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Weather stressors correlate with *Escherichia coli* and *Salmonella enterica* persister formation rates in the phyllosphere: a mathematical modeling study
Food Science and TechnologyISME Communications

Weather stressors correlate with *Escherichia coli* and *Salmonella enterica* persister formation rates in the phyllosphere: a mathematical modeling study

M. T. Brandl, R. Ivanek, et al.

This fascinating study explores how enteric pathogens like *E. coli* and *S. enterica* can enter a persister state amid varying environmental conditions. Using a mathematical model, researchers predicted how these pathogens survive and thrive on leafy greens, revealing intriguing correlations with solar radiation and other weather factors. Discover the groundbreaking findings from experts like Maria T. Brandl and others!... show more
Abstract
Enteric pathogens can enter a persister state in which they survive exposure to antibiotics and physicochemical stresses. Subpopulations of such phenotypic dormant variants have been detected in vivo and in planta in the laboratory, but their formation in the natural environment remains largely unexplored. We applied a mathematical model predicting the switch rate to persister cell in the phyllosphere to identify weather-related stressors associated with E. coli and S. enterica persister formation on plants based on their population dynamics in published field studies from the USA and Spain. Model outputs accurately depicted the bi-phasic decay of bacterial population sizes measured in the lettuce and spinach phyllosphere in these studies. Predicted E. coli persister switch rate on leaves was positively and negatively correlated with solar radiation intensity and wind velocity, respectively. Likewise, predicted S. enterica persister switch rate correlated positively with solar radiation intensity; however, a negative correlation was observed with air temperature, relative humidity, and dew point, factors involved in water deposition onto the phylloplane. These findings suggest that specific environmental factors may enrich for dormant bacterial cells on plants. Our model quantifiably links persister cell subpopulations in the plant habitat with broader physical conditions, spanning processes at different granular scales.
Publisher
ISME Communications
Published On
Sep 27, 2022
Authors
Maria T. Brandl, Renata Ivanek, Nerion Zekaj, Alexandra Belias, Martin Wiedmann, Trevor V. Suslow, Ana Allende, Daniel S. Munther
Tags
enteric pathogenspersister stateE. coliS. entericaphyllosphereenvironmental factorsbacterial decay
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