionally modified peptide, and agrA/agrC encoding for the histidine kinase/response regulator. Here, we present the phenotypic characterisation of L. monocytogenes EGDe DargD peptide deletion mutant. The DargD mutant showed a significant defect in biofilm formation. Promoter studies in broth cultures using a bioluminescent reporter system revealed an altered expression profile of hlyA and plcA, two major virulence factors of L. monocytogenes. In line with these findings, invasion of DargD into Caco-2 cells was about 4-fold lower than that of EGDe wild type. Both biofilm formation and invasion could be complemented by single copy chromosomal integration of argD under the control of a constitutive promoter. Additionally, when the DargD mutant was mixed with wild type EGDe, as little as 1 % of the wild type in the inoculum was sufficient to completely restore biofilm formation of EGDe DargD to wt levels. Finally, bioluminescence in vivo imaging was used to confirm that EGDe DargD is significantly attenuated in a murine model of listeriosis. ___________________________________________________ MPV35 Identifying a pore-forming region within E. coli hemolysin by means of cysteine substitution mutant analysis A. Valeva1, I. Valev1, I. Siegel1, M. Wylenzek1 1 University of Mainz, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Mainz, Germany Escherichia coli hemolysin is a pore-forming toxin of the RTX toxin family. Cysteine scanning mutagenesis was applied to characterize the proposed pore-forming domain 170 - 400 of HlyA. A single cysteine residue was introduced at 48 different positions in this domain and labeled with the polarity-sensitive dye badan. Spectrofluorimetric analysis of labeled toxin showed that several amino acids in this domain insert into the lipid bilayer after pore-formation. An alpha helix domain consisting of amino acids 272 to 298 was identified that forms the lining of the aqueous pore. The importance of this alpha helix in the porebuilding domain was confirmed by the introduction of helix breaker proline at position 284 and 287, which completely abolished haemolytic activity, despite unchanged binding properties. ___________________________________________________ MPV36 Integrated stress response following membrane perforation M. Husmann1, G. Veerachato1, N. Kloft1, T. Busch1 W. Bobkiewicz1, C. Neukirch1, S. Bhakdi1 1 Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany Formation of pores in membranes of cell targets is an archetypal attack mechanism that is conserved through evolution. Nucleated cells have evolved poorly understood means to cope with the potentially lethal threat of membrane perforation. A pivotal role for MAPK p38 in cellular defense against bacterial pore-forming toxins has recently been discovered, but the trigger for p38 activation and for downstream events thereof have not been elucidated. Here, we show in epithelial cells that membrane perforation by staphylococcal a-toxin, archetype of the b-barrel family of pore-forming toxins, elicits the integrated stress response (ISR), which is characterized by rapid but transient attenuation of global translation, followed hours later by restart of protein synthesis as cells recover from the initial insult. While the ISR has recently been identified as a primordial response of cells to various forms of stress, no link has yet been made between ISR and membrane perforation. Three current findings are of prime interest. First, the ISR in these cells is under the control of p38 MAPK, which undergoes rapid and prolonged activation. Within minutes, the stress kinase induces translational arrest. Subsequently, p38 enhances expression of GADD34, which is required for translational restart. Second, activation of p38 is triggered by the loss of cellular potassium. Third, the ISR delays expression of MKP-1 thus prolonging activation of p38. The data may help to explain the central role of MAPK p38 in defense against membrane perforation by pore forming proteins. 137 MPV37 CD18 is the T-lymphocyte receptor of the Helicobacter pylori Vacuolating Cytotoxin X. Sewald1, S. Prassl1, B. Gebert-Vogl1, E. Weiss1 B. Holzmann2, W. Mothes3, R. Haas1 1 Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Munich, Germany 2 Technical University of Munich, Institut for Medical Microbiology, Munich, Germany 3 Yale University School of Medicine, Section of Microbial Pathogenesis, New Haven, USA Helicobacter pylori is a bacterial pathogen that colonizes the human stomach. It persists, if untreated, lifelong in the gastric mucosa of about 50% of the human population thereby causing gastritis, peptic ulceration, and gastric carcinoma. To evade and modulate the immune system H. pylori expresses a set of virulence factors. The vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA) is one important factor in modulating the immune system. It represents a multifunctional toxin with pleiotropic effects on mammalian cells. Although many data about VacA receptors, intracellular trafficking routes, and cellular effects of VacA exist for epithelial cells, little is known about these steps for other cell types. Because the major immunomodulating effect of VacA is the inhibition of T-lymphocyte activation, we focus our work on the interaction between VacA and lymphocytes. VacA interferes with the T-cell receptor/IL-2 signalling pathway at the level of the Ca2+-Calmodulin dependent phosphatase calcineurin. IL-2 transcription and therefore activation of T-cells is down regulated by blocking the nuclear translocation of NFAT, a global regulator of immune response. How and where does the immunomodulating effect of VacA on lymphocytes take place? To address this issue, we focus our work on identifying the VacA receptor of lymphocytes and characterize the route of endocytosis. Functional and microscopy studies show that the 2-subunit of the LFA-1 integrin is a receptor for VacA on lymphocyte cell lines and primary CD4+-lymphocytes. The direct interaction of VacA with CD18 allows internalization and makes lymphocytes susceptible for the immunomodulating activity of VacA. With different fluorescence markers for endocytosis and GFP-fusion marker proteins for endosomal structures, the transport of VacA in lymphocytes is characterized in more detail. ___________________________________________________ MPV38 Protein subassemblies of the Helicobacter pylori Cag type IV secretion system revealed by localization and interaction studies S. Kutter1, R. Buhrdorf1, W. Schneider-Brachert2, R. Haas1 W. Fischer1 1 Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Bacteriology, Munich, Germany 2 University Ratisbon, Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Ratisbon, Germany Type IV secretion systems are possibly the most versatile protein transport systems in Gram-negative bacteria, with substrates ranging from small proteins to large nucleoprotein complexes. In many cases, such as the cag pathogenicity island of Helicobacter pylori, genes encoding components of a type IV secretion system have been identified due to their sequence homologies to prototypical systems such as the VirB system of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The Cag type IV secretion system of Helicobacter pylori is responsible for the induction of a pronounced proinflammatory response and for translocation of the effector protein CagA into various host cells. It therefore is considered as an important virulence determinant of H. pylori. The secretion system contains at least 14 essential apparatus components and several substrate translocation and auxiliary factors, but the functions of most components cannot be inferred from their sequences due to the lack of homologies. In this study, we have performed a thorough sequence analysis of all essential or auxiliary Cag components, and we have used a panel of antisera against several components to determine their subcellular localization. The results suggest that the Cag system contains functional analogues to all VirB components except VirB5. Moreover, we have characterized mutual stabilization effects and performed a comprehensive yeast two-hybrid screening for potential protein-protein interactions. To obtain independent evidence for protein-protein interactions found with the yeast two-hybrid screen or suggested by the stabilization data, we performed immunoprecipitation studies using the antisera against Cag secretion apparatus components. Our data suggest that distinct subassemblies of secretion apparatus components and distinct translocation complexes for the effector protein CagA exist. In conclusion we provide a first structural model of the Cag type IV secretion apparatus. ___________________________________________________ MPV39 Cryo-electron tomography and vitreous sections reveal the outer membrane of mycobacteria C. Hoffmann1, A. Leis1, M. Niederweis2, G. Pfeifer1, J. Plitzko1 H. Engelhardt1 1 Max-Planck-Institute of Biochemistry, Molecular Structural Biology, Martinsried, Germany 2 University of Alabama at Birmingham, Department of Microbiology, Birmingham, AL, USA Mycobacteria possess a unique cell wall, containing extractable lipids and long-chain mycolic acids that are covalently linked to peptidoglycan via an arabinogalactan network. Current models arrange these lipids in an asymmetrical membrane of a size that is incompatible with the dimensions and structure of the porin MspA from Mycobacterium smegmatis. The investigation of unperturbed M. smegmatis and M. bovis BCG cells embedded in vitreous ice and rendered visible three-dimensionally by cryoelectron tomography and in projections by vitreous sectioning now reveals the native organization of the cell envelope. The mycobacteria are surrounded by a symmetrical outer membrane, with a bilayer structure apparent in sufficiently thin cryosections. This outer membrane is only 20% thicker than the cytoplasmic membrane and agrees with the dimensions but also physicochemical properties of MspA. The two lipid membranes define an extensive periplasmic space that occupies about 24% of the total cell volume in M. bovis. The periplasm harbours several layers of enhanced density that are attributed to the peptidoglycan and the arabinogalactan polymers. To get a better understanding of the location and the role of the mycolic acids, we analyzed the cell walls of mycolic acid-free 138 deletion mutants. Since such a knock-out is lethal for mycobacteria, we used a mutant strain of Corynebacterium glutamicum, one of the phylogenetic relatives in the distinctive suprageneric actinomycete taxon, and the respective wild-type. Electron microscopy of vitreous sections revealed the different organization of the cell wall in both strains. Based on these results, a revised model for the mycobacterial cell wall architecture is proposed. ___________________________________________________ MPV40 Use of antisense-technique as an alternative to mutagenesis for the identification of virulence genes from mycobacteria A. Lewin1, E. Kamal1, S. Janßen2 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Microbiology, Berlin, Germany 2 Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, Langen, Germany The genus Mycobacterium comprises the most important bacterial infectious agent, M. tuberculosis, but also opportunistic bacteria as M. avium and M. fortuitum. Our knowledge about the virulence and latency mechanisms of mycobacteria is insufficient. Therefore, further research aiming at a better understanding of the interaction between mycobacteria and the human host has to be performed. The investigation of the functions of bacterial genes in infection processes usually involves their mutagenesis by homologous recombination. This technique proves elusive in mycobacteria due to the high frequency of illegitimate recombination events and the low electroporation efficiencies. Our study aimed at testing the potential of antisense-techniques as an alternative to mutagenesis for the isolation of mycobacterial virulence genes. We used a random and a directed cloning strategy to insert gene fragments from M. fortuitum and M. bovis BCG in antisenseorientation behind the strong promoter from the hsp60 gene in a shuttle vector. The DNA region behind the hsp60 promoter was sequenced in all 106 generated recombinant plasmids. We were able to confirm 33 antisense constructs with M. fortuitum DNA and 30 containing M. bovis BCG DNA that carried genes orientated in antisense with respect to the promoter. Electroporation in either M. fortuitum or M. bovis BCG succeeded with 33 antisense-plasmids for M. fortuitum and 6 antisense-plasmids for M. bovis BCG. The recombinant mycobacteria were tested for their colony morphology, the growth rate in broth culture and their intracellular survival in mouse macrophages. Impairments in intracellular persistence in mouse macrophages were found with 6 M. fortuitum transformants. In this way the following M. fortuitum genes could be shown to potentially play a role in intracellular survival: an acetyl-CoA dehydrogenase-like gene, an integrase gene, a metal-dependent phosphohydrolase gene, an anthranilate phosphoribosyltransferase gene, an enoyl-CoA hydratase/isomerise gene and the gene orthologous to Rv1738 from M. tuberculosis. Currently we are confirming the results of the antisense-experiments by generating mutations in the corresponding genes. ___________________________________________________ MPV41 Swarming of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 is a complex adaptation resulting in virulence and antibiotic resistance J. Overhage1, M. Bains1, R. Hancock1 1 University of British Columbia, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Vancouver BC, Canada Motility has been strongly implicated in the virulence of P. aeruginosa. It plays an important role in mobilization to and colonization of different environments, attachment of bacteria to surfaces, and biofilm formation. P. aeruginosa is unusual in that it is capable of three different types of motility: flagellummediated swimming in aqueous environments and at low agar concentrations (<0.3% [wt/vol]); type IV pilus-mediated twitching on solid surfaces or interfaces; and most recently observed, swarming on semisold (viscous) media (0.4 to 0.7% [wt/vol] agar). Swarming was shown to be dependent on both flagella and type IV pili as well as the presence of rhamnolipids. It can be described as a social phenomenon involving the coordinated and rapid movement of bacteria across a semisold surface. Recently, we have shown that swarming of P. aeruginosa is a more complex motility mechanism influenced by a large number of cooperating genes. To understand more about swarming, we investigated gene regulation events associated with swarming by performing microarrays of bacteria at the leading edge of a swarm zone, compared to bacteria growing in identical medium under swimming conditions. Analysis of 5 independent experiments demonstrated that 417 genes were significantly upor downregulated by more than 2-fold. Of these, 309 were upregulated and 108 downregulated of which about half were hypothetical or conserved hypothetical genes. We observed under swarming conditions the up-regulation of numerous virulence-related genes including exoS, exoT, exoY, etc. and genes coding for the type III secretion system, pyochelin, phenazine, and pyoverdine biosynthesis. Furthermore, besides several genes involved in energy metabolism, nitrogen assimilation, fatty acid and amino acid biosynthesis and transport systems, no fewer than 18 were predicted or known regulators, including e.g. lasR and rhlR, with 2 to 11-fold altered expression, indicating a complex regulatory network. Overall, these data indicate that swarming motility of P. aeruginosa is part of an alternative growth state and a complex adaptation of this human pathogen to a viscous environment resulting in changes that reflect altered virulence and antibiotic resistance and overlap with another complex adaptation, biofilm formation. Consistent with this notion, swarming cells exhibited highly elevated resistance to antibiotics including ciprofloxacin, gentamicin and polymyxin B. ___________________________________________________ MPV42 Azithromycin treatment affects siderophore production in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Y. Nalca1, F. Bredenbruch1, P. Cornelis2, S. Häußler3,1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Chronic Pseudomonas Infections, Brunswich, Germany 2 Vrije Universiteit Brussel, VIB Department of Molecular and Cellular Interactions, Brussels, Belgium 139 3 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Brunswich Germany The administration of macrolides such as azithromycin in chronic pulmonary infection of cystic fibrosis patients has been reported to be of beneficial value. In a previous study we used a systematic approach and analyzed the impact of azithromycin treatment on the global transcriptional pattern and the protein expression profile of P. aeruginosa PAO1 cultures. The most remarkable finding was that azithromycin exhibited extensive quorum-sensing antagonistic activities. In accordance with the inhibition of the quorum-sensing systems, virulence factor production was diminished and the oxidative stress response was impaired, whereas the type III secretion system was strongly induced. Since a quorum-sensing antagonistic effect holds great promise in the management of chronic infections, we became interested in the molecular mechanisms of action. Here we demonstrate that azithromycin affects P. aeruginosa siderophore production. Whereas pyoverdine production of PAO1 and a pyochelin knockout mutant ( pchE/F) was increased in the early stationary phase under exposure to azithromycin, the pyochelin production of PAO1 and pyoverdine knockout mutant ( pvdD) was diminished. Most interestingly, we observed that the pchE/F and the PAO1 wild-type strain but not the pvdD and the pvdD / pchE/F double knockout mutant exhibited an impaired oxidative stress response upon exposure to azithromycin as compared to the untreated controls. These results implicate that an induction of pyoverdine production by azithromycin accounts for the observed impaired oxidative stress response. It will be an important task for the future to identify whether the global proteome and transcriptome profile in response to azithromycin can be traced back to the induction of pyoverdine production. We will perform a comparative analysis of the pvdD mutant and its wild-type upon azithromycin addition to answer this question. ___________________________________________________ MPV43 The Pseudomonas quinolone Siganl (PQS) Balances Life and Death in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Populations S. Häußler1, T. Becker2, C. Zaoui1, M. Müsken2 F. Bredenbruch1 1 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Cell Biology Brunswich, Germany 2 Helmholtz-Center for Infection Research, Brunswich Germany Although bacteria are capable to respond to environmental challenges with a wide variety of stress responses, under sufficiently severe conditions it might be favorable to either undergo a regulated cell death allowing surviving bacteria to scavenge nutrients from dead siblings or to enter a dormant state with retained ability to revive when conditions become more conductive. In this study we provide evidence that the Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS) recently identified as an interbacterial signal molecule in Pseudomonas aeruginosa exhibits activities that support both of these assumptions. The appearance of iridescent plaque-like clearances of aged P. aeruginosa colonies is a well-known phenomenon and has previously been implicated to be due to an autolytic process which involves the production of PQS. In this study we aimed to identify stressful conditions that trigger a PQS-mediated selfinduced bacterial cell death in P. aeruginosa. We subjected the bacteria to various antibiotics and monitored bacterial viability in the P. aeruginosa PAO1 wild-type and its dependency on PQS signaling. Our results demonstrate that in a PQS nonproducing PAO1 mutant strain the initiation of DNA release and fragmentation is delayed and the mutant exhibited a drug tolerant phenotype. In contrast, in wild-type stationary P. aeruginosa cultures a reversible bacteriostatic effect of PQS sensitizes the bacteria to bactericidal antibiotic activities. However, rather than being the effector molecule of autolysis, the physiological role of PQS seems to be the synchronization of the entry of P. aeruginosa populations into stationary phase of growth. We suggest that by balancing life and death in P. aeruginosa populations PQS shapes the population structure and significantly contributes to biofilm development. Continued investigation on the physiological role of PQS will provide further fascinating insights into bacterial adaptation strategies that do not only act at the individual level but serve the multicellular community behavior in P. aeruginosa populations. ___________________________________________________ MPV44 Strictly anaerobic bacteria in sputum of patients with cystic fibrosis D. Worlitzsch1, C. Rintelen1, K. Boehm1, B. Wollschlaeger2 N. Merkel3, M. Borneff-Lipp1, G. Doering4 1 Institute of Hygiene, University Hospital Halle-Wittenberg Halle, Germany 2 Hospital of Internal Medicine, University Hospital HalleWittenberg, Halle, Germany 3 Childrens Hospital, University Hospital of Tuebingen, Halle Germany 4 Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University Hospital of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany The oxygen partial pressure in sputum plugs in the lung of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) is