| Literature DB >> 23202315 |
Chad L Mayer1, Caitlin S Leibowitz, Shinichiro Kurosawa, Deborah J Stearns-Kurosawa.
Abstract
Food-borne diseases are estimated at 76 million illnesses and 5000 deaths every year in the United States with the greatest burden on young children, the elderly and immunocompromised populations. The impact of efficient food distribution systems and a truly global food supply ensures that outbreaks, previously sporadic and contained locally, are far more widespread and emerging pathogens have far more frequent infection opportunities. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli is an emerging food- and water-borne pathogen family whose Shiga-like toxins induce painful hemorrhagic colitis with potentially lethal complications of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). The clinical manifestations of Shiga toxin-induced HUS overlap with other related syndromes yet molecular mechanisms differ considerably. As discussed herein, understanding these differences and the novel properties of the toxins is imperative for clinical management decisions, design of appropriate animal models, and choices of adjunctive therapeutics. The emergence of new strains with rapidly aggressive virulence makes clinical and research initiatives in this field a high public health priority.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23202315 PMCID: PMC3509707 DOI: 10.3390/toxins4111261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Thrombotic Microangiopathy can result from different molecular pathways. Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), atypical HUS (aHUS) and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) have shared clinical manifestations, but differing molecular etiologies. EHEC-related HUS initiated by bacterial Stx injures endothelial cells by inducing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress responses and transcription events which include generation of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Endothelial injury and a pro-thrombotic environment in aHUS results from genetic mutations in complement pathway members and aberrant activation (complement factors H, IB, 3: CFH, CFI, CFB, C3). Coagulopathy during TTP results from inherited or immune-acquired deficiency in a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif, member 13 (ADAMTS13), needed to cleave vonWillebrand Factor (VWF) released from endothelial cells to prevent accumulation of prothrombotic ultra-large VWF (UL-VWF) oligomers.
Figure 2Thrombocytopenia is common to HUS and DIC, but these are clinically distinct entities. Platelet loss occurs with both HUS and DIC, but markers of coagulopathy differ and highlight mechanistic differences. DIC is a consequence of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in experimental systems (e.g., murine models) or clinically as a complication of underlying diseases such as bacterial sepsis or malignancy. DIC is a consumptive coagulopathy characterized by decreasing fibrinogen and coagulation factors with marked up-regulation of fibrinolysis markers such as fibrin degradation products (FDP) and D-dimer. In contrast, HUS does not consume coagulation factors and fibrinogen levels are often increased in EHEC patients. Moderate levels of fibrinolysis are present, but markers of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA), such as schistocytes, are markedly elevated.
Figure 3Histopathology of renal injury in nonhuman primates after challenge with Stx1 or Stx2. Light microscopy evaluation of kidney sections from baboons challenged i.v. with different doses of Stx1 or Stx2 reveal dose-dependent kidney injury. (A–C) Comparison of Stx1 challenges reveals deteriorating glomerular structure, increasing tubular edema and increasing hemorrhage with increasing toxin dose. Clinically, the 10 ng/kg Stx1 dose induced mild and transient effects in the animals, with unremarkable pathology at the light microscopy level. In contrast, a 100 ng/kg Stx1 challenge was lethal within 3–4 days accompanied by fulminant HUS, acute renal failure and systemic inflammatory responses; (D) The 50ng/kg Stx2 dose is comparatively severe and 100% lethal by day 5 post-challenge, also with HUS and renal failure. Both toxins elicited leukocyte infiltration and interstitial hemorrhage. Hematoxylin and eosin staining of paraffin embedded tissue sections; 40× magnification.
Animal models.
| Model | Pre-treatment | Animal | Features | Limitations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EHEC | none | Gnotobiotic piglet | Focal renal lesions, renal thrombotic microangiopathy | Normal serum creatinine; no thrombocytopenia | [ |
| EHEC | streptomycin | CD-1 mice | Bacterial colonization; loose stools, anorexia, lethargy | No disease unless host-adapted strain used; no glomerular damage, coagulopathy or thrombocytopenia | [ |
| EHEC | streptomycin and mitomycin C | ICR mice | Weakness, weight loss, microhemorrhages in brain and spinal cord, high BUN | Serum creatinine normal, unremarkable kidney pathology | [ |
| EHEC | None or TNFα | Germ free IQI mice | Anorexia, renal tubular necrosis, thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis | No glomerular histopathology, inflammation only with TNFα pre-treatment | [ |
| EHEC | 24 hour fast | C3H/HeJ mice | Gastrointestinal, neurologic and systemic symptoms, renal inflammation and necrosis, fragmented red blood cells | Kidney function and platelets not measure | [ |
| EHEC | none | Newly weaned BALB/c mice | Renal damage, high urea concentrations, colon pathology | Thrombotic microangiopathy not evaluated | [ |
| EHEC | Protein calorie malnutrition | C57Bl/6J mice | Systemic and neurologic symptoms, increased BUN, mild renal tubular degeneration | Normal serum creatinine, normal glomeruli, no significant platelet changes | [ |
| EHEC | Host-adapted bacteria | Dutch Belted rabbits | Diarrhea, lethargy, anorexia, dehydration glomerular thrombi and renal congestion | No consistent thrombocytopenia | [ |
| Stx1 | none | baboon | Thrombocytopenia, schistocytosis and hemolytic anemia, renal failure, GI injury, lesions in CNS, systemic inflammation | Non-bacterial | [ |
| Stx2 | none | baboon | Thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis, acute renal failure, schistocytosis, hemolytic uremia, glomerular thrombotic microangiopathy, systemic inflammation | Non-bacterial | [ |
| Stx2 | none | C57Bl/6J mice | Increased plasma BUN and creatinine, hemolysis, neutrophilia | Non-bacterial, no thrombocytopenia | [ |
| Stx2+LPS | none | C57Bl/6J mice | Neutrophilia, thrombocytopenia, hemolysis, increased BUN and creatinine, renal histopathology | Non-bacterial, LPS effect depends on timing of administration, consumptive coagulopathy | [ |
| EHEC culture supernatant | none | Sprague-Dawley rats | Increased BUN and creatinine, thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia and leukocytosis, renal histologic changes, watery diarrhea | Non-bacterial, crude bacterial supernatants rather than purified toxin(s). | [ |