%0 Journal Article %T Characterization of a novel chaperone/usher fimbrial operon present on KpGI-5, a methionine tRNA gene-associated genomic island in Klebsiella pneumoniae %A Jon J van Aartsen %A Steen G Stahlhut %A Ewan M Harrison %A Marialuisa Crosatti %A Hong-Yu Ou %A Karen A Krogfelt %A Carsten Struve %A Kumar Rajakumar %J BMC Microbiology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2180-12-59 %X The 14.0 kb KpGI-5 island exhibited a genome-anomalous G£¿+£¿C content, possessed near-perfect 46 bp direct repeats, encoded a ¦Ã1-chaperone/usher fimbrial cluster (fim2) and harboured seven other predicted genes of unknown function. Transcriptional analysis demonstrated expression of three fim2 genes, and suggested that the fim2A-fim2K cluster comprised an operon. As fimbrial systems are frequently implicated in pathogenesis, we examined the role of fim2 by analysing KR2107, a streptomycin-resistant derivative of KR116, and three isogenic mutants (¦¤fim, ¦¤fim2 and ¦¤fim¦¤fim2) using biofilm assays, human cell adhesion assays and pair-wise competition-based murine models of intestinal colonization, lung infection and ascending urinary tract infection. Although no statistically significant role for fim2 was demonstrable, liver and kidney CFU counts for lung and urinary tract infection models, respectively, hinted at an ordered gradation of virulence: KR2107 (most virulent), KR2107£¿fim2, KR2107£¿fim and KR2107£¿fim£¿fim2 (least virulent). Thus, despite lack of statistical evidence there was a suggestion that fim and fim2 contribute additively to virulence in these murine infection models. However, further studies would be necessary to substantiate this hypothesis.Although fim2 was present in 13% of Klebsiella spp. strains investigated, no obvious in vitro or in vivo role for the locus was identified, although there were subtle hints of involvement in urovirulence and bacterial dissemination from the respiratory tract. Based on our findings and on parallels with other fimbrial systems, we propose that fim2 has the potential to contribute beneficially to pathogenesis and/or environmental persistence of Klebsiella strains, at least under specific yet-to-be identified conditions. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/12/59/abstract