extremely low. Besides facultatively anaerobic bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus or Burkholderia cepacia complex also strict anaerobes can be found in most CF patients. We analyzed antibiotic susceptibilities and bacterial counts of strict anaerobes. From 31 adults and 8 childrenwith CF 92 sputum samples were obtained.Strictly anaerobic bacteria were identified using an anaerobic bench and the RapID AnaII®identification system, and cfu’s were determined by dilution plate counting. Fastidious anaerobes (141 strains) were submitted to E-test® susceptibility testing (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) using the anaerobically active antibiotics ceftazidime, clindamycin, meropenem, metronidazole, and piperacillin/tazobactam. In 75.0% of the patients, in addition to facultative anaerobes the following strict anaerobes were detected with a mean of 6.3x106 cfu/ml (range 2.5x104 to 2.5x107 cfu/ml): Peptostreptococcus spp., Clostridium spp., Actinomyces spp., Prevotella spp., Wolinella spp., Propionibacterium spp., Streptococcus spp., Lactobacillus spp., Gemella spp., Bacteroides spp. and Eubacterium spp.. Identical strict anaerobic species were 140 detected in 12 out of 19 patients with two or more repeated sputum samples (63%). E-test® sensitivity testing yielded high sensitivity for meropenem (5.7% resistant strains), piperacillin/tazobactam (20.6%), and clindamycin (24.8%), but not ceftazidime (49.0%) or metronidazole (50.4%). High numbers of strict anaerobes are present in the majority of CF patients. The high persistence of identical anaerobic strains reflects chronic lung infection and may be caused by their increased resistence against standard antibiotics such as ceftazidime. ___________________________________________________ MSP01 Predominant CTX-M-15 ESBL type among Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae ESBLs isolates from Giessen University Hospital. S. Mshana1,2, C. Imirzalioglu1, H. Hossain1, T. Hain1 E. Domann1, T. Chakraborty1 1 Institute of Medical Microbiology/ University of Giessen Giessen, Germany 2 Bugando University College of Health Sciences, Mwanza Tanzania Over an 8-months period, 39 Escherichia coli and 18 Klebsiella pneumoniae with multiple resistance to cephalosporins were isolated from clinical samples. All isolates produced ESBLs when assessed using the disk approximation method. Gene specific primers were used to amplify and sequence Tem, SHV and CTX-M ESBL genes. DNA sequencing revealed that 32 (86.5%) Escherichia coli strains and 15 (83.3%) Klebsiella pneumoniae strains harboured CTX-M genes. Tem genes were found in 5 (13.5%) and 3 (16.6%) in Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae strains respectively. No isolates harbouring SHV genes were detected. The CTX-M-15 was the most common allele detected in both Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae and represented by 21 (65.6%) and 12 (80%) strains, respectively. Isolates with the CTX-M-15 allele were resistant to cefepime. The majority of strains had a high level resistance (MIC > 48µg/ml) and were uniformly resistant to aminoglycosides and quinolones. All these isolates were sensitive to meropenem and imipenem. Most Klebsiella pneumoniae strains harbouring the CTX-M-15 allele had a common PFGE pattern indicating clonal identity. For Escherichia coli strains the PFGE patterns were heterogenous. CTX-M-15 allele is common at Giessen University hospital among ESBL isolates and our data suggest clonal spread of Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates with CTX-M-15 allele. ___________________________________________________ MSP02 Antimicrobial susceptibilities of Ochrobactrum spp. B. Thoma1 1 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Department of Bacteriology and Toxinology, Munich, Germany The antibiotic susceptibilities of a representative collection of one hundred-five Ochrobactrum spp. isolates of both clinical and environmental origin were examined. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of 20 clinically relevant antimicrobial agents were determined using Etests™ (AB BIODISK, Solna, Sweden). Species designation was confirmed using biochemical differentiation with API® 20NE (bioMérieux, Marcy L’Etoile, France) and 16S rRNA and recA gene sequencing. All species except for O. gallinifaecis were highly resistant to all b-lactams. The tested isolates were all sensitive to ciprofloxacin and to a lesser extent to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole. However, some of the clinical cases treated with these antibiotics did not survive. Regarding the susceptibility to colistin we could not confirm the general susceptibility of all O. anthropi species as indicated in previous studies. Additionally, we observed resistance to colistin in O. anthropi isolates. Therefore, susceptibility to colistin of O. anthropi and resistance of O. intermedium does not seem to be a reliable phenotypic feature for differentiating between these two species as proposed before. We have further assessed the biochemical reaction profile to determine, whether a differentiation among the species of the genus Ochrobactrum is feasible using the API 20NE. Based on our data we suggest that the biochemical identification of a bacterium as “O. anthropii” should be only interpreted as “Ochrobactrum spp.” with O. anthropii being the most important representative. Therefore, reported cases might have been misclassified. In general, antibiotic susceptibility patterns as means of phenotypic differentiation in Ochrobactrum species is questionable due to the great variation of susceptibility within the species. In conclusion, our in vitro data suggest that ciprofloxacin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole could be used for empiric antibiotic therapy of Ochrobactrum spp. ___________________________________________________ MSP03 Occurrence and clinical relevance of Mycobacterium chimaera sp. nov. B. Schweickert1, O. Goldenberg2, E. Richter3, P. Buchholz4 A. Moter4, U. B. Göbel4 1 University hospital Charité, Microbiology, Berlin, Germany 2 Transgenomic LTD, Berlin, Germany 3 Referenzzentrum für Mykobakterien, Borstel, Germany 4 Charité Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Hygiene, Berlin Germany Recently, a cluster of strains belonging to the heterogeneous Mycobacterium Avium Complex (MAC) has been described and named as M. chimaera sp. nov.. As comprehensive epidemiological data are missing, we performed a retrospective study to investigate the frequency of its occurrence within the group of MAC-positive clinical specimens and to determine its role as a cause of human disease as compared with the closely related M. intracellulare. Mycobacterial isolates from 166 patients previously identified as M. intracellulare by 16S rDNA based methods have been reassessed by sequencing of the 16-23S internal transcribed spacer region. In addition, we evaluated Denaturating High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (DHPLC) and its capacity to distinguish between M. chimaera sp. nov and M. intracellulare type strain. The mycobacterial isolates of 97 in house patients of the Charité University Hospital have been assessed for their clinical significance according to the criteria of mycobacterial lung disease of the American Thoracic Society. Genetic analysis revealed that M. chimaera sp. nov. accounts for the predominant portion 86,1% of the isolates, whereas M. intracellulare type strain and other 141 members of the MAC represent 10.2% and 3.6%, respectively. Only six isolates, each three M. chimaera sp. nov. and three M. intracellulare type strains, could be classified as clinically significant. The data indicate that M. chimaera sp. nov. exhibits a relatively low pathogenic potential in contrast to M. intracellulare type strains expressing a noticeably higher virulence. However, further studies with larger sample numbers are necessary. DHPLC turned out as a reliable low cost method for the fast processing of a high number of samples. ___________________________________________________ MSP04 Increasing prevalence of MRSA isolates with MLST type ST022 in the Bochum area F. Szabados1, M. Kaase1, S. Friedrich1, T. Sakinc1, B. Kleine1 K. Henne1, S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Department of Medical Microbiology, Bochum, Germany Understanding the epidemiology of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) is important because therapeutic options are limited in patients with MRSA infections and measures against further spread of MRSA are associated with increased costs and workload. From 1998 to 2006 consecutive non-copy MRSA strains (N = 1516) were collected from patients in four hospitals in the Bochum area. All strains were typed by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and grouped together according to the criteria proposed by Tenover et al.. For each PFGE group consisting of more than 12 isolates representative isolates were further characterized by multilocus sequence typing (MLST), SCCmec-typing and agr-typing. Average MRSA rates in all four hospitals increased from 18% in 1998 to 36% in 2006. Overall, isolates belonged to PFGE group 35 in 26.7%, to PFGE group 13 in 17.6%, to PFGE group 7 in 11.7%, to PFGE group 11 in 7.7%, to PFGE group 3 in 6.3% and to PFGE group 16 in 5.4% of all MRSA isolates. Significant changes over time were observed for most PFGE groups: PFGE group 35 appeared in 2001 and increased in frequency from 9.7% to 56.5%, PFGE group 13 increased from 1.5% in 1999 to 12.4% with a peak of 27.3% in 2002, PFGE group 7 increased from 2.2% in 1998 to 20.6% in 2002 and decreased again to 3.1%, PFGE group 11 increased from 0.9% in 2000 to 14% in 2006, PFGE group 3 had its maximum of 23.3% in 2001 and decreased to 2.6%. PFGE group 35 belongs to ST022, is of agr type Ia and harbours SCCmec type 4b or 1. PFGE group 13 belongs to ST08, PFGE groups 7 and 3 belong to ST228, PFGE group 11 belongs to ST225 and PFGE group 16 belongs to ST045. Predominant MRSA clones changed significantly over time. Since 2001 a MRSA clone characterized by PFGE group 35 and belonging to MLST type ST022 steadily increased in frequency in our area with more than half of all MRSA isolates belonging to this PFGE group. ___________________________________________________ MSP05 Genomic mutS-rpoS region polymorphisms in extraintestinal Escherichia coli (ExPEC) of human and animal origin correlate with in vivo pathogenicity C. Ewers1, E. - M. Antáo1, G. Li1, A. Bethe1, S. Kiessling1 I. Diehl1, S. Glodde1, T. Homeier1, L. H. Wieler1 1 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany Currently, three major extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) pathovars [uropathogenic (UPEC), newborn meningitis (NMEC), and avian pathogenic (APEC) E. coli] are distinguished based on clinical symptoms and virulence features. Due to Multi locus sequence typing (MLST), ExPEC are clustered into three major phylogenetic complexes, including sequence type (ST) complex 95, 23 and 73, as well as ST 62 and ST 117. Despite extensive virulence typing of ExPEC strains, no clear correlation was seen between pathovars and virulence types. However, we were able to observe associations between unique mosaic structures of the mutS-rpoS regions among strains from single STs and pathogenic significance by PCR analyses. The chromosomal mutS-rpoS region in E. coli is often subjected to genetic exchange during the evolution of pathogenic lineages, and high levels of variation in this genomic region have been suggested as a hallmark for the emergence of E. coli pathogens. Characterization of this genomic region in NMEC (n = 24), UPEC (n = 31), APEC (n = 100), and non pathogenic avianderived E. coli strains (n = 78) identified four main structures based on PCR amplicon sizes of the downstream fhlA-mutS (1.200 or 1.673bp) and upstream o454-nlpD (1.319, 3.685, 4.546bp or no product) region. Irrespective of the pathovar, pathogenic strains predominantly harboured identical mutS-rpoS patterns, whereas non pathogenic strains mostly revealed structures differing from APEC, UPEC and NMEC strains. Among 33 virulence associated genes tested, strains with a so called “pathogenic mutS-rpoS pattern” harboured 19.8, whereas strains belonging to other patterns possessed less than 10 genes on average. There was also a clear association of different genomic structures with certain phylotypes, with the “pathogenic pattern” being mainly grouped into ST complexes 95 and 73. Animal infection trials with APEC strains harbouring different mutS-rpoS regions showed a significant relation between the “pathogenic mutS-rpoS pattern” and disease outcome in chickens. Fecal E. coli strains isolated from clinically healthy chickens bearing this pattern could be re-classified as being pathogenic, as determined by chicken infection tests providing strong evidence for a direct link between the mosaic structure of the mutS-rpoS genomic region and pathogenicity. Further characterization of the mutS-rpoS region as well as polymorphisms of their respective genes promise to be the basis of a future typing tool. ___________________________________________________ 142 MSP06 Molecular relationship in Panton-Valentine Leukocidin (PVL)-positive MRSA and PVL-positive MSSA F. Szabados1, C. von Eiff2, A. Anders1, M. Kaase1, K. Becker2 S. Gatermann1 1 Ruhr-University Bochum, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Bochum, Germany 2 University Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology Muenster, Germany The Panton-Valentine Leukocidin (PVL) of Staphylococcus aureus plays an important role in the pathogenesis of necrotic pneumonia and recurrent skin and soft tissue infections often with a fatal outcome in young and otherwise healthy patients. The considerable emergence of community-acquired methicillin-resistant S. aureus (CA-MRSA) strains commonly harbouring this toxin has fuelled the discussion on the origin of this toxin. PVL might have spread from PVL-positive MSSA into MRSA, on the other hand, PVL-positive MSSA might have become methicillin-resistant by acquiring SCCmec. The aim of this study was to investigate the clonal relationship between PVL-harbouring MSSA and MRSA strains in the Western part of Germany. We used pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multi locus sequence typing (MLST) to establish possible relationships between CA-MRSA and MSSA. For MLST, the arcC, aroE, glpF, gmk, pta, tpi and yqiL genes were amplified by PCR, sequenced, and compared with reference strains. S. aureus LukF/LukS genes and further toxin genes, such as enterotoxin genes and tst, were detected with PCR. Among PVL-positive MRSA, ST80 was the predominating type followed by isolates of types ST022, ST36, and ST152. Irrespective of the possession of PVL, MRSA were mostly represented by the following types: ST228, ST022, ST008, ST225 and ST045. ST228 and ST008 strains were not found to carry PVL. Among PVL-positive MSSA strains, we found 18 strains of ST030 (8 PFGE groups), 11 strains of ST120 (7 PFGE groups), 2 strains of ST217, and 3 strains (ST profile 1,13,1,1,5,3) with relationship to ST14 (or ST259 or ST795 ) as well as 5 singletons. Two PVL-positive MRSA and MSSA strains were clonally related according to PFGE, but were different applying MLST (MSSA ST030 and MRSA ST036). Other PVL-positive MSSA strains were different according to MLST and PFGE, except for two singletons. PVL-positive MRSA strains were often related to PVL-negative MRSA strains according to PFGE, but not corresponding to MLST types. These data indicate that acquisition of methicillin resistance by PVL-positive MSSA strains seems to be less likely and that PVL toxin genes might have spread from PVL-positive MSSA strains into MRSA. ___________________________________________________ MSP07 A condensed LightCycler based spa typing method for S. aureus B. Schwenz1, U. Vogel2, W. Bautsch1, H. Hannig1 1 Staedtisches Klinikum Brunswich GmbH, Institute for Microbiology, Immunology und Hygiene, Brunswich Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany Molecular typing methods for methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) become more important in view of the unchecked increase of the MRSA problem in German hospitals. However, most typing methods require special equipment, such as pulsedfield gel electrophoresis equipment (PFGE) or sequencing facilities (MLST, spa typing) which are not readily available in most microbiological laboratories. In contrast, real-time PCR methods gain more and more access to the routine laboratory. We therefore developed a novel typing method for S. aureus based on LightCycler technology. The scheme exploits the wellknown polymorphisms in the X-region of the protein A gene, which is also the basis of the spa typing method. This region consists of a polymorphic 24 bp sequence repeated head-to-tail a variable number of times. Instead of sequencing the whole X region (as in spa typing), we only identify the first and last repeat sequences by melting point analysis of a suitable reference detection probe after amplification of the X-region by LightCycler. In addition, the total length of the PCR product is determined to obtain the total number of repeat sequences. Analysis of several reference strains revealed the method to be reproducible and of sufficiently high discriminatory power to allow for differentiation of the most common MRSA clones. Currently, a collection of 40 different S. aureus isolates obtained from the routine work-up in our laboratory is analyzed by this method to check its suitability for routine use. Results will be presented at the meeting. ___________________________________________________ MSP08 Quinolone susceptible MRSA in the Hamburg area: Phenotypic and genotypic characterization J. K. Knobloch1, J. C. von Freyberg2, S. Scherpe2 1 University of Luebeck, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Luebeck, Germany 2 University Medical-Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Hamburg, Germany Background: Most MRSA in Germany display resistance against quinolones. However, we observed a lower prevalence of quinolone resistance in MRSA isolates associated with skin and soft tissue infections. We investigated the clonal relation of quinolone susceptible MRSA and the presence of the lukS/F genes encoding the Panton-Valentine leukocidin. Methods: 50 Ciprofloxacin (CIP) susceptible MRSA isolates were collected from February 2001 to April 2005. Clonal relationship between these isolates was determined by spatyping. Representative isolates were further characterized by multi locus sequence typing (MLST). MIC values of Oxacillin (OXA), CIP, Moxifloxacin (MOX), Daptomycin (DAP), and Linezolid (LIN) were determined for all isolates. Results: 45 isolates were divided into 7 clonal complexes using the BURP algorithm for the determined spa-types, whereas 5 isolates were identified as singletons. The lukS/F genes were identified in 19 isolates associated with three different spaclonal complexes. Representative isolates of the three spa-clonal complexes revealed to belong to the MLST sequence types ST80 (13 isolates), ST30 (3 isolates) and ST8 (3 isolates). 37 143 isolates, including all lukS/F-positive MRSA, displayed a MIC for OXA of 64 mg/L or lower, whereas only 5 isolates displayed MIC values for OXA greater than 256 mg/L. In contrast to the primary disc diffusion testing two isolates displayed a MIC for CIP of 2 mg/L, whereas all isolates were MOX susceptible, with a four to eightfold higher activity of MOX compared to CIP. In the study period no quinolone resistant lukS/F positive MRSA isolates were detected in the Hamburg area. All investigated MRSA displayed MIC values in the susceptible range for DAP and LIN. Conclusions: In the Hamburg area three different clones of lukS/F positive MRSA were identified representing CA-MRSA clones of different regions of the world. Thereby, the MLST ST80 isolates had the highest prevalence. The lack of MOX resistant lukS/F positive MRSA during the study period indicates that modern chinolones could be used for the therapy of severe skin and soft tissue infections even if CA-MRSA rates will increase in the Hamburg area. ___________________________________________________ the hospital level in both cases reveals substantial differences in resistance rates as well as in trends. In gramnegative bacteria, proportions of resistance for several species-antibiotic-combinations varied significantly over time but only for cefotaxim in E. coli from blood cultures and meropenem in P. aeruginosa the trends represented linear increases. For E. coli there is a remarkable difference in ciprofloxacin resistance with regard to origin of isolates: in blood cultures the level of resistance was approx. 