| Literature DB >> 24567733 |
Lauren Popov1, Joanna Kovalski2, Guido Grandi3, Fabio Bagnoli3, Manuel R Amieva4.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is both a major bacterial pathogen as well as a common member of the human skin microbiota. Due to its widespread prevalence as an asymptomatic skin colonizer and its importance as a source of skin and soft tissue infections, an improved understanding of how S. aureus attaches to, grows within, and breaches the stratified layers of the epidermis is of critical importance. Three-dimensional organotypic human skin culture models are informative and tractable experimental systems for future investigations of the interactions between S. aureus and the multi-faceted skin tissue. We propose that S. aureus virulence factors, primarily appreciated for their role in pathogenesis of invasive infections, play alternative roles in promoting asymptomatic bacterial growth within the skin. Experimental manipulations of these cultures will provide insight into the many poorly understood molecular interactions occurring at the interface between S. aureus and stratified human skin tissue.Entities:
Keywords: MRSA; Staphylococcus aureus; colonization; organ culture; skin
Year: 2014 PMID: 24567733 PMCID: PMC3915142 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Three-dimensional organotypic human epidermal tissues recapitulate the stratified structure of the epidermis. (A) Cross-sectional view of a fully differentiated 3D human organotypic epidermal tissue. Collagen VII (white) comprising the basement membrane is visible at the interface between the dermis and epidermis. Nuclei of keratinocytes and fibroblasts are blue, filamentous actin is red, and loricrin (green) localizes to the granular layer and the squames of the stratum corneum. Scale bar is 10 μm. (B) Top-down macroscopic view of the 3D organotypic human epidermal tissue system. Pieces of devitalized human dermis are seeded with primary human keratinocytes and fibroblasts. Tissue culture support trays raise the organotypic human epidermal tissue and promote keratinocyte differentiation by facilitating growth at the air–liquid interface. Scale bar is 1 cm.
Figure 2. (A) 3D confocal microscopy reconstruction of an infected (T = 1 h) 5-day-old 3D organotypic human epidermal tissue. S. aureus USA300 GFP-expressing bacteria (in green) are visible attached to the surface squames; filamentous actin is red, and nuclei are blue. Scale bar in all panels corresponds to 10 μm. (B) Top-down view of bacterial inoculum in (A), visualized immediately after infection. (C) Cross-sectional view of an 8-day-old 3D organotypic human epidermal tissue, infected with S. aureus USA300 GFP for 2 days. Bacteria (in green) are visible throughout the squames in the stratum corneum (loricrin in white). Filamentous actin is red and nuclei are in blue. (D) After 2 days of growth on the organotypic epidermal tissue, S. aureus USA300 GFP has started to form visible microcolonies within the squames in the stratum corneum in this top-down view (loricrin in white). Inset depicts a cross-sectional view located along the vertical line with arrows revealing a large staphylococcal microcolony.