| Literature DB >> 28270811 |
Maria Gomes-Solecki1, Ignacio Santecchia2, Catherine Werts2.
Abstract
Pathogenic Leptospira sp. are spirochetal bacteria responsible for leptospirosis, an emerging worldwide zoonosis. These spirochetes are very successful pathogens that infect a wide range of hosts such as fish, reptiles, birds, marsupials, and mammals. Transmission occurs when chronically infected animals excrete live bacteria in their urine, contaminating the environment. Leptospira sp. enter their hosts through damaged skin and mucosa. Chronically infected rats and mice are asymptomatic and are considered as important reservoirs of the disease. Infected humans may develop either a flu-like, usually mild illness with or without chronic asymptotic renal colonization, or a severe acute disease with kidney, liver, and heart failure, potentially leading to death. Leptospirosis is an economic burden on society due to health-care costs related to elevated morbidity of humans and loss of animals of agricultural interest. There are no effective vaccines against leptospirosis. Leptospira sp. are difficult to genetically manipulate which delays the pace of research progress. In this review, we discuss in an historical perspective how animal models have contributed to further our knowledge of leptospirosis. Hamsters, guinea pigs, and gerbils have been instrumental to study the pathophysiology of acute lethal leptospirosis and the Leptospira sp. genes involved in virulence. Chronic renal colonization has been mostly studied using experimentally infected rats. A special emphasis will be placed on mouse models, long thought to be irrelevant since they survive lethal infection. However, mice have recently been shown to be good models of sublethal infection leading to chronic colonization. Furthermore, congenic and transgenic mice have proven essential to study how innate immune cells interact with the pathogen and to understand the role of the toll-like receptor 4, which is important to control Leptospira sp. load and disease. The use of inbred and transgenic mouse models opens up the field to the comprehensive study of immune responses to Leptospira sp. infection and subsequent pathophysiology of inflammation. It also allows for testing of drugs and vaccines in a biological system that can avail of a wealth of molecular tools that enable understanding of the mechanisms of action of protective vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Leptospira interrogans; TLR2; TLR4; animal models; hamsters; leptospirosis; mouse models; virulence factors
Year: 2017 PMID: 28270811 PMCID: PMC5318464 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Mice as animal models to study disease caused by pathogenic .
| Mouse strain | Genotype | Model of disease | Pathogenic | Biological variables | Tissue dissemination (technique, dpi) | Major findings | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Age (w.o.) | Infection route/dose | |||||||
| A/J | Asymptomatic | Icterohaemorrhagiae strain Cop | F | 4–5 | IP/103, 106 | Kidn (IF, dpi 28) | High kidney colonization | Santos et al. ( | |
| CBA | Asymptomatic | Icterohaemorrhagiae strain Cop | F | 6–7 | IP/103, 106 | Kidn (IF, dpi 28) | Inflammatory lesions and interstitial nephritis | Santos et al. ( | |
| BALB/c | Wild type (WT) | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Cop | ND | ND | IP/106, 107 | Kidn (HP, dpi 28) | No signs of disease | Bandeira et al. ( |
| CB17 SCID | Acute | Kidn, Liv, lun (HP, dpi 28) | Pulmonary hemorrhage | ||||||
| C57BL/6 | WT | Asymptomatic | Icterohaemorrhagiae strain Cop | F | 4–5 | IP/103, 106 | Kidn (IF, dpi 28) | Inflammatory lesions and interstitial nephritis | Santos et al. ( |
| WT | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Cop | ND | ND | IP/103, 106 | Lun, Kidn (HP, dpi 28) | Interstitial nephritis | Bandeira et al. ( | |
| iNOSko | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| Rag1-ko | Acute | Kidn, Liv, and Lun (HP, necropsy dpi 7–10) | Pulmonary hemorrhage | ||||||
| WT | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 and Manilae strain L495 | F | 8–10 | IP/2 × 108 | Liv, Lun, Kidn (qPCR, HP, dpi 15, 30, 60, 90, 180) | Renal fibrosis model | Fanton d’Andon et al. ( | |
| WT | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 | ND | 3–4 | IP/106 | Bl and Kidn (qPCR, HP, dpi 14, 90) | Renal fibrosis model | Ferrer et al. ( | |
| Albino | Asymptomatic | Manilae strain L495 (bioluminescent) | F | 7–10 | IP/107, 108 | Live imaging (dpi 1–142) | Model of biphasic leptospirosis | Ratet et al. ( | |
| C3H | C3H/HeJ ( | Acute | Icterohaemorrhagiae | ND | 3 | ND/~107 | Lun, Kidn (HP, dpi 14, 20, 180) | Pulmonary hemorrhage | Pereira et al. ( |
| C3H/HeJ and C3H/HeJ/SCID | Sublethal and acute | Copenhageni strain RJ16441 | ND | 3–6 | IP/106 | Liv, Kidn (HP, dpi 3–17) | No lung hemorrhage | Nally et al. ( | |
| C3H/HeJ ( | Sublethal | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | F | 8–16 | IP/106, 107 | Uri, BL, Kidn (qPCR, HP, dpi 15) | Kidney inflammation | Richer et al. ( | |
| OF1 | WT | Asymptomatic | ND | 6–8 | IP/108 | Kidn, Lun, Liv (HP, qPCR, dpi 14, 21, 28) | Renal carriage | Matsui et al. ( | |
ND, not described; F, female; w.o., weeks old; IP, intraperitoneal; HP, histopathology; IF, immunofluorescence; BL, blood; Kidn, kidney; Liv, liver; Lun, lungs; Uri, urine; dpi, day post-infection.