30% whereas in non-blood isolates an increase from 10.1% to 19.1% was observed. Data from the GENARS project give important clues on changes in antimicrobial resistance of bacteria isolated from patients of participating university hospitals within the past five years. To obtain representative evidence, to distinguish local from overall trends and to carry out more sophisticated analysis an expansion of the surveillance is urgently needed. Figure 1: MSP09 Five Years of german network for antimicrobial resistance surveillance: Trends in resistance 2002-2006. I. Noll1, J. Beer2, W. Pfister3, S. Schubert4, N. Wellinghausen5 H. Wisplinghoff6, S. Ziesing7, T. Eckmanns1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Berlin 2 University of Leipzig , Institute for Medical Microbiology and Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases, Leipzig, Germany 3 University of Jena, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Jena Germany 4 University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein Campus Kiel Institute for Infection Medicine, Kiel, Germany 5 University Hospital of Ulm, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Ulm, Germany 6 University Hospital of Cologne, Medical Microbiology Immunology and Hygiene, Cologne, Germany 7 Medical School Hanover, Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany Six laboratories of university hospitals representing the German Network for Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (GENARS) have been collecting data continuously for all clinical relevant pathogens in a widely standardized and quality controlled way for the past five years. The objective is to analyze trends in antimicrobial resistance for the most frequent species to selected antimicrobials within this period. Antimicrobial susceptibility is determined as minimal inhibitory concentrations by broth microdilution method performed by automated test systems for antibiotics of various classes. Proportions of resistance are calculated employing breakpoints of DIN 58940-4 (2005). Analysis has been made yearly for nonduplicate isolates of E. coli from blood cultures (N=2115), E. coli from non-blood cultures (N=29234), K. pneumonia (N=7388), P. aeruginosa (N=12003), E. faecium (N=5047) and S. aureus from blood cultures (N=2018). The most important findings are related to grampositive bacteria: The overall resistance rate of S. aureus from blood cultures to oxacillin increased significantly from 12.8% in 2002 to 20.1% in 2006; an even higher increase from 1.2% to 16.6% was found for vancomycin in E. faecium. However, analysis on ___________________________________________________ MSP10 Genetic characterization of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolated from clinical specimens of various animal species investigated by molecular typing procedures B. Walther1, C. Ruscher1, A. Lübke-Becker1, L. H. Wieler1 1 University Berlin, Veterinary Microbiology, Berlin, Germany 144 S.aureus is one of the major causes of infectious diseases in veterinary medicine, especially in bone and soft-tissue infections. Similar to the threatening development of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in human medicine, these pathogens reached increasing importance in the field of veterinary medicine. MRSA by definition are resistant to the antibacterial activity of the entire class of ß-lactam antibiotics. Frequently, other resistance genes are associated with MRSA, which decreases the options for a successful chemotherapeutic intervention in many cases. In this study, a total of 43 MRSA isolates from infected sites of various animal species (horses, small animals) from different geographical regions in Germany were investigated. MRSA was confirmed by a multiplex PCR, including species verification and the presence of the resistance gene mecA. All MRSA isolates were typed by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) after genomic macrorestriction. Further genetic characterization of representative PFGE types (PFT) was performed by multilocus sequence typing technique (MLST) and PCR procedures for analysing the mecA-harbouring genomic cassette SCCmec. As a result, 13 different PFT occurred among the 43 MRSA isolates. Furthermore, five sequence types (ST), which were already known from human isolates, were assigned to the 13 representative PFT: ST225, ST22; ST8, ST254 and ST239. Analysis of SCCmec typing procedures showed genetic elements in different combinations and composition. Characteristic elements (ccrAB genes, mecI, mecRA-mecRB) of SCCmecIII and SCCmecIV were detected, but also additional ccr-Genes in some strains. These findings supported the suggestion of recombinant SCCmec types in MRSA isolates of animal origin, like it has been reported for human staphylococcal strains before. For factual epidemiological considerations, further investigation of the mobile genetic elements SCCmec derived from MRSA strains of animal origin in detail is needed. ___________________________________________________ MSP11 Bands vs. bases: A critical view on clonal analyses in Escherichia coli H. Wilking1,2, C. Ewers1, M. Achtman1, L. H. Wieler1 1 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany 2 Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute, Institute for Epidemiology Wusterhausen, Germany Avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) are the causative agent of coli septicaemia, associated with high morbidity and mortality in poultry. In addition, evidence is increasing that these extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) are zoonotic, as they share various virulence features with ExPEC strains causing disease in human, namely E. coli causing urinary tract infections in humans (UPEC) as well as strains causing meningitis (NMEC) in children (Ewers et al. 2007 Int. J. Med. Microbiol., 297, 163176). In this study, we initially typed 67 APEC-isolates sampled from different outbreaks mainly in Germany by the use of multi locus sequence typing (MLST) to reveal their phylogenetic relationship with sequence types (STs) of human ExPEC. We revealed a total of 23 different STs. Interestingly, these APEC strains were particularly prominent in two sequence type complexes (ST95 and ST23), which due to the MLST database (http://web.mpiib-berlin.mpg.de/mlst/) also contain human ExPEC. In addition, we analyzed the 67 strains by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) as a highly discriminatory fingerprinting method to compare MLST with PFGE results. Comparing the results of both analytical methods, utilizing TreeMap as a tool to compare two dendrograms of different origin, the clustering trees of both methods revealed significant inconsistencies. This study ascertains the need for appropriate tools in molecular epidemiology of E. coli. These analyses highlight the fact that capabilities and limits of different methods have to be chosen with care when comparing unrelated strains of the species E. coli, otherwise clonal analysis is prone to lead to problematic recommendations regarding risk assessment. ___________________________________________________ MSP12 Typing of German F. tularensis isolates using Multi Locus VNTR Analysis (MLVA) and different mass spectrometric techniques E. Seibold1, K. Mätz-Rensing2, W. D. Splettstoesser1,3 1 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Immunology, Munich 2 German Primate Center, Pathology, Goettingen, Germany 3 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Virology & Hygiene Medical Microbiology, Rostock, Germany Background: Differentiation of the highly virulent F. tularensis subspecies tularensis from the less virulent subspecies holarctica is of substantial clinical interest in areas were both subspecies occur naturally (North America) but maybe even more important regarding the potential use of F. tularensis as a biological warfare agent. For epidemiological studies investigating modes of transmission within enzootic disease circles and routes of the geographical spread of F. tularensis, molecular tools which are able to discriminate between different strains are mandatory. We characterized and typed 16 F. tularensis strains recently isolated in Germany, where tularemia re-emerged in several federal states. Methods: We analyzed 16 different F. tularensis strains isolated between 2004 and 2007 in threes different states from nonhuman primates, hare and water voles by VNTR employing 25 different markers. Results were compared to our BionumericsTM data base comprising more than 200 strains from a worldwide collection of F. tularensis strains. Additionally, protein preparations of representative strains of this collection were analyzed by SELDI-TOF and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Results: Whereas phenotypic spectrometric methods were able to discriminate strains on the subspecies level, differentiation of single strain was not possible. MLVA revealed at last five different genotypes within the group of isolates from Germany. Three genotypes grouped within the Eurasia I cluster, while the remaining strains could not attributed to recently published genotype clusters but showed similarities to single isolates from France. Conclusion: Mass spectrometry may be a valuable tool to identify and discriminate F. tularensis to the subspecies level, which might be sufficient in the clinical setting. For epidemiological or forensic purposes, even the currently applied molecularbiological methods based on MLVA are not sufficient 145 to resolve F. tularensis holarctica to the strain level. However, it was possible to show that distinct genotypes were responsible for two different enzootics in geographically adjacent regions within one county. ___________________________________________________ MSP13 Toxin equipment of Methicillin-rResistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains circulating in Germany C. von Eiff1, F. Hasenberg1, A. W. Friedrich2, G. Peters1 S. Gatermann3, K. Becker4 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany 2 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany 3 University of Bochum, Department of Medical Microbiology Bochum, Germany 4 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany Objectives: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains are one of the leading causes of nosocomial infections. In addition, community-onset infections due to this pathogen continue to be a major public health issue. While MRSA strains are increasingly reported in many countries worldwide, representative nation-wide data in Germany on prevalent clones and their characteristics are not available. Methods: Altogether, 36 Centers throughout Germany (laboratories associated with university and general hospitals, outpatient clinics) were enrolled to collect 50 consecutive MRSA isolates and to respond to a questionnaire. Only one isolate per patient was included. All isolates were spagenotyped and characterized concerning their equipment with virulence factors. Results: In this study, MRSA strains as well as demographic and clinical data from 1753 patients were collected. While only 19 isolates from 13 Centers were found positive for the PantonValentine leukocidin (PVL)-encoding genes, mainly from patients with skin and soft tissue infections (n = 10), nearly all strains (98.5%) were positive for at least one of the pyrogenic toxin superantigen (PTSAg) genes. In contrast to frequently detected enterotoxin genes, only a few strains (n=58; 3%) harbored the TSST-1 encoding gene. Of particular interest, associations between defined PTSAgs and single spa types were revealed, e.g. strains belonging to spa type t008 (n=131) were mainly positive for sea (n=94; 72%), strains belonging to spa type t003 (n=664) were mainly positive for sed (n=600; 90%). Also of note, all t002 strains (n=116) were seg/sei-positive whereas only one fifth (21%) of the t008 strains harbored this gene combination. Conclusion: These data collected during the course of a German multicenter study offer a reliable overview on currently circulating MRSA strains and their toxin possession. While strains harboring genes encoding PVL or TSST-1 are rare, nearly all MRSA strains are positive for at least one of the classical and/or newly described enterotoxin genes. ___________________________________________________ MSV01 New methods to estimate incidence of HIV infections: a pilot study in Berlin 2005 to 2007 – Results and implications for HIV surveillance J. Bätzing-Feigenbaum1, S. Loschen2, S. Gohlke-Micknis1 C. Kücherer2, O. Hamouda1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Department for Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany 2 Robert-Koch-Institute, HIV Variability and Molecular Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany Background: After a decrease of newly diagnosed HIV infections in Germany the number of reported cases increased by >70% from 1.444 in 2001 to 2.486 in 2005. However, these cases do not reflect the true HIV-incidence defined as newly acquired infections. Only part of incident infections is detected by routine clinical carebecause symptoms frequently lack during acute infection and the asymptomatic period can vary considerably. Furthermore attitudes and access to HIV counselling and testing affect detection of infections. Since there are new serological methods (e.g. BED-CEIA) available we aimed to measure recency of HIV infections in newly diagnosed patients. Patients found infected recently were considered as proxies for true incident HIV cases. The data allow real-time analysis ofincident HIV cases in terms of clinical features, attitudes towards HIV/AIDS and risk behaviour. Methods: Venous blood and clinical data were sampled from adults ( 18 years) with newly diagnosed HIV-infections by practitioners and clinics in Berlin. To determine recency of infection samples were tested at the RKI using BED-CEIA (recent: 20 weeks). Data on knowledge, attitudes and behaviour towards HIV/AIDS were collected through patients’ questionnaires (KAB survey). Results: 132 individuals have been enrolled and 118 were MSM (90%) indicating over-sampling of this transmission group. The proportion of recent infections in MSM is 47% (CI [95%]: 38; 56) and 20% (CI [95%]: 0; 41) in patients stating other risks of HIV infection. 30% of recently infected patients had a VL >500.000 copies/ml, 57% had CD4 cells >500/ l compared with 7% and 31%, respectively, in prevalent cases. Symptoms of primary acute infection were reported by 60% of recently infected and 26% of prevalent patients. 66% of recently HIV infected MSM had anonymous sex in the past 6 months. 59% specified not having used condoms because they thought not to be at risk or believed their sexual partner not to be HIV infected, 28% stated problems with condom use. Conclusions: Results suggest a possible delay to test for HIV in women and groups at risk for HIV other than MSM. Asymptomatic seroconversion might contribute to delay in counselling and testing. There are indicators for high risk behaviour with regards to condom use in recently HIV infected MSM. These findings can help adapting prevention strategies to present-day circumstances. In general they underline the importance of extending second generation HIV surveillance in Germany. (Funded by BMG). ___________________________________________________ 146 MSV02 Penicillin resistance of Neisseria lactamica and its impact on meningococci H. Claus1, A. Karch1, U. Vogel1 1 Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany Neisseria spp. are commensals of the human upper nasopharynx. It has been shown that the species share a common gene pool horizontally transferred by transformation. N. lactamica strains isolated in Spain exhibited an intermediate susceptibility to penicillin (Arreaza et al., 2002). Horizontal exchange of the penA gene encoding the penicillin binding protein 2 between commensal and pathogenic Neisseria has been proposed; however, most meningococcal isolates are susceptible to penicillin. It is unclear whether the differing susceptibilities towards penicillin are due to infrequent co-colonization of the host with N. meningitidis and N. lactamica, or the result of major differences at the level of genes involved in penicillin resistance. In this study, we estimated the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for penicillin of more than 100 N. lactamica strains isolated from Bavarian children and teenagers and furthermore sequenced the transpeptidase region of penA. For German isolates, the Spanish observation of elevated MICs in comparison to meningococci was confirmed. PenA sequences obtained in this study were compared to 154 penA alleles identified in meningococcal strains deposited in an international database (http://neisseria.org/). We did not identify mutations in the transpeptidase region of the N. lactamica penA explaining elevated MICs, suggesting a role of other genes in penicillin resistance. Comparative sequence analyses and in vitro selection of penicillin resistant meningococci after transformation with N. lactamica DNA will unravel their identity. ___________________________________________________ MSV03 Infection with serotype 23F is an independent risk factor for pneumococcal meningitis in adults I. Seegmüller1, F. Burckhardt2, M. van der Linden3 R. R. Reinert3 1 University Heidelberg, Hygiene, Heidelberg, Germany 2 Robert-Koch-Institute, Berlin, Germany 3 University Aachen, NRZ für Streptokokken, Aachen, Germany Background: Pneumococcal meningitis is a subgroup of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) with a case-fatality rate of up to 50 percent and long-term sequelae in up to 60 percent of cases in adults. We wanted to determine risk factors for this form of pneumococcal disease. Methods: We conducted a prospective population-based study of invasive pneumococcal disease in North-Rhine-Westphalia, Germany from February 2001 until August 2006. All isolates underwent serotyping and resistance testing in the National Reference Center for Streptococci in Aachen, Germany. Data were analysed using multiple logistic-regression. Results: 1043 isolates from bacteraemia and 131 isolates from meningitis could be included into the study. Age, serotype and gender were independent risk factors. Old age (more than 60 years) was associated with a reduced odds ratio for pneumococcal meningitis whereas being female was associated with and increased odds ratio. Although serotype 14 was the most common serotype it was not associated with an increased odds ratio for central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Serotype 23F, however, increased the odds ratios for CNS involvement twofold whereas serotype 1 decreased the odds ratio by four. Season, penicillin and macrolide resistance were not statistically associated with CNS involvement. Conclusion: Infection with serotype 23F is an independent risk factor for pneumococcal meningitis. IPD with serotype 1 and old age protect against pneumococcal meningitis, whereas being female increases the risk for central nervous system involvement in invasive pneumococcal disease. Neither season of infection nor antibiotic resistance have influence on CNS invasion. ___________________________________________________ MSV04 Seroprevalence and reservoirs of leptospirosis in Conakry (Guinea) S. Zimmermann1, A. ter Meulen2, E. Fichet-Calvet3 L. Koivogui4, O. Sylla4, M. Goris5, R. Haartskerl5 J. ter Meulen6 1 Institute of Hygiene, Heidelberg, Germany 2 GTZ, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 3 Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France 4 University of Conakry, Department of Micorbiology, Conakry Rep. Guinea 5 Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen, Amsterdam, Netherlands 6 Leiden University Medical Center, Dept. of Microbiology Leiden, Netherlands From September to December 2001, an urban outbreak of febrile jaundice revealed 107 cases in Conakry. Among them, 16 were diagnosed with acute leptospirosis. Because this disease is probably underdiagnosed in this country, a pilot study was undertaken in 2004 in Conakry, with an investigation of both humans and small mammals. Sera from 1200 human subjects were screened for leptospirosis antibodies to estimate the incidenceand identify risk factors for transmission. In parallel, rodents were trapped in households to identify the reservoir animals of the disease. A cross-sectional serologic survey was carried out in 5 resource poor urban neighbourhoods in Conakry, Guinea. A detailed questionnaire was completed to document demographic and environmental risk factors. Leptospirosis specific IgM and IgG levels were detected by ELISA and confirmed with MAT testing. The trapped rodents were taxonomically identified and one kidney was collected for detection of leptospires by culture and PCR testing. A nested PCR with a high sensitivity was performed. PCR positive samples were confirmed using different typing PCRs. 7 percent of study subjects were positive for leptospira antibodies. Preliminary epidemiological analysis revealed as risk factors for leptospira IgM antibodies: (i) living in a neighbourhood from which leptospirosis cases were reported in 2001 (ii) use of tap water for washing and bathing (iii) living close to a waste pipe (iv) history of hospitalisation during the 147 past rainy season. 