Assessing the role of p-cresol tolerance in Clostridium difficile.

Lisa F Dawson ORCID logo; Richard A Stabler ORCID logo; Brendan W Wren ORCID logo; (2008) Assessing the role of p-cresol tolerance in Clostridium difficile. Journal of medical microbiology, 57 (Pt 6). pp. 745-749. ISSN 0022-2615 DOI: 10.1099/jmm.0.47744-0
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Clostridium difficile is an important nosocomial pathogen, resulting in antibiotic-associated disease ranging from mild diarrhoea to the life-threatening pseudomembranous colitis. Upon antibiotic exposure, it is believed that the normal bowel microflora of patients is disrupted, allowing C. difficile to proliferate. Significantly, C. difficile is among only a few bacteria able to ferment tyrosine to p-cresol, a phenolic compound that is toxic to other microbes via its ability to interfere with metabolism. Therefore, the ability of different C. difficile strains to produce and tolerate p-cresol may play an important role in the development and severity of C. difficile-associated disease. In this study, it was demonstrated that two C. difficile hypervirulent 027 strains (Stoke Mandeville and BI-16) are more tolerant to p-cresol than other C. difficile strains including 630, CF4 and CD196. Surprising, it was shown that Clostridium sordellii also has a high tolerance to p-cresol, suggesting an overlap in the tolerance pathways in these clostridial species.

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