| Literature DB >> 26636047 |
Jérôme Josse1, Frédéric Velard1, Sophie C Gangloff1.
Abstract
Bone cells, namely osteoblasts and osteoclasts work in concert and are responsible for bone extracellular matrix formation and resorption. This homeostasis is, in part, altered during infections by Staphylococcus aureus through the induction of various responses from the osteoblasts. This includes the over-production of chemokines, cytokines and growth factors, thus suggesting a role for these cells in both innate and adaptive immunity. S. aureus decreases the activity and viability of osteoblasts, by induction of apoptosis-dependent and independent mechanisms. The tight relationship between osteoclasts and osteoblasts is also modulated by S. aureus infection. The present review provides a survey of the relevant literature discussing the important aspects of S. aureus and osteoblast interaction as well as the ability for antimicrobial peptides to kill intra-osteoblastic S. aureus, hence emphasizing the necessity for new anti-infectious therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; antibiotics; antimicrobial peptide; inflammation; internalization; osteoblast; phenol soluble modulin; small colony variants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26636047 PMCID: PMC4660271 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2015.00085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1. Staphylococcus aureus can interact with the BEM to concentrate around osteoblasts. Collagen adhesin (Cna) links with type I collagen, bone sialoprotein binding protein (Bbp) links with bone sialoprotein, MHC II analog protein (Map) can potentially link osteopontin. Fibronectin binding proteins A and B (FnBP A/B) link with fibronectin and act as bridges between Staphylococcus aureus and osteoblasts through α5β1 integrin.
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| CECOs | Lab | - | Adherence, internalization and intracellular survival of | Hudson et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | UAMS-1 | - | Involvement of actin microfilaments, microtubules and clathrincoated pits in the internalization of | Ellington et al., |
| MG-63, NHOs | Lab, Clinic | 30:1 | Role of cytoskeleton of osteoblasts, notably actin microfilaments, in internalization of | Jevon et al., |
| MG-63 | Lab | 300:1 | Role of fibronectin binding proteins A/B (FnBP A/B) in the internalization of | Ahmed et al., |
| NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Release of intracellular | Ellington et al., |
| MG-63 | Lab | 300:1 | Correlation between SigB expression in | Nair et al., |
| MG-63 | Lab | 50:1, 200:1, 500:1 | Internalization of | Khalil et al., |
| MG-63 | Clinic | - | Synergistic role of Cna and Bbp adhesins in the initial adhesion of | Testoni et al., |
| pHOB | Lab, Clinic | 50:1 | Tuchscherr et al., | |
| MG-63 | Lab | 10:1 | Evidence of a trafficking of intracellular | Jauregui et al., |
| UMR-106 | Lab | 100:1, 500:1, 1000:1 | Internalization and survival of | Hamza and Li, |
| pHOB | Lab, Clinic | 50:1 | Chronic osteomyelitis isolates were characterized by a high host cell invasion rate, low cytotoxicity and the ability to persist and adapt within osteoblasts through SCVs formation | Kalinka et al., |
| pHOB | Lab, Clinic | 50:1 | Sigma Factor SigB is an essential factor that enables | Tuchscherr et al., |
| pHOB | Lab, Clinic | 50:1 | Tuchscherr and Löffler, | |
| MG-63 | Clinic | 100:1 | Lack of delta-toxin production was significantly associated with osteomyelitis chronicity, osteoblast invasion and biofilm formation | Valour et al., |
MOI, Multiplicity of infection (number of bacteria per cell); CECOs, Chick embryo calvarial osteoblasts; NHOs, Normal human osteoblasts; pHOB, Primary culture of human osteoblasts; MC3T3-E1, Mouse calvaria cell line; MG-63, Human osteosarcoma cell line; UMR-106, Rat osteosarcoma cell line; Lab, Laboratory strains of Staphylococcus aureus (purchased from ATCC, NCTC,… ); Clinic, Strain of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from osteomyelitic patients; UAMS-1, Most studied laboratory strain of Staphylococcus aureus in bone infection model.
Figure 2. After internalization, Staphylococcus aureus can escape from vesicle, be disrupted from inside the vesicle or persist inside osteoblasts through a SCV phenotype. Staphylococcus aureus can also interact with extracellular receptors TLR2 and TNFR-1 and with intracellular receptors TLR9 and NODs after its internalization into osteoblasts thanks to α5β1 integrin and actin filaments.