330 rodents were trapped within the 5 neighbourhoods. Rattus rattus and Mus musculus were the most frequent species, but in addition some Crocidura and Mastomys spp. were identified. In five of the kidney samples leptospiral DNA was detected by nested PCR. This survey shows that a significant percentage of the population of Conakry is exposed to leptospirosis. Transmission probably occurs through leptospira infested water on the domestic compounds, with rodents as one possible reservoir. As the outbreak in 2001 shows, there is an urgent need for further identification of the main reservoir(s) of the disease and environmental control measures. ___________________________________________________ MSV05 Emergence of MRSA spa type t011 in the Dutch-German border region EUREGIO Twente/Muensterland R. Köck1, A. Mellmann1, M. G. R. Hendrix2, I. Daniels-Haardt3 H. Karch1, R. Lärberg1, C. von Eiff4, G. Peters4, K. Becker4 A. W. Friedrich1 1 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Hygiene, Muenster Germany 2 Laboratory Microbiology Twente-Achterhoek, Enschede Netherlands 3 Landesinstitut für den oeffentlichen Gesundheitsdienst (LOEGD) NRW, Muenster, Germany 4 University Hospital Muenster, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Muenster, Germany The project EUREGIO MRSA-net comprises the Dutch-German border area Twente/Muensterland in which the prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is unequally distributed. On the German side of the border, MRSA strains are widespread, whereas the prevalence in the Dutch neighbouring region remains 20-fold lower since many years. Nevertheless, more recently, in Netherlands an increase of MRSA isolated from patients in the community not belonging to typical risk groups for MRSA carriage has been observed. Since regional surveillance of the molecular MRSA epidemiology provides the basis for controlling MRSA dissemination and the prevention of cross-border transmission, MRSA recovered from screening samples and clinical specimens of hospital inpatients in the EUREGIO Twente/Muensterland (http://www.mrsa-net.org) were collected from September 1st, 2005 to February 28th, 2007 using a standardized protocol. To assess the molecular epidemiology, all MRSA isolates were spa sequence-typed. During the 18-month period, we observed an increase of MRSA isolates exhibiting spa-type t011 on both sides of the border. During three half-year terms, the t011 clone represented 3.0%, 9.4%, and 9.3% of all isolates in the German and 0%, 4.8%, and 35% in the Dutch part of the region, respectively. Of 45 MRSA isolates representing t011, 36 were recovered from nasopharyngeal screening samples while only 9 derived from various clinical specimens (wound swabs, n=4; tracheal fluids, n=2; others n=3). So far, MRSA t011 has not been reported as a frequent clone in German hospitals. In contrast, several recent reports described an emergence of MRSA t011 colonisations and infections in Dutch pigs. As transmissions between pigs and humans have already been shown in Netherlands, the impact of animal sources as potential reservoirs of MRSA t011 in the community and the prevalence of t011 in human carriers within the DutchGerman EUREGIO Twente/Muensterland warrants further studies. ___________________________________________________ MSV06 Phylogenetic analysis of extraintestinal E. coli (ExPEC) reveals a close relationship between isolates of human and animal origin, urging a zoonotic potential of distinct phylotypes C. Ewers1, H. Wilking1,2, M. Achtman3, L. H. Wieler1 1 Free University Berlin, Institute for Microbiology and Epizootics, Berlin, Germany 2 Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Institute for Epidemiology Wusterhausen, Germany 3 Max-Planck-Institut for Infection Biology, Department of Molecular Biology, Berlin, Germany Although extraintestinal E. coli (ExPEC) are a common cause of morbidity and mortality in man as well as in animals, reliable identification, pathogenicity, as well as risk assessment of their zoonotic potential is far from being defined. So far, single ExPEC pathovars (uropathogenic E. coli; UPEC, newborn meningitis E. coli; NMEC, avian pathogenic E. coli; APEC) have been defined based on the host species and infection site as well as by their virulence properties. Virulence typing has led to the identification of several pathogenicity islands and virulence associated factors shared among strains of each single pathovar, however this typing was unable to define unique virulence features, explaining the host specificity of each pathovar. Multi locus sequence typing (MLST) of 150 ExPEC strains revealed a remarkable dichotomy with some strains spreading all over the E.coli population and the majority accumulating in distinct phylogenetic clusters [clonal complex ST95 (CC-ST95), CCST23, CC-ST73, ST117 and ST62]. Highly pathogenic avian E.coli strains cluster at three different points on the evolutionary tree (ST95-Cplx; ST29-Cplx, and ST117), strongly suggesting the possibility of multiple origins of APEC. Likewise, the MLST-database has revealed the co-existence of APEC, NMEC and UPEC strains in common sequence types, while identical phylotypes have mostly been grouped under ST95, a sequence type that is highly linked to capsular polysaccharide K1 and several ExPEC-associated virulence genes. The appearance of multiple clusters within the three ExPEC pathovars, which are nowadays universally distributed, indicates an independent and parallel evolution over millions of years, putatively leading to different pathogenic mechanisms and special epidemiological behaviour of single phylotypes. MLSTanalysis ascertains the zoonotic potential of APEC as a direct infectious agent, a reservoir for recurrently emerging clones, and as a distributor for virulence factors. Preliminary data derived from animal infection studies also indicate the pathogenic significance of NMEC in chickens, corroborating the indistinct determination of ExPEC pathovars. ___________________________________________________ 148 MSV07 Mycobacteria MIRU-VNTRplus: Online database for identification of M. tuberculosis complex isolates based on MIRU, SPOLIGO, and regions of difference data S. Niemann1, T. Weniger2, D. Harmsen2, P. Supply3 1 Research Center Borstel, Natl. Reference Ctr. Mycobacteria, Borstel, Germany 2 Univ. Hosp. Muenster, Dept. Periodontology, Muenster Germany 3 Inst. Pasteur de Lille, Lille, France PFGE types of isolates of Listeria monocytogenes originating from human cases have been compared with those of isolates coming from various food items. The human isolates do not belong to a single cluster but are rather individual in each patient. Furthermore, there are no genetic similarities between human and environmental isolates. Obviously, no outbreak due to a particular food item has been documented. But definitely more human isolates are required to describe the actual epidemiology of listeriosisin Germany. ___________________________________________________ Background: Molecular typing of bacteria from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) is essential for epidemiological purposes such as investigating the spreading of specific genotypes. Recently, mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (MIRU) typing has become an important method, as it allows high-throughput, discriminatory and reproducible analysis of clinical isolates. Because of its portable data format, MIRU typing has the potential to be a versatile tool for individual strain identification based on large reference databases. However, so far no public MIRU database with well characterized reference strains is available. Methods: A collection of 177 strains representing the major MTBC lineages was used to build up an internet based database. For each strain epidemiologic and genotype information was stored together with copy numbers of 24 MIRU loci, spoligotyping patterns, regions of difference (RD) profiles, and IS6110 RFLP fingerprint images. Results: Via the freely accessible new service users can compare their strain(s) with the reference strains or analyze their strains without using the database content. Comparisons can be based on single MIRU-, spoligo-, RD-typing data, or by a combination of different datasets. If a combined analysis is performed, weights can be assigned to the different methods. For each comparison, a list of the reference strains most similar to the submitted strain can be displayed, thereby allowing MTBC species and lineage classification. Several distance coefficients are available, including Nei’s DA, and categorical. Based upon the respective distance matrix, a dendogram can be calculated using UPGMA or neighbor-joining clustering algorithms. The resulting trees may be exported in various data formats. Conclusion: The new MIRU-VNTRplus database offers an easy way to compare user strains against a collection of well characterized reference strains. As one additional novel feature, combinations of typing methods can be used for comparison. The open database can be accessed via the internet at http://www.MIRU-VNTRplus.org. ___________________________________________________ RKP02 The effect of hospital volume on surgical site infection rates following orthopeadic procedures: What seems to be the most appropriate threshold? D. Weitzel-Kage1, S. Dorit1, M. Behnke1, P. Gastmeier2 1 Charité-Berlin-University Medicine, Institute for Hygiene and Environment Medicine, Berlin, Germany 2 Medical University Hanover, Institute for medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Hanover, Germany RKP01 Epidemiology of listeriosis - a changing pattern H. Hof1, B. Becker2 1 University Hospital Mannheim, Inst. Med. Microbiology Mannheim, Germany 2 Bundesforschungsanstalt für Ernaehrung, Inst. Hygiene Karlsruhe, Germany In the last few years the numbers of registered cases of listeriosis in Germany has dramatically increased. This is particularly due to the incidence in aged patients. Hence, the Background: A lot of individual patient risk factors for surgical site infections (SSI) have been analysed in the past, but the number of studies investigating the influence of structural factors like annual procedure volume on SSI rates is limited. Objective: To investigate the effect of hospital volume on the SSI rate for hip and knee replacement and arthroscopic operations. Method: Data of the German national surveillance system for nosocomial infections (KISS) have been used for this analysis. A total of 34,579 hip replacement procedures from 77 hospitals, 29,237 knee replacement procedures from 56 hospitals and 16,642 arthroscopic operations from 24 hospitals (between January 2001 and June 2006) have been included in this analysis. Thresholds of 50 and 100 procedures per year have been used to distinguish between high and low volume institutions. SSI rates were calculated according to these thresholds and logistic regression analyses have been performed controlling for age, gender, duration of operation, wound class, ASA score and hospital volume. Results: Using an annual number of 50 procedures per year as a threshold, the SSI rate following knee replacement was 1.9% in lower volume hospitals and 1.0% in hospitals with more than 50 procedures per year (p=0.02). The logistic regression analysis confirmed the significant association between higher provider volume and lower SSI rates for knee replacement (OR= 1.67), but not for hip replacement and arthroscopic operations. When using 100 procedures as a threshold, a sigificant association between higher volume and low SSI rates was found for knee replacement (OR=1.42), hip replacement (OR=2.04) and arthroscopic procedures (OR= 1.98). Conclusion: From the viewpoint of SSI prevention an uncontrolled expansion of orthopeadic procedures to small hospitals should be avoided, the annual hospital volume should be at least 50 procedures, preferably about 100. ___________________________________________________ 149 RKP03 Emergence of monophasic Salmonella enterica serovar 4,5,12:i:- phage type DT193 in Germany with a characteristic 19kb island in thrW locus W. Rabsch1, J. Laverde-Gomez1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Department Wernigerode, Wernigerode Germany Salmonella enterica are one of the most common causes of foodborne gastroenteritis with 52000 cases in 2005 and 2006 in Germany. Recently in Europe, most human cases have been due to serovars S. Enteritidis, typically associated with hen-eggs and chicken and S. Typhimurium, typically associated with pork or beef. Monophasic multidrug-resistant Salmonella enterica serovar 4,5,12:i:- phage type DT193 has become one of the dominant serovar during 2006 in Germany causing some large diffuse outbreaks with increased hospitalization. Locally produced pork meat is suspected to have been the vehicle for transmission causing substantial morbidity in children and elderly people. We look for virulence differences to the sequenced S. Typhimurium (4,[5],12:i:1,2) LT2 to which it is closely related to but lacks the second-phase flagellar antigen. In the t-RNA thrW locus a 19kb island with lower G+C content is present. We produced a PCR product by long range PCR and sequenced that fragment. The sequence analysis shows some similarities with enterobacterial phage sequences and some possibly pathogenicity related genes. A multilex PCR for occupancy of the thrW locus by other phages or this island is developed. ___________________________________________________ RKP04 Report of the national reference Center for Streptococci, 2005-2006 M. van der Linden1, R. R. Reinert1, C. Heeg1, R. Lütticken1 I. Seegmüller1, A. Al-Lahham1 1 University Hospital RWTH Aachen, National Reference Center for Streptococci, Aachen, Germany In the years 2005 and 2006 the NRCS received 5.249 streptococcal strains for identification and as part of epidemiological studies. The NRCS was actively involved in national and international surveillance studies on invasive and non-invasive streptococcal infections. In 2006 the surveillance study on invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae in North RhineWestphalia was extended to Saxony and Bavaria. Several quality management and assurance measurements were established: SOPs are now available for most of the standardized test procedures in the field of streptococci. Since 1997 the level of penicillin G resistance in streptococci in Germany has been rising. However, in 2005 we observed a small decrease in the level of resistance, and this decrease continued in 2006. Macrolide resistance is increasingly seen in isolates from invasive pneumococcal disease. Especially in very young children, macrolide resistance is a growing problem, with more than 30% of isolates now being resistant. The macrolide resistance levels also show a slightly decreasing tendency in 2005 and 2006. Furthermore, in 2006 a new surveillance system of vaccine failures after a 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccination was initiated and determination of pneumococcal antibodies against single antigens according to the WHO standard is now provided by the NRCS. Nine outbreaks and cases of suspected hospital transmission of streptoccocci and enterococci were carefully analysed by the NRCS. The strain collection of the NRCS now comprises 29.796 isolates, including 25.016 Streptococcus isolates. Reference strains have been distributed to several working groups in Germany and abroad. Of note, the surveillance systems of the NRCS were adapted to the recent STIKO recommendation to vaccinate all children against pneumococcal disease with the 7-valent pneumoccal conjugate vaccine. The surveillance in children and adults was extended to detect herd immunity effects, replacement, cases of vaccine failures and reduction in the overall incidence of pneumococcal disease. Several projects are planned for the future: Surveillance on S. agalactiae disease in Germany, international cooperation in the 7th EU framework (CAREPNEUMO), two streptococcal genome projects, full MLST data on invasive isolates in children. ___________________________________________________ RKP05 Lessons from ResiNet and treatment recommendations provided by the national reference Center for Helicobacter pylori N. Wüppenhorst1, H. - P. Stüger2, B. Hobmaier1, M. Kist1 1 Institute for Medical Microbiology und Hygiene, Nationales Referenzzentrum für Helicobacter pylori, Freiburg Germany 2 AGES, Österreichische Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit, Graz, Austria In 2001 the German National Reference Center for H. pylori (Hp) launched a nationwide sentinel study on the surveillance of development and risk factors of antimicrobial resistance in Hp (ResiNet). A database was established containing information about antibiotic resistance of the individual isolate, prior eradication regimes, and socioeconomic characteristics of study patients. In addition gastric biopsies from routine patients were investigated. From all isolates, which were cultured from those patients, resistance pattern was determined using the Etest® method. To investigate the outcome of the patients involved, and to get more information concerning the efficacy of the individually applied treatment regimes, we decided to develop a follow-up study. The aim of this study is to determine which eradication therapy is most successful in a given setting of antimicrobial resistance, and finally to establish evidence-based recommendations for Hp eradication therapy. For this purpose gastroenterologists participating in ResiNet as well as such sending routine samples are asked to complete respective questionnaires for each investigated patient three months after gastroduodenoscopy. In the questionnaire they are asked to provide information on the treatment scheme applied, as well as on the outcome of the therapy. Furthermore they are asked whether confirmation of Hp eradication was performed. At the time point of abstract submission 158/190 and 167/256 questionnaires were completed and resent by gastroenterologists 150 participating in ResiNet and those sending routine samples respectively. ___________________________________________________ RKP06 Clinical management of Helicobacter pylori–infection: Impact of first multivariate analysis data from the nationwide sentinel study ResiNet M. Kist1, E. Glocker1, B. Hobmaier1, N. Wüppenhorst1 H. - P. Stüger2 1 Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Nationale Reference Center for Helicobacter pylori, Freiburg Germany 2 AGES, Österreichische Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernaehrungssicherheit, Graz, Austria The recently published International Maastricht Consensus III recommends proton pump inhibitors combined with clarithromycin (CLA) and amoxicillin or metronidazole (MTZ) as first line regimes in H. pylori (Hp)-infection. Furthermore, culture and sensitivity testing of Hp is not recommended before second treatment failure. On the other hand, use of CLA is discouraged in settings with resistance rates of more than 1520% without prior sensitivity testing. The same is true if resistance to MTZ exceeds 40% in the respective population. The aim of the nationwide study ResiNet, which was launched by the National Reference Center (NRZ) for Hp in 2001, is to monitor and to prospectively investigate risk factors for the development of antimicrobial resistance in Hp. For this purpose the NRZ recruited 16 microbiological Centers (MC), each collaborating with 3 to 7 gastroenterologists (GE) in clinical practice. At the end of April 2007 a total of 850 patients were completely investigated. Overall 39.4% and 21.8 % of isolates were resistant against MTZ or CLA respectively, and 15.3% showed double-resistances against both drugs. The proportions of primary resistance (N=570) were 28.1% (MTZ), 6.3% (CLA), 3.3% (MTZ and CLA) and 14.7% (CIP). However, in patients pre-treated once (N=94) resistance rates had increased significantly to 52.1% (MTZ), 52.1% (CLA), and 29.8% (MTZ and CLA). Repeated pre-treatment (N=91) was associated with further increase of double-resistances up to 69.2% to MTZ and CLA, clearly indicating that a significant increase in resistance to MTZ and CLA already occurs after the first treatment failure. Multivariate analysis in addition revealed pre-treatment as highly significant independent risk factors for developing resistance to CLA (OR 89.8) as well as to MTZ (OR 29.6). In conclusion, these results underline the hypothesis that development of resistance in Hp in contrast to other pathogens is nearly exclusively dependent on treatment strategies in the individual patient. Further, the data clearly demonstrate that culture and sensitivity testing of Hp from gastric biopsies – in contrast to Maastricht 2005 - should be mandatory already after the first treatment failure, because already at that stage resistance rates exceed 50% for both drugs, CLA and MTZ. ___________________________________________________ RKP07 Field investigations for the detection of animal reservoirs of Francisella tularensis in three different endemic areas of Germany P. Kaysser1, E. Seibold1, K. Maetz-Rensing2, S. Essbauer3 W.D. Splettstoesser1,4 1 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Immunology, Munich Germany 2 German Primate Center, Pathology, Goettingen, Germany 3 Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Virology, Munich Germany 4 Institute of Medical Microbiology, Virology & Hygiene Medical Microbiology, Rostock, Germany Background: Within the last three years, tularemia re-emerged in different regions of Germany. Two outbreaks affected nonhuman primate research facilities in the vicinity of Goettingen, Lower Saxony. An outbreak in humans occurred in a group of hare hunters in the county of Darmstadt-Dieburg, Hessen. The reason for the re-emergence of this highly virulent pathogen in Germany as well as the potential reservoir in wildlife is unknown. Methods: Field investigations including the description of the ecological and geographical features of the outbreak regions, live trapping of different rodent species and on spot sample preparation (blood samples) were conducted. Tissue and organ preparation were performed in a standard laboratory environment. All specimens were screened by a highly sensitive real-time PCR and different antigen detection assays (hand-held test kit, ELISA). Positive samples were additionally cultured according to standard microbiological protocols supporting the growth of F. tularensis. Detection of F. tularensis LPS specific antibodies was performed employing an ELISA. Results: All outbreak areas showed several geographic and ecological characteristics known to favor long-term presence of F. tularensis (Alluvial forests, low precipitation, mean annual temperature above 10°C). A total of more than 400 rodents of several different species from all three areas