| Literature DB >> 20182626 |
Carlo Contini1, Silva Seraceni, Rosario Cultrera, Massimiliano Castellazzi, Enrico Granieri, Enrico Fainardi.
Abstract
Chlamydophila pneumoniae is an intracellular pathogen responsible for a number of different acute and chronic infections. The recent deepening of knowledge on the biology and the use of increasingly more sensitive and specific molecular techniques has allowed demonstration of C. pneumoniae in a large number of persons suffering from different diseases including cardiovascular (atherosclerosis and stroke) and central nervous system (CNS) disorders. Despite this, many important issues remain unanswered with regard to the role that C. pneumoniae may play in initiating atheroma or in the progression of the disease. A growing body of evidence concerns the involvement of this pathogen in chronic neurological disorders and particularly in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Monocytes may traffic C. pneumoniae across the blood-brain-barrier, shed the organism in the CNS and induce neuroinflammation. The demonstration of C. pneumoniae by histopathological, molecular and culture techniques in the late-onset AD dementia has suggested a relationship between CNS infection with C. pneumoniae and the AD neuropathogenesis. In particular subsets of MS patients, C. pneumoniae could induce a chronic persistent brain infection acting as a cofactor in the development of the disease. The role of Chlamydia in the pathogenesis of mental or neurobehavioral disorders including schizophrenia and autism is uncertain and fragmentary and will require further confirmation.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20182626 PMCID: PMC2825657 DOI: 10.1155/2010/273573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interdiscip Perspect Infect Dis ISSN: 1687-708X
Studies demonstrating evidence or absence of C. pneumoniae in brain autoptic specimens from patients with Alzheimer disease.
| Author, year | No. of autoptic AD brain specimens examined | Results of ⋀PCR in AD brain Positive % | Results of PCR in control brain Positive % | Study of APOEe 4 gene expression | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balin et al. 1998 [ | 19 | §PCR, | 1790 | 15,2 | Yes |
| Nochlin et al. 1999 [ | 13 | †PCR, IHM | 0 - | 0 - | Not done |
| Gieffers et al. 2000 [ | 20 | °PCR, IHM | 0 - | 0 - | Not done |
| Ring and Lyons 2000 [ | 15 | °°PCR, Culture | 0 - | 0 - | Not done |
| Taylor et al. 2002 [ | 10 | •PCR, IHM | 0 - | 0 - | Not done |
| Wozniak et al. 2003 [ | 4 | °°°PCR | 0 - | 0 - | Not done |
| Gérard et al. 2006 [ | 27 | ‡PCR, RT-PCR, IHM, EM, Culture | 2580 | 311 | Yes |
⋀PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RT-PCR, Reverse transcriptase PCR; ⋀⋀IHM, immunoistochemistry; *EM, electron microscopy; §primers targeting the 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene (Gaydos et al., J Clin Microbiol 1992; 30: 796–800) and the chlamydial major outer membrane protein (MOMP) gene (ompA) (Perez-Melgosa et al., Infect Imm 1991; 59: 2195–9); †PCR with seminested primer amplifying C. pneumoniae-specific DNA sequences of 437 bp (Kuo et al, J Infect Dis 1993; 167: 841-9); °nested PCR (Maass et al., Atherosclerosis 1998; 140: S25–30); °°Primers targeting the MOMP gene (Perez-Melgosa et al., 1991; Infect Imm 1991; 59: 2195–9) •PCR using the 76 kDa protein gene [47], the rpoB gene encoding the RNA polymerase beta subunit (Ouchi et al., J Med Microbiol 1998; 47: 907–13), and the pan-Chlamydia primers targeting the 16S ribosomal RNA gene in Chlamydia and Chlamydia-like organisms (Ossewaarde et al., Microbiology 1999; 145: 411–17); °°°PCR with primer targeting the 16SrRNA gene (J Clin Microbiol 1992; 30: 796–800); ‡PCR-multiple assays targeting the Cpn1046 gene (aromatic amino acid hydroxylase) and Cpn0695 (MOMP)[54].
Figure 1Representative images of double immunolabelling studies to demonstrate the infection of astrocytes, microglia, and neurons with Chlamydia pneumoniae in the AD brain. Chlamydia pneumoniae-infected cells were identified in all cases using the FITC-labelled monoclonal antibody targeting the Chlamydia LPS (Pathfinder TM; a, c, e). Astrocytes (b) and microglia (d) were identified by immunostaining using monoclonal antibodies targeting GFAP and iNOS, respectively. Neurons were identified by immunostaining with a monoclonal antibody targeting neuron-specific microtubule-associated protein (f). Images in all panels were obtained using a objective. In all panels, arrows indicate cells labelling with the Pathfinder TM and surface marker-specific monoclonal antibodies. (Reproduced from [54] with courtesy of Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA, and with permission of FEMS Med Lett).
