| Literature DB >> 26636042 |
Jonathan David1, Rachel E Bell2, Graeme C Clark1.
Abstract
Members of the Burkholderia species can cause a range of severe, often fatal, respiratory diseases. A variety of in vitro models of infection have been developed in an attempt to elucidate the mechanism by which Burkholderia spp. gain entry to and interact with the body. The majority of studies have tended to focus on the interaction of bacteria with phagocytic cells with a paucity of information available with regard to the lung epithelium. However, the lung epithelium is becoming more widely recognized as an important player in innate immunity and the early response to infections. Here we review the complex relationship between Burkholderia species and epithelial cells with an emphasis on the most pathogenic species, Burkholderia pseudomallei and Burkholderia mallei. The current gaps in knowledge in our understanding are highlighted along with the epithelial host-pathogen interactions that offer potential opportunities for therapeutic intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Burkholderia; epithelial; epithelium; host-pathogen interaction; lung
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26636042 PMCID: PMC4649042 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2015.00080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Lung epithelial cell models used for studying .
| A549 | Human | Alveolar | A type 2-like pneumocyte derived from adenocarcinoma (Lieber et al., |
| LA-4 | Mouse | Alveolar | A type 2-like pneumocyte derived from adenocarcinoma (Stoner et al., |
| 16HBE | Human | Bronchiolar | SV40 transformed bronchial epithelium (Cozens et al., |
| Calu-3 | Human | Bronchiolar | Derived from a bronchial epithelial adenocarcinoma (Fogh et al., |
| BEAS-2B | Human | Bronchiolar | SV40/adenovirus 12 transformed bronchial epithelium (Reddel et al., |
| CFBE | Human | Bronchiolar | SV40/adenovirus 12 transformed cystic fibrosis bronchial epithelial cell line (Zeitlin et al., |
| NCI-H292 | Human | Mucoepidermoid | Derived from a cervical node metastasis of a pulmonary mucoepidermoid carcinoma. These cells contain numerous small mucin-containing granules (Carney et al., |
| HEp-2 | Human | Laryngeal | Originally thought to be from a laryngeal carcinoma it is now known to be established via HeLa cell contamination |
| RPMI-2650 | Human | Nasal | Derived from a malignant tumor of the nasal septum (Moorhead, |
| KB | Human | Oral | Originally thought to be from a carcinoma of the mouth it is now known to be established via HeLa cell contamination |
| Primary | Any | Any | Derived and cultured directly from tissue. Primary cells initially retain phenotypic characteristics of the donor tissue but do differentiate post isolation leading to variation in cell phenotype |
Numerous models of infection have been used to study the interaction of Burkholderia spp. with the epithelium. The location and derivation of these cell lines are shown.
Numerous cell types have now been confirmed to be contaminated with HeLa cells (cervical cancer). After original isolation the HeLa cells out compete the originally derived cell lines and dominate the cultures.
.
| Adherence | A549 | Brown et al., | |
| BEAS-2B | Essex-Lopresti et al., | ||
| RPMI-2650 | |||
| NCI-H292 | Brown et al., | ||
| HEp-2 | |||
| KB | |||
| Invasion | A549 | Jones et al., | |
| A549 | Burns et al., | ||
| 16HBE | Duff et al., | ||
| Calu-3 | |||
| 1y Human | Schwab et al., | ||
| 16HBE | Mullen et al., | ||
| CFBE | |||
| 1y Human | Taylor et al., | ||
| 16HBE | Mullen et al., | ||
| CFBE | |||
| 1y Human | Schwab et al., | ||
| Intracellular survival | A549 | Tipper et al., | |
| Intracellular replication | A549 | Chuaygud et al., | |
| A549 | Duff et al., | ||
| 16HBE | |||
| Calu-3 | |||
| Immortalized CF epithelium | Sajjan et al., | ||
| Bacterial movement | Immortalized CF epithelium | Sajjan et al., | |
| Host response | A549 | Utaisincharoen et al., | |
| LA-4 | Bast et al., | ||
| 1y Murine | |||
| Goodyear et al., | |||
| A549 | Wongprompitak et al., | ||
| A549 | Palfreyman et al., | ||
| A549 | Kaza et al., | ||
| 16HBE | Kim et al., | ||
| Calu-3 | Kaza et al., | ||
| BEAS-2B | Gillette et al., | ||
| CFBE | Wright et al., | ||
| A549 | Kaza et al., | ||
| 16HBE | |||
| Calu-3 | |||
| CFBE |
Figure 1A visualization of the known host-pathogen interactions of . (A) Bacterial factors known to interact with host epithelial cells. Items in bold are specific for Burkholderia pseudomallei and/or mallei. Invasion of bacteria is driven by several bacterial factors; capsule (Phewkliang et al., 2010), cable pili (Sajjan and Forstner, 1992, 1993), pilA (Essex-Lopresti et al., 2005), adhesins [boaA/B (Balder et al., 2010; Lu et al., 2012) and other auto-transporter adhesins (Mil-Homens and Fialho, 2012; Lafontaine et al., 2014)], LPS (Dziarski and Gupta, 2000), Lipid A (Dziarski and Gupta, 2000), flagella (Tomich et al., 2002; Chuaygud et al., 2008; Allwood et al., 2011), irl locus (Jones et al., 1997), a 22kDa adhesion (Sajjan and Forstner, 1993), lipase (Mullen et al., 2007), and the metalloprotease ZmpA (Gingues et al., 2005). Receptor binding events on epithelial cells occur via mucin (Sajjan and Forstner, 1992), the asialogangliosides GM1/2 (Gori et al., 1999), toll-like receptors (West et al., 2009, 2013), and cytokeratin 13 (Sajjan et al., 2002). Bacterial escape from vacuoles is driven by the T3SS (Pilatz et al., 2006; Gong et al., 2011) and once the bacteria are cytosolic BimA affects host actin polymerization (Stevens et al., 2005; Sitthidet et al., 2011). Direct entry into epithelial cells has also been linked to the T3SS and the effector protein BopE which also affects host actin (Rudolph et al., 1999; Stevens et al., 2003; Muangsombut et al., 2008; Muangman et al., 2011). (B) The host response to Burkholderia infection from epithelial cells. Inflammation is driven by Nfk-B induction (Dziarski and Gupta, 2000) of IL-8 (Palfreyman et al., 1997; Fink et al., 2003; Utaisincharoen et al., 2005; Sim et al., 2009; Lu et al., 2012), IL-6 (Sim et al., 2009; Lu et al., 2012) and IL-1β (Sim et al., 2009; Lu et al., 2012; Gillette et al., 2013), TNF-α, MCP-1 and CCL20 (Sim et al., 2009; Lu et al., 2012). Tight junctions are disrupted (Kim et al., 2005; Duff et al., 2006; Ferreira et al., 2015) and extracellular matrix components degraded by matrix metalloproteases (Wright et al., 2011).