were analysed. In at least 14 different rodents, F. tularensis could be directly detected by PCR or other diagnostic methods. In two cases F. tularensis could be grown from the spleen or liver from infected mice. Water voles represented the predominantly affected species. Conclusions: We could prove that tularemia is still endemic in wildlife in Germany. In at least one affected region, the infection rate in live trapped rodents was as high as 7%. From the lack of detection of specific antibodies, we presume that tularemia is an acute, mainly fatal infection in rodents. The role of water, free living amoebae and ticks as a reservoir for F. tularensis between consecutive enzootics as well as the geographical distribution of this pathogen in different German states is currently investigated. ___________________________________________________ 151 RKP08 OPS 8-987: useful tools in documentation and surveillance T. Pietzcker1, B. Gaertner2, E. Kniehl3, L. Leitritz4, H. Mauch5 E. Straube6 1 University Hospital, Ulm, Germany 2 University Hospital Saarland, Institute for Virology Homburg, Germany 3 Clinic Karlsruhe, ZLMT – Department of Microbiology and Hygiene, Karlsruhe, Germany 4 bioscientia Labor Ingelheim, Ingelheim, Germany 5 HELIOS Clinic Emil-von-Behring, Institute for Microbiology, Immunology and Laboratory Medicine, Berlin Germany 6 Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Institute for Medical Microbiology, Jena, Germany OPS 8-987 (complex treatment of colonisation or infection by multiresistant bacteria) was introduced in 2006 and is reimbursed since 2007 in G-DRG. Adherence to infection control regulations and documentation of at least 2 hours daily additional workload per patient are required for coding OPS 8987. We present several edp-supported tools to document adherence and to document the workload as well as the new recommendation of "Deutsche Krankenhausgesellschaft" and "Spitzenverbaende der GKV" which facilitates workload documentation. ___________________________________________________ RKP09 National reference Center for tropical infections S. Kramme1, M. Panning1, S. Günther1, E. Tannich1 C. Drosten1, B. Fleischer1 1 Bernhard-Nocht-Institute, Hamburg, Germany The National Reference Center for Tropical Infections deals with tropical viruses including the haemorrhagic fever viruses, Protozoa, helminths, tropical bacteria such as M. leprae and M. ulcerans, rickettsia and tropical fungi. For many of these agents few established and standardised assay systems do exist. To meet the demands of modern diagnostic assays the NRC works on the establishment and improvement of systems and cooperates with industry. Among others new PCR assays with improved specificity and sensitivity were validated. These include assays for the detection of intestinal parasites, Filoviruses, Lassavirus and rickettsia. A real-time PCR test to measure the viral load of tropical HIV-1 subtypes was established and evaluated in several developing countries. Several of these assays were brought to the market as test kits in cooperation with industry, e.g. real-time PCRs for Filoviruses or plasmodia. The NRC is a WHO Collaborating Center for Arbovirus and Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Reference and Research. Furthermore it is a member of European networks for the diagnosis of imported viral diseases and the WHO SARS Laboratory Network. A close collaboration with the United Nations exists for the analysis of suspected cases of haemorrhagic fever in the context with the UNAMSIL-Mission in Sierra Leone. The NRC has set up a reporting office for infections with Entamoeba histolytica to obtain information about the occurrence of imported and autochthonous infections. Since this infection is not notifiable no data about its prevalence in Germany exist. In the reporting period 67 reports were received. The NRC was a leading participant in the clarification of transmission of leishmaniasis and rabies after organ transplantation and of several cases of rare parasite infections in Germany. A case of imported Lassa fever in 2006 and imported Rabies in 2007 were diagnosed and investigated at the NRC. The NRC is strongly engaged in various quality assurance activities. It is the organizer of the quality assessment exercises for parasite detection in Germany and participated in large international studies in parasitology. Several external quality assurance studies were performed in collaboration with Robert Koch Institute, e.g. on CrimeanCongo Hemorrhagic Fever virus, Chikungunyavirus and poxvirus infections. The first international quality assessment study for the detection of West Nile virus was performed and evaluated in collaboration with RKI. ___________________________________________________ RKP10 The national reference center for retroviruses H. Walter1, K. Korn1, K. Metzner1, R. Grassmann1 B. Fleckenstein1 1 University Hospital Erlangen, Virologisches Institut Erlangen, Germany The National Reference Center for Retroviruses has pursued its broad spectrum of activities in the fields of HIV/AIDS and human T cell leukemia viruses (HTLV) by the development of additional methods for the analysis of the relatively uncommon retroviruses HIV-2, HTLV-1, and HTLV-2. and specific methods for the monitoring of infected patients are usually not available as commercially available test kits. Another major epidemiologic focus is the investigation of transmitted drug-resistant HIV-1. A very fruitful cooperation with the Robert-Koch-Institute has been established in national and international seroconverter studies. The development of methods for the detection and quantification of minority species of HIV-1 allowed more sensitive analyses of transmission events and the dynamics of viral infection during antiretroviral therapy. We could show that the transmission of drug-resistant viruses may be substantially underestimated by the use of conventional methods alone. Current investigations aim to evaluate the clinical relevance of drug resistant minorities. Most recently we could show that the occurrence of drug resistance in very early phases of treatment did not necessarily lead to therapy failure. Additonally, the interpretation of complex HIV resistance data became more and more important. Thus, the freely available geno2pheno system for the prediction of resistance was fortified by a clinical validation. However, such database-driven bioinformatic system have some disadvantages, e.g. with the interpretation of rare mutational patterns. Therefore, a new rules-based interpretation system for genotypic HIV-1 drug resistance data (HIV-GRADE) has been develpoed and validated by a group of German clinical virologists under the guidance of the NRC. HIV-GRADE is online freely available and may become a standard for laboratories performing HIV-1 drug resistance testing in Germany. 152 With regard to advisory activities and visibility, the quarterly “Retrovirus-Bulletin” provides scientific and clinical information focusing on HIV and AIDS and other retroviral infections. Its readership comprises physicians specialized in HIV medicine, public health and laboratory professionals and members of the HIV community. ___________________________________________________ RKP11 Consulting laboratory for Hemolytic-Uremic-Syndrome (HUS) A. W. Friedrich1, M. Bielaszewska1, W. Zhang1, O. Böhler1 A. Lagemann1, R. Fischer1, A. Mellmann1, H. Karch1 1 University of Muenster, Institute of Hygiene, Muenster Germany Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) are the major cause of hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) in childhood. E. coli O157:H7 is the most important pathogenic serotype worldwide, and accounts for more than 50% of all HUSassociated EHEC infections in Germany. Furthermore, additional 15% of HUS cases are caused by sorbitol-fermenting (SF) EHEC O157:H-. This serotype differs from classical EHEC O157:H7 in its pheno- and genotype, its epidemiology and clinical importance, and was responsible for several large outbreaks in Europe. In contrast to EHEC O157:H7, SF O157:H- do ferment sorbitol and are therefore not detected on sorbitol MacConkey agar frequently used for the isolation of EHEC O157:H7. Major tasks of the consulting laboratory are bacteriological, serological and molecular biological analyses of specimens from patients with EHEC infections. In addition, we perform detailed phenotypical (e.g. toxin expression) and molecular characterisation of the clinical isolates. We use a molecular assay based on the fimbriae-encoding sfpA gene to detect SF EHEC O157:H- directly from the patient’s stools. Subtyping of Shiga toxin genes (stx) is of a clinical importance, since specific stx-subtypes (stx1, stx2, stx2c and stx2dact) are significantly associated with the development of HUS. stxsubtyping can therefore be used for risk assessment and as a prognostic marker for the clinical outcome of the infection. Furthermore, we investigate the presence of IgM antibodies against the lipopolysaccharides of the major EHEC serotypes associated with HUS, which is especially useful in HUS patients with EHEC-negative stool cultures. Finally, we provide consulting services for patients, physicians, and public health authorities. Because of the clinical impact and the lack of specific therapy for EHEC-associated diseases, the development of new diagnostic tools, the identification of reservoirs and transmission routes, and the characterisation of pathogenicity of different EHEC are of major importance. The consulting laboratory for HUS in Muenster works on these tasks in close collaboration with the National Reference Center for Salmonella and other enteric pathogens at the Robert Koch Institute in Wernigerode. ___________________________________________________ RKP12 Sequence based typing of Legionella pneumophila strains isolated from patients in Germany: Common feature and differences to other countries and regions P. C. Lück1, F. Görlach1,2, J. Borchardt2, J. Helbig1 1 Technical University of Dresden, Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Dresden Germany Legionella pneumophila is commonly detected in environmental specimens. If transmitted to susceptible persons it can cause pneumonia (Legionaires’ disease). In order to detect the source of the infection reliably and rapidly genetic typing of clinical and environmental strains must be performed. Currently a seven locus sequence-based typing scheme (flaA, pilE, asd, mip, ompS, proA, neuA) for the epidemiological typing of clinical and environmental isolates of Legionella pneumophila has been developed by the European Working Group on Legionella Infections and made available on the web (www.ewgli.org). This typing scheme is applicable to all L. pneumophila serogroups and can be performed using cultivated Legionella strains but also directly from DNA preparations from clinical samples. We typed 185 L. pneumophila strains isolated from patients with travel-associated, community- acquired, or nosocomial legionellosis. 136 of these strains belonged to serogroup 1, and 49 to other serotypes. In 36 cases sets of related strains proved the environmental source to be the source of the infection. The a significant number of clinical isolates (33%) strains belonged to five sequence types which has been found in clinical isolates different countries. However there are differences in the distribution in different regions in the world. Thus several clones found in Germany seem to be unique. Our study supports the hypothesis that a significant part of clinical cases in Germany is caused by defined L. pneumophila clones that are distributed throughout the world. ___________________________________________________ RKP13 Clostridium difficile - molecular and functional analysis of naturally occurring variations in the putative negative toxin regulator Gene tcdC J. Fritzsche1, B. Waidner1, T. Giesemann2, B. Scherer1, M. Kist1 1 University Hospital Freiburg, Institute for Med. Microbiology and Hygiene, Department for Microbiology and Hygiene Nationale Reference Center for Helicobacter pylori, Freiburg Germany 2 University Hospital Freiburg, Institute for Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Freiburg, Germany Since 2001 ongoing spreading of a highly virulent Clostridium difficile (Cd) strain (Ribotyp 027, Toxinotyp III, 18 bp-deletion in the putative negative regulator gene tcdC) is observed. The epidemic strain was first detected in the United States, from there spreading over Canada and England, and reaching Western Europe in 2005. In the meantime it has been detected in Netherlands, Belgium, France, Switzerland, and recently in Austria and Poland. During the same period a case-control-study on epidemiological risk factors and molecular virulence of nosocomial Cd153 associated diarrhea was carried out at the Freiburg University Medical Center (granted by the BMBF), resulting in Cd isolates from 600 study patients, and 400 patients investigated routinely during the same time period. From all isolates (N=1000), including three epidemic strains from Belgium and Switzerland as positive controls, PCR-based ribotyping, and in addition, molecular analysis of the putative negative regulator gene tcdC was carried out using PCR and molecular sequencing. Isolates with respective variations were further analysed phenotypically applying a Vero cytotoxicity assay, and a quantitative ELISA toxin assay, which was adapted for this purpose. In a total of 35 isolates the same 18 bp deletion as found in the epidemic strains was detected. However in no case those isolates belonged to the epidemic ribotype 027. A total of 70 isolates presented with an already known 39 bp deletion, but in 19 isolates a 54 bp deletion was detected, which had not been described before. All “novel” deletions were further investigated by molecular sequencing. Growth curves performed from truncated and wild type strains were not significantly different. The already known 18 bp deletion was associated with an up to 2.2 fold increase in toxicity measured by the ELISA, however the toxic effect was more pronounced (about 10fold) if the verocell cytotoxicity test was applied. Surprisingly, cytotoxin production of isolates with deletions of 39 and 54 bp was markedly reduced, reaching zero in some cases. In conclusion, the functional impact of the putative regulator gene tcdC needs further investigation. ___________________________________________________ RKP14 Biofilm-grown Klebsiella pneumoniae capsular type 2 induces higher stimulation of polymorphonuclear leucocytes than planktonic bacteria R. Podschun1, S. Hany1 1 Christian-Albrechts-University, Institute for Infection Medicine, Kiel, Germany The biofilm-growth mode of bacteria is considered to mediate enhanced resistance to antibiotics and to modify virulence. In Klebsiella pneumoniae, the major virulence factor is the production of a polysaccharide capsule, capsular types K1 and K2 being the most virulent serotypes. K2 inhibits phagocytosis and killing by polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL). The present study investigates whether biofilm grown and planktonic K2 bacteria differ with respect to interaction with PMNL. Two clinical K. pneumoniae K2 isolates and their noncapsulated variants were examined for their ability to induce respiratory burst induction in human PMNL. The chemiluminescence response (CL) was taken as a gauge of leucocyte stimulation. Surprisingly, stimulation by biofilmgrown bacteria was significantly increased compared to planktonic cells (median CL values 38.3 vs. 22.3; P<0.001). The effect observed was independent of composition of the culture media used. Biofilm enhanced PMNL stimulation was not due to reduced capsular production as the amounts of glucuronic acid in capsular preparations from planktonic and biofilm-grown bacteria were equivalent (3.8 vs. 4.1 µg/109 bacteria; P>0.1). In contrast to K2 capsulated strains, in biofilm-grown noncapsulated variants a significantly decreased stimulation of PMNL compared to planktonic cells was observed (median CL values 53.6 vs. 78.5; P<0.01). The expression of K2 capsules furthermore diminished the early phase of biofilm formation as determined by measuring bacterial adhesion to microtitres plates (OD578nm 0.03 vs. 0.17; P<0.0001). Our findings suggest that expression of Klebsiella capsules in the biofilm-growth mode might render the bacteria more susceptible to interaction with PMNL, but the nature of this finding remains unclear at this stage and needs to be further investigated. ___________________________________________________ RKV01 Analysis of a cross-border rise in Incidence of serogroup B invasive meningococcal disease affecting Netherlands and Germany J. Elias1, L. Schouls2, I. van de Pol2, M. Schroeter3, M. Frosch1 U. Vogel1, A. van der Ende4 1 Institute for Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 National Institute of Public Health and the Environment Bilthoven, Netherlands 3 Landesinstitut für den Oeffentlichen Gesundheitsdienst NRW (loegd), Muenster, Germany 4 Netherlands Reference Laboratory for Bacterial Meningitis (AMC/RIVM), Amsterdam, Netherlands Automated finetype-specific spatiotemporal analyis repeatedly identified an unusually high concentration of meningococci of the finetype B:P1.7-2,4:F1-5:ST-42:cc41/44 in the region of Greater Aachen (counties of Aachen, Dueren, and Heinsberg, population: 1.1m). Further analyses confirmed the predominance of this finetype within this region (63% compared to 13% in the rest of Germany, 2005) and an approximately threefold (2005) incidence of invasive meningococcal disease compared to the rest of Germany. The question was raised whether this community outbreak represented a delayed spillover of the hyperendemic situation starting in Netherlands in the 1980ies. Serogroup B strains isolated in Netherlands, in North-Rhine Westphalia and in Lower Saxony in 2000-2006 were screened for ST-41/44 using a lineage specific PCR (Bart et al FEMS Microbiol Lett 2000). The PCR positive strains were subjected to MLST and to MLVA analysis (Schouls et al. J Clin Microbiol 2006). Results were visualized on geographic maps. MLST revealed an accumulation of ST-42 in four counties around Aachen, and in the province of Limburg. Moreover, MLVA suggested an increased case number due to MT-19 in the Aachen area. Only the combined use of MLST and MLVA clearly segregated a clone with ST-42 and MT-19, which accounted for the majority of cases in Greater Aachen, while being almost absent in the rest of the two German Federal states. The clone was more prevalent in the province of Limburg than in the rest of Netherlands, but geographic mapping suggests that it emerged as an independent descendant of the ST-41/44 complex in the Aachen area. Antigen fine typing was of pivotal importance for the identification of the outbreak of meningococcal disease. In this particular scenario, combined application of MLST and MLVA was crucial for the elucidation of the emerging strains origin. The visualization of bi-lateral geographic data in this investigation enhanced data interpretation, arguing for 154 international geographic mapping of laboratory surveillance data. It furthermore paves the grounds for newly designed investigation of epidemic waves and international spread of meningococcal strains. ___________________________________________________ RKV02 Second Helicobacter pylori multiresistant clinical isolate including tetracycline resistance in Germany N. Wüppenhorst1, E. Glocker1, M. Kist1 1 University Freiburg, Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, National Reference Center for Helicobacter pylori Freiburg, Germany In 2006 the National Reference Center for H. pylori (Hp) reported the first Hp strain with reduced susceptibility to tetracycline, which was isolated from a multimorbid 70-year-old woman in Germany. In February 2007 we isolated the second tetracycline-resistant Hp strain from a 50 year-old woman in our routine-laboratory. