Salmonella enterica serovar Sofia (S. Sofia) is often isolated from chickens in Australia. However,
despite its high frequency of isolation from chicken and chicken meat products, S. Sofia is rarely
associated with animal or human salmonellosis, presumably because this serovar is avirulent in
nature. The objective of this work was to investigate the phenotypic and molecular properties of S.
Sofia in order to assess its pathogenic potential. Our in vivo studies support the observation that
this serovar can colonize tissues, but does not cause disease in chickens. This was further
confirmed with tissue culture assays, which showed that the ability of S. Sofia to adhere, invade
and survive intracellularly is significantly diminished compared with the pathogenic Salmonella
enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) 82/6915. Molecular analysis of Salmonella
pathogenicity islands (SPIs) showed that most of the differences observed in SPI1 to SPI5 of
S. Sofia could be attributed to minor changes in the sequences, as indicated by a loss or gain
of restriction cleavage sites within these regions. Sequence analysis demonstrated that the
majority of virulence genes identified were predicted to encode proteins sharing a high identity
(75¿100 %) with corresponding proteins from S. Typhimurium. However, a number of virulence
genes in S. Sofia have accumulated mutations predicted to affect transcription and/or translation.
The avirulence of this serovar is probably not the result of a single genetic change but rather of a
series of alterations in a large number of virulence-associated genes. The acquisition of any single
virulence gene will almost certainly not be sufficient to restore S. Sofia virulence.