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| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and release of IL-6 and IL-12 in infected osteoblasts | Bost et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and release of GM-CSF and G-CSF in infected osteoblasts | Bost et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | UAMS-1 | 250:1 | Intracellular | Tucker et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Induction of expression and release of TRAIL in infected osteoblasts | Alexander et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and release of MCP-1 in infected osteoblasts, but not IL-3 | Bost et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1, | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Increase of phosphorylation of ERK 1 and 2 and activation of c-jun in | Ellington et al., |
| MG-63, NHOs | Clinic | 10:1, 1:1 | Upregulation of expression and release of IL-8, IP-10, RANTES, MCP-1 in infected osteoblasts | Wright and Friedland, |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and release of IP-10 in infected osteoblasts | Gasper et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression of IL-1β and IL-18 in infected osteoblasts, but no release of the related proteins in spite of the presence of caspase I | Marriott et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Expression of TRAIL in infected osteoblasts induces apoptosis and activation of caspase-8 | Alexander et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and production of CD40 in infected osteoblasts and mediation of cytokine induction | Schrum et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of mRNA and surface expression of MHC II in infected osteoblasts | Schrum et al., |
| MNCOs | Bacterial DNA | - | Induction of osteoclastogenesis by ligation of bacterial DNA upon TLR-9 in osteoblasts | Zou et al., |
| MG-63, NHOs | Clinic | 10:1, 1:1 | Effect of Th2 cytokines, PGE2 and dexamethasone on release and expression of RANTES, MCP-1, IP-10, IL-8 from infected osteoblasts | Wright and Friedland, |
| MNCOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Stimulation of Nod1 and Nod2 by intracellular | Marriott et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1 | 125:1 | Decrease of sensibility to antibiotics for intracellular established | Ellington et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1, Lab | 25:1, 75:1 | Expression of TRAIL is observed in both infected and uninfected osteoblasts in infected cultures | Reott et al., |
| MNCOs, | UAMS-1, Clinic | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Upregulation of expression and production of RANK-L and production of PGE2 via COX-2 activation in infected osteoblasts | Somayaji et al., |
| hFOBs | - | Supernatant | Up-regulation of the production of HBD-2 by osteoblasts challenged with | Varoga et al., |
| SaoS-2, NHOs | - | Supernatant | Production of HBD-3 by osteoblasts via TLR2 after stimulation with | Varoga et al., |
| MNCOs | UAMS-1 | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Modulation of osteoblast response to | Chauhan and Marriott, |
| SV40 hOBs | UAMS-1 | 250:1 | Release of MCP-1 and IL-6 in infected osteoblasts through NF-kB regulation | Ning et al., |
| SV40 hOBs | UAMS-1 | 250:1 | Necessity of attachment of | Ning et al., |
| MNCOs, NHOs | UAMS-1, Lab | 25:1, 75:1, 250:1 | Expression of TRAIL death receptors, DR4 and DR5, and decrease of OPG production in infected osteoblasts | Young et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | - | Induction of osteoblast apoptosis via Caspase-3 and expression of RANK-L thanks to the binding of SpA from | Claro et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | - | Inhibition of the osteoblast proliferation, induction of the migration of pre-osteoclasts and osteoclastogenesis through SpA from | Widaa et al., |
| MC3T3-E1, SaoS-2 | Clinic | Supernatant | Dose-dependent cytotoxicity of PSMα of | Cassat et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | - | SpA binds to TNFR-1 which activates NF-kB and the release of IL-6 | Claro et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | 100:1 | PVL, SpA and Coa of | Jin et al., |
| MG-63 | Lab, clinic | 100:1 | Killing effect of PSMα secreted by intracellular | Rasigade et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | Supernatant | Induction of production of MDB-14 (a murine ortholog HDB-3) by | Zhu et al., |
| NHOs | UAMS-1, clinic | Biofilm supernatant | Decrease of osteoblast viability, inhibition of osteogenic differentiation and increase of RANKL expression by osteoblasts by biofilm components of | Sanchez et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | 100:1 | Apoptosis and decrease of osteogenic differentiation in response to | Chen et al., |
| Primary osteoblasts | Lab | 20:1, 100:1, 500:1 | Production of CCL2 and CXCL3 by osteoblasts following stimulation by | Dapunt et al., |
| MC3T3-E1 | Lab | 100:1 | Expression of miR-24 was significantly down-regulated in | Jin et al., |
MOI, Multiplicity of infection (number of bacteria per cell); MNCOs, Mouse neonate calvarial osteoblasts; NHOs, Normal human osteoblasts; MC3T3-E1, Mouse calvaria cell line; MG-63, Human osteosarcoma cell line; SaoS-2, Human osteosarcoma cell line; hFOBs, Human fetal osteoblastic cell line; SV40 hOBs, Human osteoblastic cell line; Lab, Laboratory strains of Staphylococcus aureus (purchased from ATCC, NCTC,… ); Clinic, Strain of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from osteomyelitic patients; UAMS-1, Most studied laboratory strain of Staphylococcus aureus in bone infection models.
Figure 3. Staphylococcus aureus interaction with osteoblasts increases the expression of cytokines IL-1β, IL-18, TNF-α, the production and release of IL-6, IL-12 and the expression and release of chemokines CXCL2, CXCL8, CXCL10, CCL2, CCL3, CCL5 and growth factors G-CSF and GM-CSF. It also increases the expression and production of CD40 and MHC II. All of this participates to the recruitment and activation of innate (neutrophils, monocytes/macrophages) and adaptive (lymphocytes) immune cells.
Figure 4. Staphylococcus aureus can cause the necrosis of osteoblasts through the release of membrane-damaging virulence factors such as PSMs. It can also induce the apoptosis of osteoblasts through intrinsic and extrinsic caspase pathways. Both can lead to the release of intracellular Staphylococcus aureus, which can re-infect other osteoblasts.
Figure 5Induction of osteoclastogenesis by . S. aureus-challenged osteoblasts increase their expression and production of RANK-L, directly or through the COX-2/PGE2 pathway. It leads to an excessive formation and activation of osteoclasts and to a severe bone resorption in addition to a decreased production of OPG.
Figure 6Summary diagram of the osteoblasts responses in presence of . S. aureus can interact with osteoblasts and provoke: inflammation by increased release of mediators such as cytokines (CTKs), chemokines (CMKs), or growth factors (GFs); osteoblast self-defense by the production of AMPs (HBD-2/3, LL-37); osteoblasts death through apoptosis or necrosis; bone resorption by activation of the RANK/RANK-L complex.