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (Etest® method) showed sensitivity to amoxicillin (0.016 mg/L) and rifampicin (1 mg/L) but resistance to metronidazole (16 mg/L), clarithromycin (16 mg/L), ciprofloxacin (32 mg/L) and tetracycline (8 mg/L). Sequencing of the 16S rRNA encoding genes revealed a double nucleotide exchange at positions 926928 (AGA926-928ATC) which confirms the tetracyclineresistant phenotype in Hp. The patient reported preceding antimicrobial treatments due to unrelated bacterial infections which included minocycline and clarithromycin. Further genetic analysis of the isolate and more detailed information concerning the patient’s medical history and antibiotic pre-treatment regimes due to Hp infection and further unrelated bacterial infections are in progress. In conclusion, this case clearly demonstrates that rare resistant phenotypes, like resistance to tetracycline, which up to now have been observed predominantly in Asia and South America, may also occur in Germany. These findings further underline the importance of antimicrobial susceptibility testing in H. pyloriassociated infections and the need for surveillance studies on the development of antimicrobial resistance. ___________________________________________________ RKV03 How can the national reference Center be helpful in combating the resistant tuberculosis in Germany and the world? S. Rüsch-Gerdes1 1 Research Center Borstel, National Reference Center for Mykobakteria, Borstel, Germany ___________________________________________________ RKV04 Large scale sequence based typing of Staphylococcus aureus: a reference Center’s experience B. Strommenger1, C. Braulke1, D. Heuck1, W. Witte1 1 Robert-Koch-Institute, Wernigerode Branch, Wernigerode Germany Objectives: In May 2006 we introduced spa-typing in our laboratory. This method replaced phage typing in combination with SmaI-macrorestriction analysis for routine S. aureus strain typing. This study reviews typing results for six month with respect to typeability, reproducibility, discriminatory power and concordance with alternative typing methods. Methods: A total of 1459 S. aureus isolates were characterized. A spa-type was assigned using the Ridom StaphType software. The algorithm BURP (based upon repeat patterns) was used to cluster resulting spa-types into different groups. To verify the results a subset of isolates was subjected to SmaI-macrorestriction analysis and MLST. Results: Among 1459 S. aureus isolates 221 different spa-types were defined. The twenty spa-types most frequently found comprise more than 60% of all isolates and include most types linked to predominant clonal lineages of MRSA in Central Europe, previously defined by phage typing and SmaImacrorestriction analysis. Among those clonal lineages distinct differences in spa-type variability were seen; while some lineages (e. g. the Barnim epidemic MRSA, t032, ST22) encompassed a variety of closely related spa-types, others (e. g. a subclone of Rhine-Hesse epidemic MRSA, t003, ST225) are represented only by a single type. For assessment of widely disseminated lineages exhibiting only a single spa-type, additional markers must be applied. One hundred and twentyone spa-types were determined only once. For 90% of these isolates BURP proved to be a valuable tool to assign them to particular clonal groups. Thereby, results of BURP grouping were overall concordant with those of SmaI-macrorestriction analysis and MLST. Conclusion: spa-typing in combination with BURP based grouping of isolates proved to be a valuable tool for strain typing with regard to the demands of a national reference Center. The BURP algorithm revealed extremely useful for grouping new and uncommon spa-types. However, to overcome limitations in terms of typing accuracy and discriminatory power, additional markers, like SCCmec, lineage specific genes or alternative DNA polymorphisms are indispensable. ___________________________________________________ RKV05 Prion diseases in Germany: epidemiological data and risk of transmission U. Heinemann1, B. Meissner1, I. Zerr1 1 Georg-August-University, Neurology, Goettingen, Germany Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is the most frequent form of human transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. It is caused by accumulation of pathological prion protein PrPsc. Beside sporadic, there are also genetic (genetic CJD, FFI, GSS), iatrogenic (e.g. by dura mater grafts, growth hormone) and variant CJD (probably due to uptake of BSE contaminated food) known. Susceptibility and clinical manifestation are modified by the disease subtype composed of genotype at codon 129 (methionine or valine) and prion protein type (1 or 2). In Germany, since 1993 a systematic prospective surveillance of prion disease is performed by the National Reference Center in Goettingen. Incidence of sporadic CJD is slightly increasing up to 1.7 per million per year in 2006. Especially the frequency of atypical cases (young age at onset, longer disease duration, atypical technical findings) is increasing. By several mutation of the prionprotein gene on chromosome 20 gentic prion disease can 155 be caused. The most frequent mutation in Germany is D178N coupled with methione at codon 129 (FFI). Variant CJD is not recognized in Germany up to now. Additionally, ten patients with iatrogenic CJD were identified (9 by dura mater grafts, 1 by corneal transplant). Instead, no transmission by cadaveric growth hormone treatment werde found, what is the most frequent cause of iatrogenic CJD worldwide. Whether neurosurgical intervention can transmit CJD is not yet resolved. In the litertaure only two cases are reported. Due to the long incubation time up to decades this rare phenomenon might be caused by an anamnestic problem. In a german case-control study seven patients with CJD were identified who had anamnestic neurosurgical internvention. There was no significant difference to the frequency in control population and therefore brain surgery is no statistical risk factor. Nevertheless, it is remarkable that three patients with iatrogenic CJD by dura mater grafts were treated within 17 months within the same hospital. In summary, the results of prospective surveillance for prion diseases in Germany will be presented with special emphasis on diagnostic and differential diagnostic characteristics. Additionally, potentially transmission by iatrogenic procedures will be discussed. ___________________________________________________ RKV06 Molecular epidemiology of respiratory syncytial virus infections in Underfranconia between 2002 and 2006 D. Schneiderbanger1, F. Neske1, K. Blessing2, H.W. Kreth2 B. Weissbrich1 1 University of Wuerzburg, Institute of Virology and Immunobiology, Wuerzburg, Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Childrens Hospital, Wuerzburg Germany Background: The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common viral cause of respiratory infections in infants and children. Reinfections occur lifelong. Two RSV groups (A and B) have been described, each with several genotypes. The available data on the molecular epidemiology of RSV in Germany are only limited. Material and Methods: Between January 2002 and July 2006, 221 respiratory samples of infants and children treated in the Children?s Hospital of the University Wuerzburg were found to be positive for RSV antigen by routine testing with immunofluorescence assays. Phylogenetic analysis was performed on 211 of these samples by amplification and sequencing of the second variable region of the RSV G gene. Results: The group distribution of the 211 RSV positive samples was 69.5 % group A and 30.5 % group B. RSV group A was the predominating virus in all seasons except for the winter season 2002/03. Over the whole observation period, three different Agenotypes (GA2, GA5, GA7) and four different B-genotypes (GB3, SAB3, BA, and a novel genotype) were detected. The RSV genotypes GA2, GA5, SAB3, and BA were most frequently found and were prevalent in almost all seasons. Among the B-genotypes, the proportion of the genotype BA increased from 25 % in 2002 to 91 % in 2005/06. Three group B sequences were assigned to a novel genotype, which was tentatively named BWUE. One reinfection with the same genotype (GA5) was observed in a child who was hospitalised with RSV infection at the age of 12 and 28 months. Conclusion: The results of our study are in agreement with the molecular epidemiology of RSV in other geographical regions. We found both genotype persistence and genotype shifting during the observation period. In addition, we detected a novel B genotype. ___________________________________________________ RKV07 Role of Game in the natural cycle of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato V. Fingerle1, U. C. Schulte-Spechtel1, C. Hizo-Teufel1, A. König2, B. Wilske1 1 Max v. Pettenkofer , National Reference Center for Borrelia, Munich, Germany 2 Wissenschaftszentrum Weihenstephan, Wildbiologie und Wildtiermanagemnt, Munich, Germany B. burgdorferi s.l. is maintained in nature in complex cycles involving hard bodied ticks as vectors and warm blooded animals as hosts. Several authors have suggested that certain B. burgdorferi s.l. species are preferentially or exclusively maintained in specific vertebrate host – tick cycles. B. afzelii and some B. garinii strains appear to use rodents as the main reservoir, while B. valaisiana and most B. garinii strains were found in enzootic cycles with birds. Furthermore, it was shown that these associations are mirrored in the complement sensitivity of these species or strains. However, data from Germany of mice or of game on the influence on the host-vector cycle of B. burgdorferi s.l. are poor so far. To gain more information we investigate in a still ongoing study skin biopsies (ear) and ticks from hunted animals. Deers, wild boars, and foxes were investigated for infection with B. burgdorferi s.l. species and OspA types by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the ospA gene. The method enables differentiation of both single and multiple infections with B. burgdorferi s.s. (OspA type 1), B. afzelii (OspA type 2), B. garinii (OspA types 3 - 8), B. valaisiana (subgroupI and II), B. lusitaniae, B. bissettii, and B. spielmanii. In the frame of this study skin biopsies from 209 roe deer (Capreolus capreolus), 55 red deer (Cervus elaphus), 127 fallow deer (Dama dama), 49 wild boars (Sus scrofa), and 92 red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), as well as 550 ticks were investigated. In general, feeding on all deer species clearly reduced borrelia prevalence in ticks. However, young roe deer may serve as host for B. valaisiana and B. garinii OspA types 4 and 6 and red deer possibly for B. garinii OspA type 4. In skin biopsies from Wild boars B. burgdorferi s.s. and B. garinii OspA types 4, 5, and 6 were present and from red foxes B. garinii OspA types 5 and 6 and B. spielmanii. Detection of B. spielmanii from red foxes is of special interest, since this only recently described new species was only detected from dormice so far. The results of the present study argue for a relevant role of game in distinct natural cycles of different B. burgdorferi s.l. species and subtypes. However further studies are necessary to substantiate these findings. ___________________________________________________ 156 QSP01 Accreditation of microbiological laboratories according ISO 15189 A. Steinhorst1 1 DACH Deutsche Akkreditierungsstelle Chemie, Frankfurt am Main, Germany In the last years the importance of quality has increased in all parts of the society. In medical laboratories quality has a special importance. It is not only the implementation of a quality management system, but moreover to a high degree that the medical laboratories are competent to provide valid results, including their interpretation. These additional quality feature is the essential part of the International Standard ISO 15189:2003 “Medical laboratories - Particular requirements for quality and competence” and the main difference to ISO 9001:2000. The ISO 15189 covers all elements, which are essential to patient care. Such elements include arrangements for requisition, patient preparation, patient identification, collection of samples, transportation, storage, processing and examination of clinical samples, together with subsequent validation, interpretation, reporting and advice. The International Standard has been elaborated for all different types of medical laboratories. Therefore many German societies in the field of medical laboratory diagnostics – the DGHM as well – have decided some years ago to complement the standard for the different laboratory diagnostic disciplines. The complements are available in form of special checklists. Special checklists for microbiological laboratories are: 1. Microbiology and Hygiene - General requirements 2. Bacteriology 3. Mycobacteriology 4. Mycology 5. Parasitology 6. Virology 7. Infection serology 8. Molecular biology of infection diagnostics 9. Hygiene That the requirements of ISO 15189 are fulfilled can be demonstrated through the accreditation from the German Accreditation body of Chemistry (DACH). Important part of the accreditation is the on-site assessment, carried out by experts. The experts are recommended from the various medical societies, correspondingly the microbiological experts are recommended from the DGHM. With the accreditation and therefore with the conformation of competence the confidence in the medical laboratories should be strengthened. Many laboratories are already accredited against ISO 15189 and many others are on the track. ___________________________________________________ QSP02 Antibiotic prescribing indicators in German ICUs E. Meyer1, P. Gastmeier2,3, B. Schrören-Börsch1 H. Rüden4,3, U. Frank1, F. Schwab4,3 1 Freiburg University Hospital, Institute of Environmental Medicine and Hospital Epidemiology, Freiburg, Germany 2 Hanover School of Medicine, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 3 National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections, Berlin, Germany 4 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany Objective: To determine and to analyse antibiotic prescribing parameters of intensive care units (ICUs) which are not only measures for quantity but also for quality in the sense of picturing diversity of antibiotic use. Methods: From January through December 2005, 43 ICUs participating in SARI (Surveillance of Antibiotic Use and Bacterial Resistance in Intensive Care Units) provided data and were included in the analysis. For antibiotic prescribing indicators we choose the following parameters: 1. The number of different antibiotics used 2. The most frequently antibiotic used of each ICU (top1) and the three and ten most frequently antibiotics used (top3, top 10) and 3. The percentage of total antibiotic use of penicillins, of quinolones, of cephalosporins, of carbapenems and of glycopeptides. Antibiotic use was expressed as defined daily doses (DDD) and normalised per 1000 patientdays (AD=antimicrobial usage density), one DDD being the standard adult daily dose of an antimicrobial agent for one day’s treatment defined by the WHO (index 2006). Results: The data covered 182,565 patient days. The median of total antibiotic use was 1156 DDD/1000 pd and ranged from 450 to 1799 DDD/1000 pd. The median number of different antibiotics used was in 27 (range 19 - 37). The most frequently single antibiotic used per ICU (top1) accounted for almost 20% (median) of the total antibiotic use. The top 3 antibiotics used made up 40% of total use and the top 10 of 80% (range 62.5 – 93.8). Maximum the top 3 single antibiotics used accounted for over 60% of total antibiotic use in an ICU. Total antibiotic use and the percentage of different antibiotic groups used were extremely heterogeneous in single ICUs. At single ICU level quinolones could make up more than 35%, broad spectrum cephalosporins almost 40% and carbapenems 30% of their total antibiotic use. However, at median penicillins and cephalosporins accounted each for a forth of total use. Conclusion: Prescribing parameters of antibiotic use differ considerably from ICU to ICU. The three most frequently used antibiotics account for 40% of the total antibiotic use. Prescribing parameters provide additional and easy to understand information for the analysis of antibiotic consumption and of the selective pressure applied by those drugs. ___________________________________________________ QSV01 Immunodiagnosis of cystic and alveolar echinococcosis: antibody screening and species differentiation I. Reiter-Owona1, M. Frosch2, P. Kern3, B. Grüner3 A. Hörauf1, D. Tappe2 1 University Clinic Bonn, Institute of Medical Microbiology Immunology and Parasitology (IMMIP), Bonn, Germany 2 University of Wuerzburg, Institute of Hygiene and Microbiology, Wuerzburg, Germany 3 University Hospital and Medical Center Ulm, Division of Infectious Diseases, Ulm, Germany 157 Differential diagnosis between cystic echinococcosis (CE) due to Echinococcus granulosus (Eg), and alveolar echinococcosis (AE) due to E. multilocularis (Em), has significant implications for the treatment and follow-up of infected individuals. Whereas imaging methods mostly provide sufficient criteria for differentiation, selected serological assays back-up the diagnosis and are considered as highly specific. Recent results of external quality control measurements (INSTAND), however, did not confirm the expected specificity when applied in routine diagnostic laboratories. Therefore, the diagnostic performance of the Em2plus-ELISA (Bordier Affinity Products, Switzerland) was evaluated using 56 sera from 30 CE patients and 39 sera from 35 AE patients from two different Centers (Bonn and Ulm). The following standardized in-house techniques were run in parallel: IHAT (Eg human hydatid cyst fluid), IFT (Eg protoscolex antigen), and ELISA (Em crude larval extract antigen) for screening, and the Em10-ELISA for species differentiation (recombinant Em antigen). Results: 3 sera out of 26 (11.5 %) from 20 CE patients (Bonn) and 4 sera out of 30 (13.3 %) from 10 CE patients (Ulm) showed a cross-reaction in the Em2plus-ELISA, whereas no cross-reactivity was observed with the Em10-ELISA. From 9 sera of 5 AE patients (Bonn), 3 sera (one single patient with long-term chemotherapy) were negative in both the Em2plus and Em10-ELISA, whereas from 30 sera of 30 AE patients (Ulm), 10 sera were negative in the Em2plus-ELISA (33 %) and 11 sera were negative in the Em10-ELISA (37 %). Of these negative sera, 4 were from patients who had undergone curative surgery. The remaining 7 negative sera were from patients who had received long-term chemotherapy. Conclusion: Cross-reactivity of the Em2plus-ELISA on sera of CE patients tested (11.5 % and 13.3 %, respectively) was lower than anticipated by the manufacturer (20-25%). The Em10ELISA proved to be very specific. As the individual antibody profiles of CE and AE patients may change during antiparasitic chemotherapy and after parasite resection, a definitive speciesspecific diagnosis is not always possible. Acknowledgment: The Em2-ELISA kits were kindly provided by Bordier Affinity Products ___________________________________________________ QSV02 Proficiency testing program for bacterial genome Detection (PCR/NAT by INSTAND e.V.): Why to participate? U. Reischl1 1 University Hospital Ratisbon, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Ratisbon, Germany Numerous methodological and technical advances combined with manifold efforts to automate and to standardize the most critical steps within sample preparation, amplification and sequence-specific detection of amplicons, have turned nucleic acid-based assays from a highly demanding and sophisticated technology into almost routine analytical procedures. With the increasing acceptance of this novel technology in the field of diagnostic microbiology and the broad availability of individual open platforms to perform a permanently growing spectrum of in-house or commercially prefabricated PCR / NAT assays, there is also a growing demand for appropriate quality control (QC) activities. A program for external validation was timely activated by the DGHM and is now organized by INSTAND e.V., Duesseldorf, Germany (www.instand-ev.de). This quality control initiative termed Bacterial Genome Detection (PCR / NAT) started in early 2003 with a panel of 5 pathogens. At present we are conducting bi-annual ring trials for 12 bacterial pathogens or pathogenicity factors including Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, Bordetella pertussis, Legionella pneumophila, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori, EHEC, Borrelia burgdorferi, Salmonella enterica, Listeria spp., and MRSA / cMRSA. In order to keep up with the current scope of routine PCR testing in medical microbiology, our spectrum of PCR/NAT ring trials will be extended by Mycoplasma pneumoniae soon. Then we can offer the first CAP-panel worldwide covering the most frequently PCR-tested pathogens involved in community acquired pneumonia (L. pneumophila, C. pneumoniae, and M. pneumoniae). Here we present the concept of our unique sample design and discuss some practical aspects as well as noticable problems experienced during the past rounds of PCR/NAT proficiency testing. Relevant benchmarks are summarized and the direct as well as the indirect benefits for participating laboratories are depicted. ___________________________________________________ QSV03 Diagnostic accuracy of chlamydia serology as assessed from 14 sentinel surveys performed by the German Infection serology proficiency testing program between 2000 and 2006 I. Müller1, K. - P. Hunfeld1, M. Frosch2, H. - J. Hagedorn2 H. Hlobil2, C. Schörner2, G. Stanek2, E. Straube2 C. - H. Wirsing von König2, V. Brade1 1 University Hospital of Frankfurt am Main, Central Laboratory of the Bacteriologic Infection Serology Study Group of Germany (BISSGG), Institute of Medical Microbiology and Infection Control, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2 Bacteriologic Infection Serology Study Group of Germany (BISSGG), Frankfurt am Main, Germany Serological methods such as enzyme immuno assay (EIA) and microimmunofluorescence test (MIFT) are frequently used in the routine medical laboratory to confirm or to rule out possible Chlamydia infection. The poor quality of Chlamydia serology in the non-specialist laboratory is a question of growing concern, although, actual data dealing with this issue are rare. Here, the results of 14 proficiency testing sentinel surveys for diagnostic laboratories in Germany were analyzed. From 2000 to 2006, the average number of laboratories participating in each survey was n=207 for C. trachomatis serology and n=176 for C. pneumoniae serology. A total of 56 clinically and/or serologically characterized serum samples were provided by voluntary donors (two per survey) and distributed to the participating laboratories in order to determine the accuracy of diagnostic methods such as complement fixation test (CFT), EIA, and MIFT. Assessment of reference test results for each trial was performed according to the provisional guidelines for proficiency testing in infection serology as proposed to the German general council of physicians. The use of EIA for specific antibody detection was four times more frequent than that of CFT and MIFT. For specific IgG- and IgA-testing, mean 158 accuracy ranged from 77 to 90% for EIA and from 70 to 83% for qualitative MIFT. Quality of quantitative MIFT was poor with mean accuracy rates between 55 and 70%. The accuracy of diagnostic comments was even lower: On average, only 60% (range:15 - 92%) of participants provided correct statements when asked to classify their findings as active, past or no infection. These findings suggest that serological test results alone are not sufficient for a clear cut diagnosis when Chlamydia infections are suspected. Standardization of testing procedures and the implementation of standard sera are urgently needed to improve the diagnostic value of Chlamydia serology in the routine microbiological laboratory. ___________________________________________________ QSV04 Safety of laboratory tests for infection diagnostics – Experience of the BfArM until end 2005 R. Siekmeier1, J. Lütz1, D. Wetzel1 1 Bundesinstitut für Arzneimittel und Medizinprodukte, Abteilung Medízinprodukte, Bonn, Germany 3 University Hospital, Dept. of Med. Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, Rostock, Germany 4 Helios Hospital, Institute of Microbiology, Immunology and Laboratory Medicine, Berlin, Germany In the years 2006 and 2007, the MiQ series of Standards has been amended with novel editions addressing “Respiratory Infections in Cystic Fibrosis” (Corresponding Author, M. Hogardt)(MiQ 24), “Diagnosis of Liver Infections” (Corresponding Author, S. Schaefer)(MiQ 25), and an newly written edition of “Blood Culture Diagnosis: Sepsis, Endocarditis, and Catheter Infections” (Corresponding Author: H. Seifert)(MiQ 3a and 3b). With these Standards, an expert consensus has been reached on various analytic procedures including preanalytic issues, basic and extended microbiologic analysis in the diagnostic laboratory, reporting and interpretative aspects as well as quality assurance. The consensus statements are supported by an extensive literature review, and these new Standards are edited with the approval and support of other Medical Societies of the respective fields. New MiQ projects currently planned or in preparation include “Bioterrorism”, “Ocular Infections”, “Myocarditis”, “Validation in the Microbiology Laboratory”, and “Multiresistant Organisms”. Furthermore, new editions on the following MiQs are planned or in progress: “Wound Infections”, “Gastrointestinal Infections”, “Peritonitis”, “Mycobacteria”, “Lower Respiratory Infections”, “Genital Infection”, and “Parasitology”. In this symposium, select aspects of the recently published MiQs with interest to a larger audience will be presented as well as a perspective into the MiQ editions currently under preparation. The MiQ Procedures Quality Standards are an integral part of the Quality Assurance Initiatives of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Hygiene und Microbiology and provide solid, expert- and literature-based practical recommendations applicable in all diagnostic microbiology laboratories. ___________________________________________________ The European Directive 98/79/EC for in-vitro diagnostic medical devices (IVD) regulates the marketing and post marketing surveillance of IVD in the European Economic Area. Manufacturers have to inform the responsible Competent Authorities about incidents and field corrective actions related to IVD. In Germany, the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM) is the responsible Competent Authority for most IVD, while a small subset of IVD, specified in Annex II of the Directive 98/79/EC, for immune hematological and infectiological testing as well as tissue typing, is under the responsibility of the Paul-Ehrlich-Institute (PEI). Until the end of 2005 the BfArM received a total of 653 notifications regarding IVD. From these 115 related to IVD for analysis of the infection status (tests, control materials, calibrators, culture media and analyzing equipment). Most of the reports originated from manufacturers (57.4 %), while other sources of reports played only minor roles. Product failures of tests, control materials, calibrators as well as culture media were frequently caused by manufacturing errors and biological contaminations. Analyzing equipment was typically affected by software malfunction. Through the investigations of the manufacturers product failures were confirmed in most cases and consequently corrective actions were performed in the large majority of incidents. The corrective actions frequently included customer information, product recalls, changes in the production process and/or the quality management or software upgrades for the analyzing equipment. Our data suggest that the existing system for post marketing surveillance is a sufficient tool to ensure product safety of IVD. ___________________________________________________ QSV06 Antifungal use in intensive care units E. Meyer1, F. Schwab2,3, P. Gastmeier3,4, H. Rüden2,3 A. Heininger5 1 Freiburg University Hospital, Institute of Environmental Medicine and Hospital Epidemiology, Freiburg, Germany 2 Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Berlin, Germany 3 National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections, Berlin, Germany 4 HanoverSchool of Medicine, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hanover, Germany 5 Tuebingen University Hospital, Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Tuebingen, Germany QSV05 The Microbiology Procedures Quality Standards (MiQ) – New topics M. Herrmann1, E. Kniehl2, A. Podbielski3, H. Mauch4 1 University Hospital, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Homburg, Germany 2 City Hospital, Dept. of Med. Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, Karlsruhe, Germany Objectives: To provide benchmarking data on antifungal use in ICUs, to analyse risk factors and to look for correlations with antibiotic use data and structure parameters. Methods: Antimicrobial use data for 13 ICUs were obtained from computerised databases from 1/2004 through 6/2005. Antimicrobial usage density (AD) is expressed as daily defined doses/1000 patient-days. Correlations were calculated by the Spearman correlation or for binomic variables by the two-sided 159 Wilcoxon test. A multivariate regression analysis was performed to identify independent risk factors for the outcome ‘antifungal use’. Results: Mean systemic antifungal drug use was 93.0, the range being between ADs of 18.9 and 232.2. ICUs treating transplant patients had a significantly higher mean antifungal usage at 152.9 compared with ICUs not treating transplant patients where the AD was 46.0. Fluconazole was the most frequently prescribed antifungal (mean AD 69.6) followed by amphotericin B (11.4) and voriconazole (6.2). Antifungal use correlated significantly with the consumption of quinolones, carbapenems and penicillins with extended spectrum, but not with total antibiotic use and not with the type of ICU or university status. In the multivariate linear regression analysis, two parameters i.e. high quinolone use (p 0.002) and ICUs which treat transplant patients (p 0.027) were independent risk factors for a high level of antifungal use. Conclusion: Antifungal use was heterogeneous in German ICUs with the mean lying at 93. Benchmarking data might provide a useful method for assessing strategies that aim to reduce antifungal use in ICUs. However, data should be stratified for ICUs with and without transplant patients. Keywords: Surveillance, defined daily doses, benchmarking data, fluconazole, amphotericin B, voriconazole ___________________________________________________ In our opinion, ATP bioluminescence may be a simple to use surrogate parameter to control the effect of cleaning surgical instruments. ___________________________________________________ QSV07 ATP bioluminescence – An alternative method for cleaning control of surgical instruments D. Hansen1, M. Hilgenhöner1, W. Popp1 1 University Hospital, Hospital Hygiene, Essen, Germany Success of cleaning is critical in reprocessing of medical devices and has to be verified. Visual assessment has limitations; therefore quality of reprocessing actually is checked by performing microbial cultures or by determination of residual blood or protein of real instruments after reprocessing. Unfortunately these methods have considerable disadvantages: Results of microbiological cultures are not available in time for corrective action to be taken at once. Available methods for detection of residues of protein or blood are too cumbersome to be performed by non technical staff, dosage of reagents risks to be imprecise because of improper equipment or interpretation of results is subjective. Methods are needed which can be routinely performed on site at reprocessing of medical devices by non technical staff and which deliver results at once. ATP bioluminescence, a method which is widely applied to control surface cleanliness in food industry and kitchen hygiene, may be a suitable method to control the quality of reprocessing of medical equipment too. The method of ATP bioluminescence and our experiences of applying a commercial available ATP bioluminescence assay to verify the cleaning of real contaminated surgical instruments in the context of validation of washer-disinfectors are presented. A total of 235 samples were collected. In 6.4 % measured ATP bioluminescence was above the chosen threshold and thus induced immediate troubleshooting. For single instruments ATP bioluminescence indicated problems of reprocessing when no residual protein was detected. 160 Detection of antibodies by flow cytometry and ELISA SERION MultianalytTM assays: Flow cytometry multiplex detection kits SERION MultianalytTM principle NEW! Applicable for all flow cytometers Borrelia burgdorferi IgG & IgM kit Superior to blots Epstein-Barr-Virus IgG & IgM kit Diphtheria/ Tetanus/ Bordetella pertussis Toxin IgG kit High quality In Vitro Diagnostics Institut Virion\Serion GmbH Serion Immundiagnostica GmbH Tel. +49 931 3045-0 Fax +49 931 3045-100 www.virion-serion.de SERION ELISA For infectious and autoimmune diseases Liquor (CSF) diagnostics Avidity Reagents Bulk Antigens Complement Fixation Tests Quantification: Detector fluorescence Blot-equivalent antigen detection: Bead fluorescence Author Index Baljer, G. GIV06 Bandi, C. FEMS-V01 Bethe, A. MSP05, MPP38 Bandt, D. KMP14 Betzel, C. HYP17 Bär, W. KMP01 Bhakdi, S. MPV36 MPP74 Barbuddhe, S. DVV09 Biedermann, T. MPP18 Barekzai, J. HYP14 Biehler, K. Bartel, M. DVV08 Bielaszewska, M. A Aas, F. E. Abu-Qatouseh, L. F. Achtman, M. MSV06, MSP11 Adam, S. KMV11 Barthel, M. MPV15 Adam, T. FTP33 Bastian, M. IIP17 Adler, B. FTP26 Batra, A. IIV01 DVP11, KMV04, MPP64, MPV18 MPP30 Äpfelbacher, M. Aichinger, C. Aktan, I. GIP09 AlDahouk, S. DVP12 AlbertWeissenberger, C. Alderborn, A. MPV24, MPP70 DVV10 Aldick, T. Aleík, E. Al-Lahham, A. GIP17 FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP12, FTP13 RKP04 Almeida, R. EKV05 Alpers, K. KMV01 Alterio, V. FEMS-P07 Anders, A. KMP12, MSP06, MPV06 Aniwatangkoora, Y. DVP27 Batzilla, C.F. MPV09 BaetzingFeigenbaum, J. Bauer, B. MSV01 Baum, C. MPP36 Biundo, T. HYP16 Bautsch, W. MSP07 Blahout, B. FTP08 Bauwens, A. GIP19 Blass, D. MPP55 Becher, D. FTP24 Blaut, M. IIV01 Becher, K. IIP22 Bleich, A. IIP02, MPV13 Becken, U. FEMS-P10, FEMS-P09, FEMS-V03 RKP01 Bleich, E. IIP02 Bleiß, W. GIP07 Becker, B. DVP09, MPP18, MPP22, MPP23, MSV05, HYV10, MSP06, MSP13 MPP56, MPV43, MPP41 Becker, K. Becker, T. Beer, J. MSP09 Behrens, S. GIV04 Antonenka, U. MPP24 Behrens, W. GIP15 FTP10 Benedek, O. MPP66 IIP20 Beninati, T. FEMS-V01 IIP01 MPV28 Benner, D. FTP08 IIP14, IIV12, KMP06, HYP03, MPP10, IIP09, FTP18, GIP14 Autenrieth, S. E. IIP09 Bensel, T. MPP04 Benz, A. KMV02 Aurass, P. Autenrieth, I. B. B Berchtold, S. IIP07 Bereswill, S. GIV07, MPV10, IIV01, IIP13 Berger-Bächi, B. Babikir, R. Bachmann, T. T. Backert, S. HYP01 DVV05 GIV05, MPV11, GIP10, GIV02 GIP01 MPP02 DVV06 MSP05, MPP38 Arvand, M. Bischoff, M. HYV09 Bittner, T. Antáo, E. - M. Appel, B. Bin jasass, F. M. GIP16, MPP08, GIP17, RKP11, GIP19, GIP18 FTP22, HYP10, MPP49 EKP03 HYV06, RKP02, HYP09 Anonsen, J. H. Biertz, F. MPP50 KMV06 MPP46, MPP50 MPP74 GIP09 Bierbaum, G. IIP16, IIV13 Biswas, R. BehnckKnoblau, S. Behnke, M. Anjum, M. F. Bessler, M. Berghoff, J. Bergmann, S. MPP02, MPP15 IIP20 MPV31, MPV02 Bergmans, A. M. C. DVP17 Bergstrom, K. GIV11 Blessing, K. RKV06 Blöcker, H. MPV13 Blokhin, B. M. MPV36 Böckenholt, A. MPP64 Böcker, K. MPV32 Bodmer, T. DVP03 Böhnke, U. GIP06 Bogdan, C. IIV08, MPV22, IIP22 Bögli-Stuber, K. DVP03 Bogner, K. - H. KMP02 Böhler, O. RKP11 Böhm, K. MPV44 Bohn, E. Bohne, W. Bönemann, G. MPP67 Bonn, M. L. MPP08 Borchardt, J. RKP12 Borges, F. MPP28 EKP06 KMV02 MPP04, MPV44 Bader, O. EKP06 Bernauer, J. KMV11 Bahr, U. IIV06 Bertsche, U. MPV33 Borg-von Zepelin, M. Borkenhagen, G. Borneff-Lipp, M. Bertz, H. HYP01 Bains, M. MPV41 Besier, S. MPV05, MPP58 FEMS-V04 GIP13 HYP08, HYV01 KMV03 MPP10, IIP07 Bolbot, Y. K. Bader, L. Baier, M. GIP13 Bobkiewicz, W. Borrmann, E. MPP54 162 Boye, K. Busch, U. KMP02, GIP03 Daniels-Haardt, I. Brade, H. FTP34, FTP35 Buschmann, J. MPP15, MPP50 Danschke, A. Brade, L. FTP34, FTP35 Buss, A. DVP15 Dasti, J.I. Brade, V. HYP11, IIV11, IIV11a MPV05, QSV03, MPP58 EKP02 Buss, C. MPP12 de Bör, A. IIV09, EKV11 Bussmeyer, U. MPV22 de Groot, P. W. EKV11, IIV09 FTP33 de Hoog, G. S. DVP23 Decker, E. - M. MPP06 Brakhage, A. Brands, B. MPP36 DVP19 Büssow, K. Brandt, C. HYP11, HYV04 Brandt, S. MPV11, GIP10, GIV02 Brattig, N. DVP24 C., P. Brauers, J. FTP06 Cantero, P. C Deckert, M. MPP30 FTP29 Braulke, C. RKV04 Carniel, E. MPP33 Brecx, M. MPP06 Carsauw, H. HYV06 Carstens-Slim, A. HYP12 Bredenbruch, F. Breitbach, K. Breitenstein, A. MPV42, MPV43, MPP32, MPP41 MPV26, KMP05, IIP03, IIV03, MPV08 DVV02, DVP28 Brenneke, B. GIP15, MPV12 Breukink, E. MPV33 Brocker, T. Brockmann, D. Brockmeyer, J. Brodegger, T. Carter, B. GIP09 Casey, P. MPV34 Cassone, M. FTP30 IIV05 Chakraborty, T. HYV02, HYV11, HYV09, HYP09 IIV05, DVV09, MSP01 ESV14 Changtrakun, Y. DVP27 Chaberny, I. F. MPP08, GIP17 Charpian, S. FEMS-V02 DVP11 Chatterjee, I. MPP51, MPV09 Chen, L. FEMS-P06 Broich, M. FEMS-P02 Bröker, B. IIV10, MPP65 Chhatwal, G. S. MPP09, MPP60 IIP04, IIP06 Chikkaballi, D. MPP45 Bröker, B. M. Brosius, J. MPP18 Chinni, S. V. MPP18 Broszat, K. MPV22 Christian, J. MPV21 MSV02 Bruns, H. IIP10 Claus, H. Buchal, A. IIP13 Cleland, S. GIV10 FTP15, FTP17 Cloud, J. Buchholz, P. MSP03 Cohrs, A. HYV02 Buchrieser, C. MPP29 Colgan, S. P. ESV07 Buchwald, A. KMV06 Conrads, G. Buchbauer, G. DVV04 DVP18, DVP19 Buckendahl, A. DVP22 Coops, S. DVP17 Buder, I. KMP01 Cordes, T. MPP23 Cornelis, G. R. ESV06 MPV42 Buer, J. IIP15 Buhrdorf, R. MPV38 Cornelis, P. Bünger, J. LMV01 Cosmina, M. Bunk, S. DVV12 Cramer, N. Burckhardt, F. MSV03 Creuzburg, K. Burggraf, S. DVP21 Cuny, C. Burghardt, I. MPP65 Czerny, C. - P. Burian, M. MPP55, MPP20 Burkert, B. MPP54 Busch, D. IIV05, MPP48 Busch, T. MPV36 FTP21, GIP12 ESV13 GIP05 KMV05, DVV10 DVP25 Dehghani, F. MSV05, HYV10 KMP04 GIP11 IIV07 MPP58 Dehio, C. ESV01 Deiwick, S. MPP61 DellEra, S. MPP29 Denk, S. Dettenkofer, M. Deyneko, I. Diehl, I. Dierich, M. P. GIP04 HYP01 MPV13 MSP05, MPP38 EKV06, IIP11 Diestel, A. GIV01 Dieterich, G. MPP32 Dietz, A. EKP04 Dilling, S. MPV16 Disqué, C. DVP14 Distler, M. FTP36 Dittmann, S. Dittrich-Breiholz, O. Ditzen, A. MPP01, MPP52 IIP02, MPV19 KMV08 Dobrindt, U. MPP33, MPV29, MPP47 Domann, E. DVV09, MSP01 Donat, S. Döring, G. MPP73 MPP04, MPV44 Dorit, S. RKP02 Dötsch, A. FTP23 Dreier, J. Dreisewerd, K. Drexler, H. G. Drögemüller, K. Drosten, C. Duchmann, R. DVP01, DVP13, KMV09 GIP18 FEMS-P05, IIV07 RKP09, DVP24 FTP33 Dumke, R. MPP37 Dunn, J. DVV04 Durmus, N. IIP21 Dykstra, T. FEMS-P10, D Dalpke, A. KMP17 Daniel, W. G. KMP16 163 E Ebel, F. EKV04, EKP03 Fedtke, I. MPP63 Gärtner, B. Feldmann, F. MPV27 Gastmeier, P. Feldmeier, E. FTP01 Eberhard, S. DVV14 FerreiradaSilva, M. EKP07 Eberhardt, C. DVP02 Feucht, H. DVP11 Ebert, S. MPV02 Fichet-Calvet, E. Ebner, S. IIP08 Eckart, M. Eckmanns, T. MPP14 FTP27, MSP09, HYP05 Egge-Jacobsen, W. MPP74 Ehricht, R. ESV10 Eichberg, J. KMP08 Eichler, P. Eick, S. Fingerle, V. Fink, K. Finlay, B. MSV04 IIV11, IIV11a, RKV07 IIV12, GIP14 GIV11 IIV10, IIP06 Fischer, R. GIV07, IIV01, DVP09, MPP22, MPP23 LMP02, LMP03, LMP04, LMP05, LMP06 RKP11 KMP19, KMP20 Fischer, W. MPV38, GIV08 Eickhoff, M. DVP12 Eikmann, T. HYP13, HYP14, HYV05 Fischer, A. Fischer, M. Fleck, R. HYP06 Fleckenstein, B. RKP10 Fleischer, B. RKP09, DVP24 Eikmanns, B. J. FTP19, MPP28 Eisenblätter, M. IIP13 Flenner, E. IIP16, IIV13 Elias, J. RKV01 Flieger, A. FEMS-P02, MPV28 Eltzschig, H. E. ESV07 Flunker, G. Elwin, S.J. MPP01 Forestier, C. MPP33 Engelhard, K. HYP02 Forsbach-Birk, V. DVV13 Engelhardt, H. MPV39 Frangoulidis, D. Engelhardt, W. DVP21 Frank, C. KMV01 Engelmann, S. FTP24, IIV10, MPV08, IIP04, MPP65, MPV09, MPP73 EKV08 Frank, R. MPP60 Engstler, M. MPP07, KMP05 IIP17, DVV03, FEMS-P08 Frank, U. QSP02 Franke, G. MPP64 Frankenberg, T. IIV04 MPV07 Frenzel, E. DIP01 Ergin, A. FTP33 Freytag, C. Erttmann, K. DVP24 Frick, I. - M. Epis, S. FEMS-V01 Erck, C. Eske, K. Essbauer, S. Essig, A. Ettischer, N. IIV10, MPV26, IIV03 RKP07 FTP26, FTP25 Evans, S. FTP34 Ewers, C. DVP10, MSP05, MSV06, MPP38, MSP11 F Fabbri, M. MPP48 Fabri, M. IIV13 Fahl, E. IIP07 Faigle, M. ESV07 Fälker, S. Färber, J. DVP13, KMV09 MPP09 Frick, J.-S. IIP14, IIV12, IIP07, GIP14 Friedrich, A. W. MSV05, DVV11, HYV10, MSP13, GIP17, GIP18, RKP11 KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP68, MPP69 DVV02 DVV08, DVV13 Friedrich, S. Fritzsche, W. Gatermann, S. Fröhlich, J. GIV06 Frosch, M. Fuchs, S. HYP02, RKV01, MPP17, QSV03, QSV01 MPP73 Fulde, M. MPP05 Ge, Z. Gebert, S. Gebert-Vogl, B. Gebhardt, F. DVP14 MPV37, MPP48 IIV05 Gehde, N. IIV06, HYP06, EKP04, EKP05 FEMS-V02 Geiger, T. MPV04, MPP21 Geipel, U. HYV12 Geginat, G. Geisel, J. IIP14, IIV12, IIP07 Geißdörfer, W. KMP16 Georgi, C. DVV11 Gerstenbruch, S. FTP34 Gerten, B. DIP02 Gessner, E. IIP02 Gfrörer, S. FTP14 Ghebremedhin, B. Giedrys-Kalemba, S. Giese, A. MPP27, MPP31 IIP06 IIP08 Gieseler, S. MPV11 Glocker, E. RKP06, RKV02 Glöckner, G. Glodde, S. Gnad, T. Göbel, U. B. Görke, C. Göthe, R. MPV24 MSP05, MPP38 MPP13 GIV07, IIV01, MSP03 MPP55, MPP02, MPP20, MPV04, MPP21, MPP39, MPP49 MPP05 Götzfried, M. MPP42 Gohlke-Micknis, S. MSV01 Goldberg, J. HYV05 Goldenberg, O. MSP03, IIP01, LMP01 Gore, M. DVP04 Goris, M. MSV04 Görlach, F. RKP12 Görtz, H. - D. G FTP11, RKP08, FTP32 HYV02, HYV11, HYV06, HYV03, QSV06, RKP02, QSP02, HYV08, HYV09, HYP09, HYP09 KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP34, MPP35, MSP06, MPV06, MPP43, MSP13, MPP68, MPP68, MPP71 MPV12 Götz, F. FEMS-P01 MPP15, MPP46, MPP50, MPP63 MPP45 Gabdoulkhakov, A. HYP17 Gowda, A. MPV14, MPP25, MPP26 Gahan, C. G. M. MPV34 Gräme M, W. EKP01 DVP06, DVP07 Garcia Diez, M. GIP03 Graham, R. MPP60 164 Grassl, G. GIV11 Hancock, R. MPV41 Hermann, C. DVV12 Grassmann, R. RKP10 Handrich, C. LMV01 Hermann, G. FTP38 IIV06 Hannig, H. MSP07 Herr, C. Greiner, A. FTP36 Hansen, D. FTP08, QSV07 Greune, L. MPV32 Hansen, S. HYV06 IIP11 Hanski, E. MPP60 Hany, S. RKP14 Hardegen, C. GIV09 Grauling-Halama, S. Grif, K. Grimm, V. DVV05 Gröbner, S. FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP12, FTP13, DVP10 HYP03 Gronow, S. FEMS-P05 Harpel, S. HYP13, HYV05 EKP07, FEMS-V04, EKV02, GIP11, EKP06, EKV11 KMV04 Hartig, R. GIP10, MPP27 Grobbel, M. Gross, U. Grosse, R. Hardt, W. – D. Harmsen, D. MPV15, MPV16 DVV04, DVV11, MSV07 Hartmann, M. MPV13 Herrmann, I. Herrmann, M. Herzberger, P. HYP13, HYP14, HYV05 ESV05 MPP51, MPP55, HYV12, MPP11, QSV05, MPV09 IIV11, IIV11a Heuck, D. RKV04 Heudorf, U. HYP11 Heuner, K. Heusipp, G. Heussler, V. Hildebrandt, A. Hilgenfeld, R. MPV24, MPP70 MPV14, MPP12, MPP25, MPP26, MPP44 EKV09 KMV03 FEMS-P07, FEMS-P06, EKV09 QSV07 Grosskinsky, U. FTP18 Hasenberg, F. MSP13 Gruber, I. HYP11 Haslinger-Löffler, B. MPP36 Hilgenhöner, M. Hauser, N. DVV07 Hill, C. MPV34 MPP56, MPV42, MPV43, MPP41, FTP23, MPP32 HYP05 Hill, J. MPP01 Hiller, M. KMP18 Hilty, A. DVP03 Hinsching, A. MPP54 Grumann, D. IIP04, IIP06 Grüner, B. QSV01 Häußler, S. Günther, S. MPP38 Heckenbach, K. Gürra Roman, B. FTP10 Hecker, H. HYV09 Güngör, N. MPP43 Hecker, M. Günther, S. KMP08, DVP10, RKP09 FTP24, MPP07, IIV10, MPV08, IIP04, MPP65, MPV09 HYV06 Güntner, S. DVP20 Güntsch, A. KMP19, KMP20 Heeg, C. RKP04, HYP04 Gunzer, F. MPV13 Heeg, P. HYP03 Gutjahr, R. DVP28 Heesemann, J. Gutmann, D. Heczko, P. Haas, A. Haas, R. Haase, G. FEMS-P10, KMV07, FEMSP09, FEMS-V03 GIV03, MPV37, MPV38, MPP48, IIP20 DVP23, DVP26 Habold, C. GIV01 Häcker, G. EKV02, MPV21, IIV04 Häcker, H. IIV04 Hacker, J. Hafke, H. Hagedorn, H. - J. Hain, T. Hall, G. Hallier, E. Hammerschmidt, S. MPP33, MPV29, MPP47, MPV07 IIV13 QSV03 DVV09, MSP01 DVV04 LMV01 MPV31, MPV02 Hamouda, O. MSV01 Han, S. - R. KMV02 Hlobil, H. QSV03 Hobmaier, B. Hochrein, H. RKP06, RKP05 IIV05 GIV07, IIV01 Hoffmann, C. MPV39 Heinbockel, L. FTP35 Hoffmann, R. FTP30 Heinemann, U. RKV05 Hoffmann, T. Heimesaat, M. M. MSV04 RKV07 Hoffmann, A. Hehl, J. Haartskerl, R. EKV02 Hizo-Teufel, C. RKP01, HYP06, EKP04, EKP05 FTP22 IIV07 H MPP53, MPP52, HYP08, MPP42, MPP59, MPV18, HYV01 FTP36 Hippe, D. Heininger, A. Heiser, V. KMP06, QSV06 DVV03 Heisig, P. KMV04 Helbig, J. MPP40, MPP72, RKP12 Helmuth, U. IIV07 Hempel, K. FTP24 Hendrix, M. G. R. MSV05, HYV10 Henke, C. MPP59 Henker, J. GIP13 Henn, A. DVV05 Henne, K. MSP04 Henrich, B. GIV09 Hense, B. A. FTP23 Hensel, M. Henseler, K. Hentschke, M. MPV17, FEMS-P03 MPP63 Hof, H. KMP19 Hogardt, M. MPP42, MPP59, ESV09 Hogg, T. FEMS-P07, FEMS-P06, EKV09 GIP07 Holland, G. Holtfreter, S. IIV10, IIP04, MPP65 Holzmann, B. MPV37 Homburg, S. MPP47 Homeier, T. Hörauf, A. Hörmansdorfer, S. Hornbach, A. Hornef, M. Horré, R. Horstkotte, M. Horz, H. - P. Hossain, H. MSP05, MPP38 QSV01 KMP02, GIP03 EKV03 IIP07, GIP08 KMV07 KMV04 DVP18, DVP19 MSP01 KMV04, MPV18 165 Hott, U. HYV04 Hube, B. EKV05 Huber, I. KMP02, GIP03, HYP08 Huber, S. ESV04 Hünger, F. DVP18 Hultgren, S. J. MPP71 Humberg, V. MPV32 Hunfeld, K. - P. KMV03, QSV03, ESV17 Husmann, M. MPV36 Hussain, M. MPP62 Hutzler, M. LMP01 Ignatius, R. Kaase, M. Kabisch, H. MPP57 IIP13 Imirzalioglu, C. MSP01 Ingersoll, M. MPP71 Irma, O. EKP01 Irtenkauf, C. MPP30 Iwen, P. DVV04 KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP34, MSP06, MPV06 KMV04 FTP09 Käding, J. DIP01 Kahl, B. MPP61 Kahl, B. C. MPP36 Kahl, F. IIP14, IIV12, GIP14 Kaiser, P. MPP03 Kalbacher, H. MPP15 IIP16, IIP18, IIV13 Kalteis, T. KMP11 Kamal, E. MPV40 Kaminski, E. I. KMP17 Kanageswaran, N. MPP43 Karapetyan, A. DVP25 Karch, A. MSV02 Karch, H. GIP16, MPP08, MSV05, GIP17, GIP18, RKP11, GIP19 ESV07 Karhausen, J. J Klade, M. Kadlec, K. Kalka-Moll, W. I Igel, L. Kist, M. K Kaspar, H. FTP20 Jäckel, K. ESV07 Kasper, H. KMP08 Jacobi, S. MPP70 Kästner, N. DVP20 Jacobs, E. Jansen, A. MPP37, MPP40, MPP72, KMV08 HYP10, MPP49 Janßen, S. MPV40 Jaros, M. DIP03 Jasny, E. IIP13 Jellbauer, S. IIP05 Jensch, I. MPV02 Jensen, V. MPP32 Jentsch, H. KMP19 Jiang, H. Johansson, H. M. Johswich, K. Jonas, D. FEMS-P06 MPP09 IIP02 KMV06 Joost, I. MPP55, MPP11 Jores, J. KMP08, GIP06 Josenhans, C. GIP15, MPV12 Jung, S. IIV05, IIV02 Juretzek, T. KMP01 Just-Nübling, G. KMV07 Juuti, K. M. MPP62 Katzowitsch, E. GIP15, GIV10 Klar, S. FEMS-P02 Klare, I. FTP14 Klebba, P. E. DVP01, DVP13, KMV09 Kleine, B. KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP34, MPP35, MPV06, MPP43, MPP68, MPP69 MPP10 Klein-Günther, A. Klemm, A. IIP21 Klemmer, A. IIP19 Kleta, S. MPP71 Klis, F. EKV11 Kloft, N. MPV36 Klos, A. IIP02, MPV19 Klotz, M. Knabbe, C. FTP10 Knappe, D. FTP30 Knauer, M. MPP61 Knaust, A. HYP13, HYP14, HYV05 Kniehl, E. FTP11, QSV05, RKP08, FTP32 MSP08 Knobloch, J. K. Köberle, M. Kaysser, P. IIP17, DVP22, RKP07 Ködel, U. Kempf, V. Kepp, O. Kerksiek, K. Kohlenberg, A. IIV04 HYV07 FTP24, IIP04 DVP02, MPP03 Köhler, H. MPP54 ESV05 Köhler, J. IIV03, MPV08 IIV05 Kohler, T. MPV03 Kern, Y. IIP22 DVP15, DVP17 Köhn, B. Koivogui, L. Kokryakov, V. N. Kola, A. Khan, A. - B. IIP11 Khang, D. D. KMP05 Kolata, J. Kiehntopf, M. KMV03 Kolditz, M. Kim, K.S. MSV05, HYV10 Kohler, C. QSV01 Kiessling, S. MPP10 GIP19 Kern, P. Kesztyues, B. IIP19 DVV05, DVP08 Knabner, D. Köck, R. Kemper, B. GIP07 Kline, K. MPP60 DVV04 MPP19 Kleesiek, K. Kaur, S. J. Keckevöt, U. RKP06, RKP05, HYV02, RKV02, MPV10 DIP03 MSP05, MPP38 GIP17 IIP05 MSV04 FTP30 HYV02, HYV08 IIP06 KMP14 KolobovJr., A. FTP30 Kondruweit, M. KMP16 DVP27 FTP10 Kim, K.