| Literature DB >> 22892068 |
Nathan A Fisher1, Wilson J Ribot, Willard Applefeld, David DeShazer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Burkholderia pseudomallei and Burkholderia mallei are gram-negative pathogens responsible for the diseases melioidosis and glanders, respectively. Both species cause disease in humans and animals and have been designated as category B select agents by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Burkholderia thailandensis is a closely related bacterium that is generally considered avirulent for humans. While it can cause disease in rodents, the B. thailandensis 50% lethal dose (LD50) is typically ≥ 104-fold higher than the B. pseudomallei and B. mallei LD50 in mammalian models of infection. Here we describe an alternative to mammalian hosts in the study of virulence and host-pathogen interactions of these Burkholderia species.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22892068 PMCID: PMC3431275 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-12-117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1A representative juvenile Madagascar hissing cockroach used as a surrogate host for,, andinfection studies. The black arrows show the locations where bacteria were inoculated into the dorsal abdominal section of the MH cockroach, between the third and the fifth terga from the posterior.
Figure 2is virulent for the MH cockroach and T6SS-1 mutants are attenuated. Groups of eight MH cockroaches were challenged by the intra-abdominal route of infection and MH cockroach deaths were monitored for 5 days at 37°C. (A) 101 cfu. (B) 102 cfu. (C) 103 cfu. (D) 104 cfu. (E) 105 cfu. Bp, K96243; Bp Δhcp1, DDS1498A; Bp ΔvgrG1-5’, DDS1503-1A; Bp ΔvgrG1-3’, DDS1503-2A.
Relative virulence of bacterial strains in Syrian hamsters and Madagascar hissing cockroaches
| MC4100 | NDb | > 105 |
| B/r | ND | >105 |
| K96243 | <10 | <10 |
| DDS1498A | >1000 | 207 |
| DDS0518A ( | <10 | <10 |
| DDS2098A | <10 | <10 |
| DDS0171A | <10 | <10 |
| DDS0099A | <10 | <10 |
| DDL3105A ( | <10 | <10 |
| DDS1503-1A ( | 102 | <10 |
| DDS1503-2A ( | >450 | <10 |
| 1026b | <10 | <10 |
| MSHR305 | ND | <10 |
| SR1 | <10 | <10 |
| DDA0742 | >103 | >103 |
| DW503 | ND | <10 |
| DDII0868 | ND | >103 |
a LD50, 50% lethal dose [9,25,33]; b ND, not determined.
Figure 3T6SS-2, T6SS-3, T6SS-4, T6SS-5, and T6SS-6 mutants are virulent in the MH cockroach. (A) 101 cfu. (B) 102 cfu. (C) 103 cfu. (D) 104 cfu. (E) 105 cfu. Bp, K96243; Bp Δhcp2, DDS0518A; Bp Δhcp3, DDS2098A; Bp Δhcp4, DDS0171A; Bp Δhcp5, DDS0099A; Bp Δhcp6, DDL3105A.
Figure 4andare virulent for the MH cockroach and their T6SS-1 mutants are attenuated. (A) 101 cfu. (B) 102 cfu. (C) 103 cfu. Bm, SR1; Bm Δhcp1, DDA0742; Bt, DW503; Bt Δhcp1, DDII0868.
Figure 5multiplies inside MH cockroach hemocytes. Panel A is a representative micrograph of hemolymph obtained from a MH cockroach infected with B. pseudomallei K96243 and stained with DAPI. The white arrows show hemocytes that harbor intracellular B. pseudomallei. The white scale bar is 100 μm. Panels B and C show a higher magnification of a B. pseudomallei-infected hemocyte using bright field microscopy (B) and stained with DAPI and a Burkholderia-specific rabbit polyclonal antibody (C). The secondary antibody used, Alexa Fluor 588 goat anti-rabbit IgG, stained B. pseudomallei green. The magnified inset in C shows individual bacilli within the hemocyte cytosol and the white arrows show extracellular bacteria in the hemolymph. The white scale bars in B and C are 20 μm. The results are representative images from eight MH cockroaches infected with ~ 103 cfu of B. pseudomallei K96243.
Strains and plasmids used in this study
| TOP10 | General cloning and blue/white screening | Invitrogen |
| S17-1 | Mobilizing strain with transfer genes of RP4 integrated on chromosome; Smr, Pms | [ |
| MC4100 | K-12 laboratory strain | [ |
| B/r | B laboratory strain | [ |
| K96243 | Isolated in Thailand from a diabetic patient with a clinical history of short incubation, septicemic infection, and rapid progression to death | [ |
| DDS1498A | K96243 derivative harboring a 162-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDS0518A | K96243 derivative harboring a 303-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDS2098A | K96243 derivative harboring a 186-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDS0171A | K96243 derivative harboring a 321-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDS0099A | K96243 derivative harboring a 192-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDL3105A | K96243 derivative harboring a 216-bp in-frame deletion mutation in | [ |
| DDS1503-1A | K96243 derivative harboring a deletion of the 743-bp | [ |
| DDS1503-2A | K96243 derivative harboring a deletion of the 894-bp | [ |
| 1026b | Isolated in Thailand from a human case of septicemic melioidosis with skin, soft tissue, and spleen involvement | [ |
| MSHR305 | Isolated from the brain of a fatal human melioidosis encephalomyelitis case in Australia | [ |
| SR1 | ATCC 23344 sucrose-resistant derivative | [ |
| DDA0742 | SR1 derivative harboring a deletion of the 156 bp | [ |
| DW503 | E264 derivative; | [ |
| DDII0868 | DW503::pGSV3-0868; Gmr; | This study |
| Plasmids | ||
| pCR2.1-TOPO | 3,931-bp TA vector; pMB1 | Invitrogen |
| pCR2.1-0868 | pCR2.1-TOPO containing 342-bp PCR product generated with II0868-up and II0868-dn | This study |
| pGSV3 | Mobilizabile Gmr suicide vector | [ |
| pGSV3-0868 | pGSV3 derivative containing | This study |
a r, resistant; s, susceptible.