Highlighted in gray are the mouse models leading to acute leptospirosis.
Mice as animal models to study innate and adaptive immune responses to .
| Mouse strain | Genotype | Model of disease | Pathogenic | Biological variables | Tissue dissemination (technique, dpi) | Major findings | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Age (w.o.) | Infection route/dose | |||||||
| BALB/c | Wild type (WT) | Asymptomatic | Pomona and Hardjo | M, F | ~6 | IP/~108 109 | BL (dpi 1–30) | B cells are important to control | Adler and Faine ( |
| Immunosuppressed | Acute | ||||||||
| Athymic nude | Asymptomatic | Pomona L10 and Copenhageni L45 | ND | 5–6 | IP/~3 × 108 | BL (dpi 2–10) | Humoral response crucial to control | Adler and Faine ( | |
| Immunosuppressed | Acute | ||||||||
| WT | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | ND | ND | IP/2 × 108 | Kidn (HP dpi 28) | No interstitial nephritis | Athanazio et al. ( | |
| IL4ko | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| WT | Asymptomatic | Icterohaemorrhagiae strain Cop | F | 4–5 | IP/106 | BL, Kidn (IF dpi 28) | High IgG response | Santos et al. ( | |
| C57BL/6 | WT, TNFRko, IFNγko | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | ND | ND | IP/2 × 108 | Kidn (HP dpi 28) | TNFR involved in interstitial nephritis | Athanazio et al. ( |
| WT, CD3ko, TLR2ko | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 | F | 8–10 | IP/2 × 108 | BL, Kidn (qPCR, qRT-PCR dpi 3) | Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and TLR2-dependent IgM, IgG, iNOS and IFN-γ responses | Chassin et al. ( | |
| TLR4ko; TLR2/4dko; MyD88ko | Lethal | ||||||||
| μMT; Rag2ko | Lethal | ||||||||
| CD3ko | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | F | 8–10 | IP/106 | Kidn (qPCR, ELISA, qRT-PCR dpi 3) | Lacroix-Lamande et al. ( | ||
| TLR2/4dko | Sublethal infection | ||||||||
| WT, TLR2ko; TLR3ko; TLR5ko; TLR9ko | Asymptomatic chronic renal colonization | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 and Manilae strain L495 | F | 8–10 | IP/106 | Liv, Lun, and Kidn (qPCR and HP dpi 15) | TLRs, NLRs, T and B-cells are not involved in fibrosis | Fanton d’Andon et al. ( | |
| TLR4ko; TLR2/4dko; MyD88ko | Sublethal infection | ||||||||
| Nod1ko; Nod2ko; Nod1/2dko, Casp1ko | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| μMT | Sublethal | ||||||||
| iNOSko | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| CD3ko | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| Daf1ko | Lethal chronic renal colonization | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 | ND | 3–4 | IP/106 | BL and Kidn (qPCR and HP dpi 14 and 90) | Lack of Daf1 enhances nephritis and fibrosis | Ferrer et al. ( | |
| WT | Asymptomatic | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1–130 and Manilae strain L495 | M | 4 | IP/5 × 106 | BL, Kidn, and Liv (qPCR and HP dpi 3) | Pathogenic | Scharrig et al. ( | |
| C3H | C3H/HeJ ( | Lethal and sublethal | Icterohaemorrhagiae strain HAI188 | F | 3–6 | IP/6 × 108 | Heart, Spl, Kidn, Lun, and Liv (qPCR and HP dpi 21) | TLR4 response important to control | Viriyakosol et al. ( |
| C3H/SCID | |||||||||
| C3H/OuJ (functional TLR4) | Asymptomatic | ||||||||
| C3H/HeJ | Lethal and sublethal | Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | ND | 3 | IP/107 | Kidn (qPCR and HP dpi 14) | Protective role of NO against | Pretre et al. ( | |
dko, double knockout; ND, not described; F, female; M, male; w.o., weeks old; IP, intraperitoneal; BL, blood; Kidn, kidney; Liv, liver; Lun, lungs; Spl, spleen; HP, histopathology; IF, immunofluorescence; dpi, day post-infection.