-S. MPV32 Kongdoung, P. Kipp, F. HYV10 Konietzny, A. Kirsche, H. KMP03 König, A. RKV07 IIV04 König, B. IIP14, IIV12 König, W. DVP06, DVP07, MPP27, MPV27 DVP06, DVP07, GIV05, MPV11, GIP10, GIV02, Kirschnek, S. Kirschning, C. J. 166 Kulauzovic, E. MPV03 Liese, J. IIV08 Konkel, M. E. MPP27, MPP31 GIV05 Kunert, A. EKV07 Liesenfeld, O. IIV01 Konstabel, C. FTP14 Kunz, S. Kooistra-Smid, A. M. D. DVP17 Kupfahl, C. Koomey, M. MPP74 Kurt, K. Kopf, S. DVP22 Kurtz, D. FTP28 Lindner, B. Kurz, C. - L. ESV02 Lingelbach, K. Kopron, K. IIP06 Korableva, E. FTP30 Kurzai, O. Körber-Irrgang, B. FTP06 Kurzmann, C. IIV08 HYP06, EKP04, EKP05 DVV10 EKV03, MPP17 Liliana, T. FTP21, GIP12 Linde, H. - J. MPP30 Lindenstrauß, A. LMP03 FTP35 FEMS-V02 Linke, D. DVP02, MPP03, FTP18 IIV08 Lo, N. FEMS-V01, FEMS-P04 Loddenkemper, C. Körfer, R. KMV09 Kusch, H. IIV10 Korn, K. RKP10 Kutter, S. MPV38 Lössner, M. J. MPP29 Kuusela, P. I. MPP62 Löffler, J. EKV03 Kortsik, C. KMV02 Kösel, S. DVP21 Kosma, P. FTP34 Kostrzewa, M. DVV09, DVV04 Kozjak-Pavlovic, V. ESV05 Kracht, M. IIP02, MPV19 Kraiczy, P. IIV11, IIV11a Kramme, S. KMV10, RKP09, DVP24 Krammer, S. KMV11 Kraus, D. MPP15 Krause, M. KMP07 Krause-Gruszczynska, M. GIV05 Kraushaar, B. FTP10 Krausse, R. KMP18 Kreft, J.-U. FTP23 Kreidenweiss, A. EKV01 Kreikemeyer, B. MPP16, MPV01 Kremer, M. MPV15 Kremsner, P. EKV01 Kresken, M. FTP06 Kreth, H. W. RKV06 Kretzschmar, H. IIP08 Krickhahn, C. HYV12 Krickhahn, D. HYV12 Krist, S. FTP15, FTP17 Krüger, S. GIV01 Krüger, W. A. FTP16 Krumbholz, A. KMV03 Krumbholz, G. MPP47 Kuchenbecker, U. FTP16 Kücherer, C. MSV01 Kuczius, T. DVP09 Kuhlicke, J. ESV07 Kuhlisch, E. MPP57 Kühlmann, G. FTP38 L La Ragione, R. M. GIP09 Lärberg, R. MSV05 Lagemann, A. RKP11 Laib Sampaio, K. Lakner, A. FTP26, FTP25 DVV08 Landré, J. DVV01 Landt, O. DVV03 Lang, A. MPV31 Lohoff, M. IIP19 Loitsch, S. MPP58 Löns, D. MPP32, MPP41 Loof, T. IIV02 Lorenz, B. MPV07 Lorenz, M. DVP14 Lorenz, U. MPV07 Lorenzen, T. KMV03 Loschen, S. MSV01 Lübke-Becker, A. Langehanenberg, P. GIP19 Lardon, L. FTP23 Larsen, U. HYP17 Lüder, C. La Sala, P. R. DVV04 Ludwig, A. Laskay, T. MPV22 Lugert, R. Laugks, R. GIV08 Laverde-Gomez, J. Layer, F. Le, T. T. H. Lupas, A. MPP03 DVP06, DVP07, MPP27, MPV27 IIV10 Lüthje, P. FTP03 DVV01 KMP11, MPP30 Leiendecker, J. KMP18 Leinberger, D. M. DVV05 Leis, A. MPV39 Lembke, C. Lendeckel, U. Lewin, A. Li Stephen, T. GIP11 MPP19, RKP03 Lehmann, M. Leitritz, L. MPV05 MPV20 DVP03 Leithäuser, F. Lück, P. C. MSP10, FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP12, FTP13 HYP07, KMP21, MPP57, RKP12 EKV02, EKP07 Lührmann, A. Léchenne, B. Lehn, N. IIV01 GIP14 Lütticken, R. Lütz, J. RKP04, DVP26 QSV04 Luu Duc, H. KMV11 Lyytikäinen, O. HYV06 M Ma, L. MPP19 Maass, M. DVV12 FTP11, RKP08, FTP32 MacKenzie, C. GIV09 MPV01 MacKenzie, R. FTP34 MPP13, GIV01 MPV40 IIP18 Li, G. MSP05, MPP38 Li, H. FEMS-P06 Macpherson, A. J. MPV15 Mader, D. MPP63 Madlener, K. HYP14 Mätz-Rensing, K. Mai, M. MSP12, RKP07 DVV07 167 Maier, G. MPP06 Möller, R. DVV02 Nilsson, M. Maier, T. DVV09, DVV04 Monecke, S. . ESV10 Nimptsch, A. Mainiero, M. MPV04, MPP21 Monk, I. . MPV34 Nitsche-Schmitz, D. P. MPP09 Mordmüller, B. EKV01 Noll, I. MSP09 Moter, A. MSP03 Nordhoff, M. Marsch, S. HYV11 Martin, M. IIP02 Martinez-Quiles, N. GIV02 Mothes, W. MPV37 Nübel, U. Massow, I. KMP13 Mshana, S. MSP01 Nürnerger, T. Matern, Y. GIV04 Mücke, I. FTP27 Matten, J. KMP10 Müller, A. LMP08 HYV02, HYV09 Müller, D. MPP12 Müller, I. QSV03 Mattner, F. Matysiak-Klose, D. Mauch, H. Maucher, H. Maydannik, V. . McNamara, P. Medina, E. FTP27 FTP11, QSV05, RKP08, FTP32 DVP28 GIP13 MPP22 IIV12, LMV01, GIP14 Müller, P. FEMS-P03 Müller, W. IIV07 MüllerLoennies, S. Mülverstedt, A. FTP34, FTP35 FTP30 GIP07 KMV05, DVV10 ESV11 O Oberdorfer, K. HYP16 Obermaier, B. IIV04 Ölschläger, T. MPP33, GIP07 Özkaya, I. MPP42 Ohlsen, K. MPV05, MPP73, MPV07 Olbermann, P. GIV10 LMP07 Olgemöller, B. DVP21 Münch, R. MPP32 Orland, A. MPP43 MPP02 Münter, W. MPP16 Orth, D. Meissner, A. MPP32 Muselmann, C. MPP54 Ostin, M. Meissner, B. RKV05 Müsken, A. GIP18 Oswald, S. GIP07 Müsken, M. MPP56, MPV43 OtvosJr., L. FTP30 Menge, C. DVV04, MSV05, DVV11, HYV10, RKP11 GIV06 Müthing, J. GIP16, GIP18, GIP19 Overhage, J. MPV41 Merkel, N. MPV44 Mertens, T. IIP21 Messler, S. GIV09 Nagarajan, K. Metzner, K. RKP10 Nagel, M. Meukow, N. MPP07, KMP05 Naim, A. IIP11 LMP08, LMV02 Nalca, Y. MPV42 Paschen, S. MPV21 Nau, R. MPV02 Pasierb, P. FTP17 IIV05 Meemboor, S. Meier, S. Mellmann, A. Meussdörffer, F. IIV02 Müller, M. DVV10 IIP16, IIP18 Meyer, E. HYP01, QSV06, QSP02 Meyer, F. GIV02 Meyer, F. J. KMP17 N IIP11 FTP21, GIP12 P FEMS-P07, FEMS-P06, EKV09 Nauerth, M. Naumann, M. HYP10 Panning, M. Panthel, K. Park, S.F. KMV10, RKP09, DVP24 IIV05, IIP05 GIP01 Patten, A. MPP30 MPP13, GIV01 Pattis, I. GIV08 IIV04 Meyer, H. DVV03, FEMS-P08 Nega, M. MPP50 Paul, R. Meyer, O. LMP08, LMV02 Neske, F. RKV06 Pelkmans, L. MPV16 Michalski, N. MPP34, MPP68 Neuenhahn, M. PeltrocheLlacsahuanga, H. Perbandt, M. DVP26 Michel, D. KMV11 Michel, R. IIV05 Neukirch, C. MPV36 FTP37 Neumayer, W. MPP53 Michelmann, M. HYP16 Newton, S. M. C. MPP19 Middendorf, B. DVV11 Nguyen, T. T. H. IIV10 Middendorf, D. IIP09 Miller, T. Mircea Gabriel, S. DVP05 Nicholson, G. Nickel, D. Peschel, A. Peter-Katalinic, J. Peters, G. MPP63 IIP10 Petzl, W. HYP17 MPV03, MPP15, MPP63 GIP19, GIP16, GIP18 DVP09, MPP18, MPP22, MPP23, MSV05, MPP36, RKV06, MPP62 MPP65 FTP21, GIP12 Nicolaisen, S. MPV13 Petzold, A. Misselwitz, B. MPV16 Niederführ, A. KMP03 Pfaffinger, G. Moder, K. - A. DVP06, DVP07 Niederhausen, M. DVP25 Pfeffer, K. GIV09 HYP06 IIP05 Mogk, A. MPP67 Niederweis, M. MPV39 Pfeffer, M. DVP12 Mohsenipour, I. EKV06 Niemann, S. MSV07 Pfeifer, G. MPV39 168 Pfeifer, Y. KMP04 Reichelt, R. Pfepper, K. - I. DVV13 Reichholf, U. MPP30 Runge, C. Reidel, A. LMP06 Rupp, J. DVV12 GIP14 Rupp, S. DVV07 Ruppert, T. EKP04 Pfister, W. MSP09, KMP19, KMP20 Phuong, D. M. KMP05 Reimann, J. Piening, B. HYV03 Reinert, R. R. GIP19 RKP04, MSV03, DVP16, HYP04 IIV07 Piper, C. FTP11, KMV11, RKP08, FTP32 DVP13 Pless, B. MPV28 Reischl, U. Plitzko, J. MPV39 Reißmann, S. MPP09 Reiter-Owona, I. QSV01 Pietzcker, T. Plum, G. Podbielski, A. Polidori, M. IIP18 KMP07, MPP16, MPV01, QSV05 FEMS-V03 Poltermann, S. EKV07 Polywka, S. KMP09 Popp, J. DVV02 Popp, W. Poppert, S. Prager, R. Prassl, S. Preissner, K. T. Principi, M. FTP08, QSV07 DVP20, DVV08, IIP10 DVP05 MPV37, MPP48 MPV31, MPP11, MPV09 IIP21 Proctor, R. A. MPP22, MPP23 Przyborski, J. FEMS-V02 Przybylski, M. DVV12 Püllen, R. HYP11 Pumpor, K. Putze, J. FEMS-P06 MPP33 Reinhold, D. Reinscheid, D. J. Quang, N.X. KMP05 R Rabsch, W. DVP05, MPP19, RKP03 Rainard, P. MPP65 Rainer, P. RKP14 Rajbhandari, R. MPP51 Rakette, S. MPP73 Rakin, A. MPP24 Rambach, G. EKV06 Ramminger, I. DVV04 Rechner, C. MPV30 Redanz, S. MPP16 Reder, S. Reichardt, K. FTP38 MPP40 QSV02, MPP30 FTP16 Ruscher, C. MSP10 Rüsch-Gerdes, S. RKV03 Russell, D. ESV08 Rüssmann, H. IIV05, IIP05 Russwurm, S. DVV01 Rüter, C. GIP02 Reithmeier-Rost, D. MPP01 Rennemeier, C. R. MPV31 Rennenberg, A. EKV09 Reschke, F. MPP57 Reutter, S. DVP02 Saager, B. KMV04 IIP02 Sacchi, L. FEMS-V01 Richter, E. MSP03 Sacher, R. MPV16 Rickman, B. MPV12 Sachse, S. KMV03, DVV01 KMP03 Sakar, A. Rheinheimer, C. Riechelmann, H. Riedel, C. U. MPV34, FTP19 Rieder, G. GIV07, GIV03 Riess, T. DVP02, MPP03 Rintelen, C. Ripper, D. Robbiani, R. Robinson, N. Röcker, T. MPV44 FTP25 Rydzewski, K. MPV28 S Sakinc, T. SakowiczBurkiewicz, M. Samen, U. M. MPV22 MPP14, KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP34, MPP35, MPV06, MPP43, MPP68, MPP69, MPP69 IIV07 FTP19 MPV15 Sander, G. MPP22, MPP23 IIP18 Sanjaq, S. LMP02, LMP03 FTP36 Santos Barbosa, H. EKP07 DVV14 Sassera, D. FEMS-V01 Rössner, A. GIV01 Sastalla, I. MPP09 Rogasch, K. FTP24, MPV08 Saum, S. MPP58 Rogers, A. MPV12 Savey, A. HYV06 Rohde, H. KMV04, MPP64 Schade, R. FEMS-P02 Rohde, M. IIV02, KMP07, GIV05, MPV11 MPP54 Schäfer, A. MPP03, DVP02 Schäfer, T. MPV07 Schalimow, H. MPV26 Schaller, B. MPP28 Schaller, M. IIV09, EKV11 Rödel, J. Q MPP28 HYV04 Rohrmann, B. Roider, E. Rönnebäumer, K. Roschack, K. IIP05 FEMS-V04 IIV10 Rosenkötter, N. KMV01 Rothe, M. MPV02 Roy, C. R. MPV20 Rozhdestvensky, T. S. MPP18 Rubtsova, M. DVV05 Ruckdeschel, K. MPV18 Rudel, T. Rüden, H. MPV30, ESV05 HYP01, HYV03, HYV07, QSV06, QSP02, HYP09, Schallmey, M. Scharf, S. MPP19 IIP04 Schaumann, R. KMV01 Schaumburger, J. KMP11 Scheer, S. DVP18 Scheid, P. FTP37 Schenk, S. IIV06 Scherpe, S. DVP11, KMV04, MSP08 169 Schiemann, M. Schierack, P. Schilling, J. Schindler, S. Schlag, M. Schleicher, U. IIV05 Schubert, A. IIP10 Siegel, D. DVP14 KMP08, GIP07, DVP10 Schubert, S. MSP09, IIP12, MPP66 Siegel, E. KMV02 Siegel, I. MPV35 MPV14, MPP25, MPP26, MPP44 EKP02 MPP46 IIV08 Schlundt, C. KMP16 Schlüter, D. IIV07 Schmelz, F. DVP25 Schmelz, U. HYP15 Schmid, A. MPP53, MPP01, MPP52 Schmid, M. LMP08 Schmid, R. D. DVV05 Schmidt, C. L. Schmidt, D. S. Schmidt, H. Schmidt, K. - H. Schmidt, M. A. FEMS-P07, FEMS-P06, EKV09 MPV13 GIP05 DVV01 MPV32, MPV14, MPP12, MPP25, MPP26, MPP44, GIP17 GIP11 Schuff-Werner, P. IIP17 Schuhegger, R. HYP08 Siegmund, B. IIV01 Schüler, T. DVV02 Siekmeier, R. QSV04 Schulte, B. KMP06, HYP03 Sieper, J. FTP33 Schulte, J. MPV32 Sigge, A. DVP20 IIV11, IIV11a, RKV07 Silva, H. IIP06 Schulte-Spechtel, U. C. Schulthess, B. MPP02 Silvis, W. KMP11 Schulz, T. MPP70 Simnacher, U. DVV13 Schulze, H. LMV02 Simon, V. Schulze, J. Schumann, R. R. Schunder, E. GIP15, GIP13, MPV12 IIV01, IIP13 MPV24, MPV25 Schuppler, M. MPP29 Schurwanz, N. MPP37 Schüßler, A. Schütt, S. FTP26 KMV06, HYP12 Schütz, M. FTP18 Schwab, F. Sing, A. Sinha, B. GIP11 MPP01, KMP02, GIP03, HYP08 MPP62 Sinzger, C. FTP26, FTP25 Skerka, C. IIV11, IIV11a Skopek, R. FTP38 Slickers, P. ESV10 Smoczek, A. MPV13 Snijder, B. MPV16 Sobottka, I. KMV07 Schmiedel, A. FTP38 Schwarz, A. HYV06, QSV06, QSP02, HYV08 EKP06 Schmiedel, S. KMV10 Schwarz, G. DVV09 Solbach, W. MPV22 Schmitt, C. EKV03, MPP17 Schwarz, R. KMP10 Söllner, H. HYP08 Schmitt, J. KMP13 Schwarz, S. FTP02, FTP03, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP09, FTP12, FTP13, KMP08, GIV10, GIV10 FTP31 Somerville, G. A. MPV09 Sommer, K. MPV19 Schmidt-Ott, R. Schmitt, S. MPV09 Schmitz, I. MPV06 Schmitz, S. Schmoldt, S. Schmudde, M. FTP22 HYP08, MPP42 IIP06 Schneider, C. KMV06 Schneider, M. IIP21 Schneiderbanger, D. SchneiderBrachert, W. Schneider-Stock, R. Schörner, C. Scholz, H. Schouls, L. RKV06 MPV38 GIV01 QSV03, KMP16 DVP12 RKV01 Schwarzer, K. Somplatzki, D. MPV02 MSP03 Sonnenborn, U. GIP13 Schwenz, B. MSP07 Souady, J. Schweppe, C. H. GIP16 Soutschek, E. Schweppe, H. GIP19 Spahr, A. Schwerk, P. MPP45 Spellerberg, B. Sebo, P. MPP48 Speth, C. Seeger, E. M. MPP72 Splettstösser, W. D. Seegmüller, I. RKP04, MSV03, DVP16, HYP04, KMP17 MPP18, MPP22, MPP23 Seggewiß, J. IIP17, DVP22, MSP12, RKP07 KMP14 Stanek, G. QSV03 Seibold, E. IIP17, DVP22, MSP12, RKP07 KMP20 Stanzel, S. DVP16 Stecher, B. MPV15 DVP04 Schröder, S. IIV05 Sethi, S. DVP04, IIP08 Schröer, U. FTP20 Seltmann, T. Sewald, X. Shamova, O. MPV37, MPP48 FTP30 DVV05, EKV10 Shen, X. FEMS-P06 QSP02 Shen, Z. MPV12 RKV01, KMV01 EKV06 MPP16 Sethi, K. Schröter, M. DVP20, KMV11 Standar, K. GIP03 Schrören-Börsch, B. IIP10 EKV10 Schreiber, C. Schröppel, K. Spornraft-Ragaller, P. GIP18 DVV13 Sehnal, M. KMP02 FEMS-P08 HYV07, HYV04 Schweickert, B. Schranner, S. Schröpfer, E. Sohr, D. Siegel, C. IIV11, IIV11a Stegemann, C. Stehle, T. Steil, L. Steiner, B. Steinert, M. FTP30 MPP73 IIV10 IIP22 MPV24 Steinhauer, K. DIP01 Steinhoff, U. IIP01 170 Steinhorst, A. Steinmetz, I. Stemberger, C. Stenger, S. QSP01 MPP07, MPV26, KMP05, IIP03, IIV03, MPV08, IIP06 IIV05 IIP10 Sterzenbach, T. GIP15, MPV12 Stierhof, Y. - D. FTP25 Stingel, S. GIP05 Stöckelhuber, M. GIV03 Stolte, M. GIV03 Störmer, M. DVP01 ter Meulen, J. MSV04 van Slochteren, K. R. Terjung, S. MPP35 van Treeck, U. KMV01 Thebille, S. DVP25 van Zandbergen, G. MPV22 IIP06 van Zanten, E. DVP17 MPV07 Veerachato, G. MPV36 Thi Thu Ngyuen, H. Thiede, A. Thiel, A. FTP33 Verhöven, F. HYV10 Thoma, B. MSP02 Vianna, M. DVP18 Thuma, M. MPP72 Vier, J. MPV21 Thürmer, A. KMP21 Viezens, J. Tintelnot, K. KMV07 Vik, S. To Baben-Yang, M. HYV09 Vogel, U. Strauch, E. KMV03, FTP11, DVV13, QSV03, RKP08, FTP32, DVV01 FTP10 Strecker, T. KMP16 Toonkomdang, S. DVP27 Stringer, J. KMP13 Top, J. DVV11 Tran, Q. - T. KMP15 Trautmann, S. KMV08 Trülzsch, K. MPV18 Trung, T. T. KMP05 Straube, E. Strommenger, B. Strompen, S. Stübs, G. Stüger, H. - P. Stürzl, M. Sürbaum, S. Sugai, M. KMV05, IIP06, RKV04, DVV10 MPP22, MPP23 IIP13 RKP06, RKP05 ESV03 GIP15, IIP02, HYV08, HYV09, MPV12, GIV10 MPP64 Suger-Wiedeck, H. IIP21 Suhre, M. IIV05 Supply, P. MSV07 Sutinoski, B. MPP44 Suznea, I. DVV12 Svanborg, C. MPV29 Sydor, T. FEMS-V03 Sylla, O. MSV04 Szabados, F. Szekat, C. KMP09, MSP04, KMP12, MPP34, MSP06, MPV06, MPP43, MPP68, MPP69 FTP22, MPP49 DVP17 Tokuda, G. FEMS-P04, Tomaso, H. DVP12 Truong, Q. P. IIV10 Tschernych, N. HYP14 Tsikas, D. EKP05 Tuan, N. . KMP05 Tümmler, B. ESV13 Türck, M. HYP10 Turner, D. MPP17 U Ulrichs, T. Unger, C. Uphoff, C. Urstadt, S. Vogelgesang, S. HYP07 FEMS-P05 DVP25 V MPP74 HYP02, MSV02, RKV01, MSP07 MPV08, Voigt, B. MPP07 Völkel, I. DVP25 Völker, U. Volkmar, S. IIV10, IIP04 FEMS-P02 Vollmar, J. ESV15 Vollmer, I. ESV07 Vollmer, T. DVP13, KMV09 Vollmer, W. MPV33 Volz, T. MPP50 von Bally, G. von Bargen, K. von Baum, H. von der Heide, M. von Eiff, C. von Freyberg, J. C. IIP13 IIP20 von Löwenich, F. von Mehring, C. von Müller, L. GIP19 FEMS-P10, FEMS-V03 KMP04, KMV11 EKV07 DVP09, MPP18, MPP22, MPP23, MSV05, MSP06, RKV06, MPP65 MSP08 MPV22, IIP22 MPV15 MPP11,IIP21 von Ohle, C. MPP06 von Oy, S. DVP26 von Wulffen, H. DVP11 T Valdez, Y. GIV11 Talay, S.R. MPP60 Valentin-Weigand, P. MPP05 Tammer, I. DVP06, DVP07, MPV11 Valev, I. MPV35 Wagener, J. IIV09, EKV11 Valeva, A. MPV35 Wagner, C. MPV17, DVP02 GIV11 Wagner, H. IIP14, HYP14 IIV10 Wagner, I. RKV01 Walker, A. MPV15 RKV01 Wallich, R. IIV11, IIV11a Tan, J. FEMS-P06 Tannich, E. RKP09 Vallance, B. Tappe, D. QSV01 van Belkum, A. Tautzenberger, A. MPP28 van de Pol, I. Taylor, N. MPV12 van der Ende, A. Tedin, K. GIP06, GIP07, MPP45 Tegtmeyer, N. ter Meulen, A. MPV11, GIV02 MSV04 van der Linden, M. RKP04, MSV03, HYP04 van der Linden, P. HYV07 van GemertPijnen, J. E. W. HYV10 W Wallmann, J. Walter, A. IIP08 FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP12, FTP13, FTP20 HYV01 171 Walter, H. RKP10 Widmer, A. HYP01 Würthner, J. GIV09 Walther, B. MSP10 Wiedemann, T. GIV03 Würzner, R. IIP11 Wardecki, K. MPP61 Wiehlmann, L. ESV13 Wylenzek, M. Watanabe, H. FEMS-P04 Weber, A. EKV02 Weber, W. HYP17 Wegner, K. KMP19 Wehland, J. MPV07 Wei, H. Weidenmaier, C. FTP19 MPV03 Weig, M. IIV09, EKP06, EKV11 Weile, J. DVP08 Weindl, G. IIV09, EKV11 Weiss, E. MPV37, GIV08 Weiß, M. IIP21 Weissbrich, B. RKV06 Weist, K. HYV07 Weitzel-Kage, D. Weller, A. Wellinghausen, N. Wendel, A. Wendt, C. Weniger, T. Werckenthin, C. HYV07, RKP02 DVV10 MSP09, KMP03, DVV08, DVP14, KMV11 DVV12 KMV06, HYP12, HYP16 ESV16 MSV07 FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, FTP12, FTP13 FTP14 Wieler, L. Wieler, L. H. Wieser, A. FTP12, FTP13 MSP10, FTP02, FTP04, FTP05, FTP07, KMP08, GIP06, GIP07, GIP09, DVP10, DVP10, MSV06, MPP38, MSP11 IIP12 Wilharm, G. MPP53, MPP01, MPP52 Wilking, H. GIP09, MSV06, MSP11 MPV35 X Xia, G. Xiang, W. MPP13, GIV01 IIP08 Y Yamada, A. FEMS-P04 Willems, R. J. L. DVV11 Williamson, D. MPP01 Wilms, M. DVP16 Wilske, B. IIV11, IIV11a, RKV07 Wilson, D. DVV04 Windhorst, S. HYP17 Zabler, D. MPV11 Wintermans, R. G. F. DVP17 Zähringer, U. MPP63 Wirsing von König, C. - H. Wirtz, C. QSV03 Zander, J. MPP58 Zaoui, C. MPV43, MPP32, MPP41 MPP39 Wisplinghoff, H. MSP09 Wisselink, G. . DVP17 Witt, T. EKV09 Witte, W. Wittelsberger, R. KMV05, KMP04, HYP02, IIP06, FTP14, RKV04, DVV10 GIV02 Yapici, G. Ying, S. IIP13 MPV21 Z Zautner, A. E. KMP07 Zdziarski, J. MPV29 Zelensky, T. DVP20 Zerr, I. Zhang, W. RKV05 GIP17, GIP18, RKP11 Zhu, S. LMP04, LMP05 Wolf, C. MPP65 Ziebuhr, W. MPP14, MPV09 DVP12 Wolff, C. GIP13 Ziesing, S. MSP09, HYV09 Wertheim, H. IIV10 Wolff, S. FTP24 Zimmerhackl, L. - B. Wessler, S. GIP10 Wollschläger, B. Werner, G. Wernery, U. Westendorf, A. Westendorf, A. M. MPV15 IIP15 Westh, H. MPP36 Westphal, G. LMV01 Wetzel, D. QSV04 Wewer, C. MPV32 Weyand, M. KMP16 Whary, M. MPV12 Wichelhaus, T. A. HYP11, DVV05, MPV05, MPP58 Wolters, K. Wolz, C. Wongprompitak, P. Woodward, M. J. Worlitzsch, D. MPV44 MPP25, MPP26, MPP44 Zinecker, H. MPP02, KMP06, MPP20, MPV04, MPP21, MPP39, MPP49, MPP64 IIP03, IIV03 Zingarelli, A. GIP09 MPP04, MPV44 Wosny, M. FTP15 Wozniok, I. EKV03 Wullt, B. Wüppenhorst, N. Zimmermann, S. IIP11 MSV04, KMP17 DVP28 IIP16, IIV13 Zink, M. MPP39 Zipfel, P. EKP02 Zipfel, P. F. Zoll, S. Zöller, L. Zweigner, J. IIV11, IIV11a, EKV07 MPP46 FTP37 IIP13 MPV29 RKP06, RKP05, RKV02 172 Anzeige Abstracts 210x280 08.08.2007 16:16 Uhr Seite 1 The Bavarian Genome Research Network was founded in 2004 to explore the functions, interactions und regulation of human genes and gene products with the goal of developing new methods for diagnostics, prognostication and therapy of diseases. We invite you to join us at our international congress on INTEGRATIVE CANCER GENOMICS that will be held from February 11-13, 2008, at the Auditorium Maximum of the Technical University Munich. Major sessions are dedicated to: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) Signaling and Cancer Bioinformatics Cancer Genetics and Epidemiology Molecular Imaging Cancer Stem Cells Novel Targets in Cancer Treatment Tumor Metabolism and Immune Escape Confirmed speakers include Roderick L. Beijersbergen, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Jürgen Behrens, Erlangen, Germany Christian Brandts, Frankfurt, Germany Vincenzo Bronte, Padova, Italy Frederico Canzian, Heidelberg, Germany Jan Cools, Leuven, Belgium Michael Detmar, Zurich, Switzerland Ivan Dikic, Frankfurt, Germany Roland Eils, Heidelberg, Germany Riccardo Fodde, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Jerome Galon, Paris, France Edward K. Geissler, Regensburg, Germany Kristine Glunde, Baltimore, USA Anne Hartmann, Regensburg, Germany Richard S. Houlston, Sutton, United Kingdom Lukas Huber, Innsbruck, Austria Paul M. Hwang, Bethesda, USA Andreas H. Jacobs, Cologne, Germany Walter Kolch, Glasgow, Scotland Hasan Korkaya, Michigan, USA Marina Kreutz, Regensburg, Germany Friedrich Lottspeich, Martinsried, Germany Richard Marais, London, United Kingdom Ruggero De Maria, Rome, Italy Bernard Mathey-Prevot, Boston, USA Frank McCormick, San Francisco, USA Jack T. Mosher, Michigan, USA Ulrike Peters, Seattle, USA Anil Potti, Durham, USA George C. Prendergast, Wynnewood, USA Clemens A. Schmitt, Berlin, Germany Terry Speed, Berkeley, USA Charles Tannenbaum, Cleveland, USA William G. Thilly, Cambridge USA Axel Ullrich, Martinsried, Germany Benoit Van den Eynde, Brussels, Belgium For further information visit our web site www.baygene.de, or contact Dr. Ulrike Kaltenhauser: Email: [email protected], Tel. ++49-89-8595054