Molecular protocols employed for detection of C. pneumoniae in clinical specimens from MS patients.
| MS patients (positive/total) | Controls (positive/total) | PCR assay | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7/30 (23%) | 0/56 (0%) | n-PCR† | Layh-Schmitt et al. 2000 [ |
| 9/17 (52%) | 13/15 (86%) | PCR† | Li et al. 2000 [ |
| 2/8 (25%) | not reported† | Treib et al. 2000 [ | |
| 12/58 (21%) | 20/47 (43%) | n-PCR† | Gieffers et al. 2001 [ |
| 3/32 (9%) | 0/30 (0%) | PCR† | Sotgiu et al. 2001 [ |
| 11/16 (69%) | PCR† | Ikejima et al. 2001 [ | |
| 9/28 (32%) | 2/15 (13%) | PCR† | Hao et al. 2002 [ |
| 2/70 (2.9%) | 0/30 (0%) | n-PCR† | Chatzipanagiotou et al. 2003 [ |
| 23/107 (21%) | 2/77 (3%) | Touchdown n-PCR† | Grimaldi et al. 2003 [ |
| 2/25 (8%) | 3/28 (11%) | n-PCR and semi-n-PCR† | Rostasy et al. 2003 [ |
| 42/84 (50%) | 25/89 (28%) | Touchdown n-PCR, RT-PCR† | Dong-Si et al. 2004 [ |
| 26/71 (36.6%) | 24/72 (33.3%) | Touchdown n-PCR† | Contini et al. 2004 [ |
| 12/20 (60%) | 1/12 (8%) | Touchdown n-PCR† | Sriram et al. 2005 [ |
| 2/112 (2%) | 0/110 (0%) | Real-time PCR‡ | Sessa et al. 2007 [ |
| 7–9/14 (50–64.3%)† | 0-1/19 (0–5.2%)† | Touchdown n-PCR, |
Contini et al. 2008 [ |
| 5–7/14 (35.7–50%)‡ | 0–2/19 (0–10.5 %)‡ | RT-PCR†‡, | |
| 64/80 (80%) | 5/57 (9%) | PCR-EIA, Touchdown n-PCR, Real Time-PCR† | Tang et al. 2009 [ |
n-PCR: nested PCR; RT-PCR: reverse transcriptase PCR; PCR-EIA: PCR enzyme immunoassay; †, CFS: cerebrospinal fluid; ‡, PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Acute and chronic neurological complications preceding or following C. pneumoniae associated respiratory manifestations.
| Author, year | Patient n. | Sex/age range (yr) median | Clinical findings | Neuroimaging | Treatment | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Fryden et al. 1989 [ | 1 | F/16 | Encephalitis, respiratory tract infection | Serum (4-fold rise) in IgG and IgM§ CSF negative for IgG and IgM | Brain CT scan | Clorampheni-col, Steroids | Recovery 1 year later |
| Haidl et al. 1992 [ | 1 | M/13 | Guillan-Barrè syndrome, parestesia, hyporeflexia, cough | Serum (4-fold rise) in IgG and IgM§ | ND | Steroids | Recovery 5 weeks later |
| Michel et al. 1992 [ | 1 | M/9 | Meningoradicultis, cough, rhinitis, hyporeflexia, back stiffness | Serum 4-fold fall in IgM, CSF positive for total IgG | ND | ND | Recovery 6 months later |
|
Sundelöf et al. 1993 [ | 1 | M/18 | Meningoencepha-litis, headache, diplopia paresthesia, fever, cough | Serum IgG (4-fold), IgM§ CSF negative for IgG and IgM | Brain CT scan | Erythromycin, Cefotaxime, Acyclovir | Recovery <1 week later |
| Socan et al. 1994 [ | 1 | M/18 | Diplopia, parestesia, meningeal syndrome, cough and pneumoniae | Serum IgM and IgG§ CSF negative for IgG and IgM | Brain CT scan | Acyclovir, Cefotaxime, Erythromycin | Recovery <1 week later |
| Koskiniemi et al. 1997 [ | 3 | F2/5.6 | Pareses, sensory symptoms, convulsions, depression of conscious-sness | Serum IgM and IgG§ | Brain CT, EEG## | Unspecified | ND |
| Korman et al. 1997 [ | 1 | F/69 | Cerebellar ataxia, respiratory failure | Serum (4-fold rise) in IgG, elevated IgA§ CSF negative for IgG and IgM | Brain CT | Erythromycin, Imipenem | Recovery <1 month later |
|
Heick and Skriver 2000 [ | 1 | F/18 | Coryzal illness, headache, dizziness, left-sided hemiparesis (†ADEM), ataxia, fever, dry cough | CKT# in serum serum IgM PCR in tracheal swab | Brain CT scan, cranial MR | Penicillin, Acyclovir, Gentamycine, Cefotaxime, Doxycycline, Methylpredn-isolone | Recovery 2 months |
| Guglielminotti et al. 2000 [ | 1 | M/95 | Meningeal syndrome, sleepiness, dry cough | Serum (4-fold rise) in IgG and IgA§ CSF IgG | Brain CT, EEG | Acyclovir, Amoxicillin, Erythromycin, Ofloxacin | died aspiration pneumoniae |
| Anton et al. 2000 [ | 1 | F/16 | Hyporeflexia, bilateral nistagmus, sleepiness, motor weakness, rhinitis | Serum (4-fold rise) in IgG, IgM§ CSF negative for IgG and IgM | Brain CT scan, Brain MR, Electrophy-siological studies | Ceftriaxone, Methylpredn-isolone | Recovery 2 months later |
| Airas et al. 2001 [ | 1 | F/33 | Sleepiness, memory loss, cough, pharyngitis | Serum IgA and IgG‡ | Brain MR | Acyclovir, Levofloxacine, Azhitromycine | Partial improvement |
| Boschin-Crinquette et al. 2005 [ | 1 | M/21 | Aphasia, meningeal syndrome, respiratory symptoms | Serum IgM° CSF negative for IgM, IgG and PCR | Brain CT scan, Brain MR | Acyclovir, Ofloxacin Amoxicillin, Cefotaxime | Recovery <2 weeks later |
§MIF: microimmunofluorescence; ‡EIA: enzyme immunoassay; °ELISA: enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay; #CTK: Chlamydia Complement-binding Test; ##EEG: electroencephalogram; †ADEM: acute disseminated encephalomyelitis.