| Literature DB >> 27430279 |
Denja Baumgartner1, Suzanne Aebi1, Denis Grandgirard1, Stephen L Leib1, Annette Draeger2, Eduard Babiychuk2, Lucy J Hathaway3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Streptococcus pneumoniae causes several human diseases, including pneumonia and meningitis, in which pathology is associated with an excessive inflammatory response. A major inducer of this response is the cholesterol dependent pneumococcal toxin, pneumolysin. Here, we measured the amount of inflammatory cytokine CXCL8 (interleukin (IL)-8) by ELISA released by human nasopharyngeal epithelial (Detroit 562) cells as inflammatory response to a 24 h exposure to different pneumococcal strains.Entities:
Keywords: CXCL8; Capsule; Liposomes; Pneumolysin; Streptococcus pneumoniae
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27430279 PMCID: PMC4950757 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-016-0777-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Wild type and mutant S. pneumoniae strains used
| Strain | Capsule serotype | Description |
|---|---|---|
| B201.73 | 19F | Wild types (clinical isolates) [ |
| 103.57 | 23F | |
| B101.77 | 14 | |
| 307.14 | 18C | |
| 109.74 | 9V | |
| 207.31 | 15 | |
| 106.66 | 6B | |
| 208.41 | 7F | |
| P21 | 3 | Wild type [ |
| 106.66 Janus | nonencapsulated | Capsule operon replaced by a Janus cassette [ |
| 106.66cps106.66 | 6B | Capsule switch mutants [ |
| 106.66cpsB201.73 | 19F | |
| 106.66cps103.57 | 23F | |
| 106.66cpsB101.77 | 14 | |
| 106.66cps307.14 | 18C | |
| 106.66cps109.74 | 9V | |
| 106.66cps207.31 | 15 | |
| 106.66cps208.41 | 7F | |
| B103.21 | 1 | Wild type, non-haemolytic (current study) |
| 211.25 | 1 | Wild type, poorly haemolytic (current study) |
| 207.06 | 1 | Wild type, haemolytic (current study) |
| 202.67 | 1 | Wild type, non-haemolytic (current study) |
| D39 | 2 | Wild type [ |
| D39Δply | 2 | Mutant lacking pneumolysin [ |
| D39Δcps | nonencapsulated | Mutant lacking capsule [ |
| D39ΔplyΔcps | nonencapsulated | Mutant lacking pneumolysin and capsule [ |
Fig. 1Effect of pneumococcal strains of different serotypes on CXCL8 induction in human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells. Detroit 562 nasopharyngeal epithelial cells were assessed for CXCL8 release after exposure to wildtype (a) or capsule switch mutant (b) pneumococcal strains. a Strain 207.31 induced more CXCL8 than either strain 103.57 or strain 208.41 but there were no other significant differences in CXCL8 induction between the clinical isolates. b No significant differences in CXCL8 induction were detected between any of the strains of different serotypes but the same genetic background. All experiments were performed in triplicate. Serotypes are indicated in brackets, NT refers to the nontypeable capsule deletion mutant. Negative control refers to Detroit cells in the absence of bacteria. * indicates significant difference by ANOVA with Tukey’s post hoc test. Error bars indicate standard deviation
Fig. 2Liposomes (1 mg or 100 μg) reduced CXCL8 concentration from human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells induced by different pneumococcal strains. Values shown are means of three independent experiments and are the values with 1 mg or 100 μg of liposomes expressed as percentages of the CXCL8 concentrations obtained in the absence of liposomes in the presence of wild type clinical isolates. Liposomes reduced the CXCL8 response to all pneumococcal strains tested. Numbers in brackets indicate serotypes. Error bars indicate standard deviation
Fig. 3Treatment of serotype 3 strain P21 with lytic antibiotic is required for release of CXCL8 from human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells which is reduced by liposomes. Values shown are means of three independent experiments and are the absolute CXCL8 concentration in the (a) absence of antibiotic and (b) following addition of the lytic antibiotic ceftriaxone in the absence or presence of 1 mg or 100 μg of liposomes. Lytic antibiotic caused strain P21 to induce CXCL8 from the epithelial cells, the level of which was reduced by liposomes. * indicates significant difference. Error bars indicate standard deviation
Fig. 4CXCL8 responses of human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells to serotype 1 pneumococcal clinical isolates with different haemolytic activities in the absence and presence (1 mg or 100 μg) of liposomes. For the haemolytic and poorly haemolytic strains, liposomes significantly reduced CXCL8 concentration (p < 0.05 for 1 mg liposomes). The non-haemolytic strains induced so little CXCL8 that no reduction was observable by adding liposomes. * indicates significant difference. Error bars indicate standard deviation
Fig. 5CXCL8 responses of human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells to pneumococcal strain D39 (serotype 2) and its mutants lacking pneumolysin (D39Δply) or capsule (D39Δcps) or both (D39ΔplyΔcps) in the absence and presence (1 mg or 100 μg) of liposomes. Liposomes reduced CXCL8 levels following exposure to the wildtype strain D39 strain but also reduced the CXCL8 response to its mutants lacking pneumolysin. * indicates significant difference. Error bars indicate standard deviation