| Literature DB >> 24866798 |
Freya Harrison1, Aneesha Muruli2, Steven Higgins2, Stephen P Diggle2.
Abstract
Research into chronic infection by bacterial pathogens, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, uses various in vitro and live host models. While these have increased our understanding of pathogen growth, virulence, and evolution, each model has certain limitations. In vitro models cannot recapitulate the complex spatial structure of host organs, while experiments on live hosts are limited in terms of sample size and infection duration for ethical reasons; live mammal models also require specialized facilities which are costly to run. To address this, we have developed an ex vivo pig lung (EVPL) model for quantifying Pseudomonas aeruginosa growth, quorum sensing (QS), virulence factor production, and tissue damage in an environment that mimics a chronically infected cystic fibrosis (CF) lung. In a first test of our model, we show that lasR mutants, which do not respond to 3-oxo-C(12)-homoserine lactone (HSL)-mediated QS, exhibit reduced virulence factor production in EVPL. We also show that lasR mutants grow as well as or better than a corresponding wild-type strain in EVPL. lasR mutants frequently and repeatedly arise during chronic CF lung infection, but the evolutionary forces governing their appearance and spread are not clear. Our data are not consistent with the hypothesis that lasR mutants act as social "cheats" in the lung; rather, our results support the hypothesis that lasR mutants are more adapted to the lung environment. More generally, this model will facilitate improved studies of microbial disease, especially studies of how cells of the same and different species interact in polymicrobial infections in a spatially structured environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24866798 PMCID: PMC4136229 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.01554-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Immun ISSN: 0019-9567 Impact factor: 3.441
Comparison of different model systems for studying pathogen social behavior and virulence
| Category or concern | Data for model system (reference) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petri dish/test tube | Live invertebrate | Live mammal | Human cell or tissue culture | ||
| Example studies | References | Waxworm ( | Usually mouse ( | References | References |
| Chemical environment | Can be controlled to mimic CF sputum ( | Not known | Mouse metabolome ( | Controllable and can be made to mimic | Metabolome more similar to human than a mouse is ( |
| Spatial structure | Can be controlled, but artificial | Limited | Burn wounds, limited; lung infections, yes | Possible with scaffolding or organ sections | Very similar to human lung ( |
| Immune system | None | Limited similarity to humans | Limited similarity to humans | Human | Very similar to human ( |
| Infection time scale | Can study hundreds to thousands of generations | Acute: host dies very quickly | At best semichronic; rodent lung infections tend to be acute (days), though can sometimes last 1–4 weeks ( | Days to weeks | Not known |
| Large sample sizes (tens plus) possible? | Yes | Yes | No, due to cost and ethical considerations | Not usually | Yes |
| Cost | Low-medium | Low | High | Medium to set up, low to run | Low |
| Ease of method | Simple, requires only general microbiology techniques | Must learn how to inoculate but otherwise simple | Requires specialized expertise, an animal license and often a dedicated animal worker to carry out inoculation | Requires expertise and dedicated lab space/equipment to minimize risk of contaminating cell lines | Lungs are readily obtained from commercial butchers; we developed dissection, infection, and culture techniques in ca. 3 months |
| Ethical considerations | None | None | Yes—and limit sample size/infection duration | Minimal (donor informed consent must be obtained) | None if obtained from animals slaughtered for meat; little or no tissue is used for human consumption, so lungs are basically a waste product. |
| Review articles | References | References | References | ||
Infection duration depends on local rules governing animal welfare; e.g., in the United Kingdom, animals must be euthanized when the symptoms of infection become too severe. pers. commun., personal communication.
FIG 1Schematic of the final protocol for preparation, infection, and culture of EVPL.
FIG 2Micrographs of tissue after 24 h in ASM, fixed and stained with H&E, which colors nuclei dark blue and other structures (cytoplasm, collagen, etc.) pink. (A and B) Mock-infected control; (C and D) infected with WT P. aeruginosa; (E and F) infected with the lasR::Gm mutant. Panels A, C, and E show tissue at magnification ×100 with a 100 μM scale bar; panels B, D, and F show tissue at magnification ×400 with a 50 μM scale bar. In panel A, note two bronchioles (Br) with diagnostic folded epithelium of brush border, example of a blood vessel (V), and lace-like pattern of alveoli defined by thin epithelium (example outlined; A). Small patches of cellular debris are visible in the alveoli (three examples are circled). In panel B, occasional cells with horseshoe-shaped nuclei (circled) are visible, which may represent neutrophils, along with enucleate red blood cells (two examples are boxed). Note in panels C and D the loss of clear epithelium, lower number of nuclei, and a decreased volume of airspace. In panels E and F, this change is less extreme, with thickened outlines of epithelium still discernible.
FIG 3Number of CFU of P. aeruginosa recovered from ex vivo pig lung cubes after 24 h of incubation in artificial sputum medium. Different symbols show cubes from independent lungs, and bars denote overall means. Where pairwise differences between strains were found to be significant (P < 0.05) using Tukey HSD tests, this is indicated with an asterisk.
FIG 43-oxo-C12-HSL signal in mock-inoculated and P. aeruginosa-infected lung cubes after 24 h incubation. Different symbols show cubes from independent lungs, and bars denote overall means. The amount of signal in the WT-infected cubes was significantly greater than that in cubes infected with the other three strains (Tukey HSD tests, P < 0.001).
FIG 5Total protease in mock-inoculated and P. aeruginosa-infected lung cubes after 24 h of incubation. Different symbols show cubes from independent lungs, and bars denote overall means. Where pairwise differences between strains were found to be significant (P < 0.005) using Tukey HSD tests, this is indicated with an asterisk.
FIG 6Pyocyanin (A695) in mock-inoculated and P. aeruginosa-infected lung cubes after 24 h of incubation. Different symbols show cubes from independent lungs, and bars denote overall means. Where pairwise differences between strains were found to be significant (P ≤ 0.006) using Tukey HSD tests, this is indicated with an asterisk.
FIG 7(A) Photon-counting image of cubes taken from one lung after 24 h of incubation. Mock-inoculated cubes and cubes infected with unlabeled NPAO1 show no luminescence, and cubes infected with phzA1-luxCDABE reporters show luminescence. (B) Per-CFU expression of phzA1 by P. aeruginosa in lung cubes (arbitrary luminescence units divided by CFU and blanked on samples from cubes infected with the unlabeled NPAO1). Different symbols show cubes from independent lungs, and bars denote overall means. The asterisk denotes a significant difference between strains in ANOVA (P < 0.001).