Vibrio vulnificus is the causative agent of primary septicemia, wound          infection and gastroenteritis in immunocompromised people. In this study, signature-tagged          mutagenesis (STM) was applied to identify the virulence genes of 
V.            vulnificus. Using STM, 6,480 mutants in total were constructed and divided into          81 sets (INPUT pools); each mutant in a set was assigned a different tag. Each INPUT pool          was intraperitoneally injected into iron-overloaded mice, and 
in vivo          surviving mutants were collected from blood samples from the heart (OUTPUT pools). From          the genomic DNA of mixed INPUT or OUTPUT pools, digoxigenin-labeled DNA probes against the          tagged region were prepared and used for dot hybridization. Thirty tentatively attenuated          mutants, which were hybridized clearly with INPUT probes but barely with OUTPUT probes,          were negatively selected. Lethal doses of 11 of the 30 mutants were reduced to more than          1/100; of these, the lethal doses of 2 were reduced to as low as 1/100,000.          Transposon-inserted genes in the 11 attenuated mutants were those for IMP dehydrogenase,          UDP-N-acetylglucosamine-2-epimerase, aspartokinase, phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine          cyclo-ligase, malate Na (+) symporter and hypothetical protein. When mice were immunized          with an attenuated mutant strain into which IMP dehydrogenase had been inserted with a          transposon, they were protected against 
V. vulnificus infection. In this          study, we demonstrated that the STM method can be used to search for the virulence genes          of 
V. vulnificus.
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