Highlighted in blue are the mouse models potentially leading to lethal infection.
Figure 1Diagram of immune responses induced by . Known innate responses to Leptospira sp. involve neutrophils, macrophages but also B and T cells. Recognition of Leptospira sp. mostly occurs through the TLR2 pathway, sensing outer membrane proteins (OMPs) such as the lipoprotein LipL32, the major leptospiral OMP and the atypical LPS (72), which is also recognized by toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) in mice (73). Protective host responses are depicted in green on the right side, whereas potential unfavorable responses are in red, on the left side. In mouse B cells, TLR4 stimulation by leptospiral LPS leads to the early production of partially protective IgM (44), via the TRIF adaptor (74). TLR2 and TLR4 responses, through the Myd88 adaptor, also control the production of protective IgG (44). In vivo methylation of LipL32 in rat has been shown to reduce its recognition by human antiserum (78). In humans, leptospiral LPS is not recognized by TLR4 (73), potentially leading to disease, as observed with TLR4 mutant mice (39, 44, 63). In mouse T cells, Leptospira interrogans signal through the MyD88-dependent activation of TLR4 and TLR2 receptors and trigger the production of the protective pro-inflammatory cytokine IFN-γ that activates macrophages (44). Both T and B cells, by sensing leptospiral components through an unknown receptor, are involved in the production of an unfavorable pro-inflammatory cytokine response (44). In humans, neutrophils play a slight protective role for the host against Leptospira sp. infection due to the production of bactericidal neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) (66). Neutrophils and macrophages barely phagocytize non-opsonized Leptospira sp. but opsonized Leptospira sp. with specific IgG are readily killed by phagocytose (43, 82). Macrophages produce pro-inflammatory cytokines leading to a protective inflammatory state by sensing OMPs, including LipL32, via TLR2 (72). The atypical leptospiral LPS is also detected by TLR2 and CD14, the co-receptor of TLR4 (72). Acting in concert with TLR2 and TLR4 activation, leptospiral glycoprotein blocks the Na/K-ATPase pump that triggers the activation of the Nod-like receptor protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome and enables the secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1β (65). Upon L. interrogans infection, macrophages and other cells also produce nitric oxide (NO), which has a positive and a negative effect. NO has a protective effect through the action of its antimicrobial role (67) and the negative effect is that NO activity favors kidney fibrosis (36) and nephritis of infected hosts (35, 67).
Figure 2. The panel depicts the different factors (in capitals) and genes tested for virulence in different animal models (summarized in Tables 3 and 4) and their localization in Leptospira sp. The mutant strains were inoculated via the intraperitoneal route, using both lethal and sublethal bacterial doses, in different animal models for acute disease: hamster (blue), guinea pig (purple), and gerbil (green). In all cases, the mutant strains were compared with their wild-type counterpart to assess the effect on virulence of the mutated genes. As schematized on top of the panel, we discriminate the genes in two groups; the genes not involved in virulence (on the left side of the panel), since the mutant strain killed the host, and the virulence genes (right side of the panel) determined since the mutant strain did not cause the death of animal. In this category, we further distinguish the non-virulent (NV) mutants that did not colonize target organs and the NV attenuated ones that did. Attenuated mutants are indicated by underlined names. Complementation of mutated genes was not always achieved, and the complemented mutants are indicated with a star (*). OM, outer membrane; IM, inner membrane; OMP, outer membrane protein.
Animal models to study .
| Function | Gene/name | Biological variables | Bacterial phenotype | Tissue dissemination (technique, dpi) | Reference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | Sex | Age (w.o.) | Infection route/dose | ||||||
| Motility | Australis | Hamster | F | 6 | IP/106, 108 | NV ( | ND (dpi 21) | Fontana et al. ( | |
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M | 4 | IP/103, 106 | V | Kidn+; Liv+ (qPCR, dpi 5–7) | Lambert et al. ( | ||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M | 4 | IP/103, 106 | NV | Kidn−; Liv− (qPCR, dpi 21) | Lambert et al. ( | ||
| Lai strain Lai | Guinea pig | ND | 3 | IP/6 × 108, 1.2 × 109, 3 × 109, 6 × 109 | NV | ND | Liao et al. ( | ||
| Copenhageni strain Fiocruz LV2756 | Hamster | M | 3–6 | IP/108 | NV ( | Kidn−; Liv−; Lun−; Spl−; Eye−; BL− (qPCR, dpi 21) | Wunder et al. ( | ||
| CJ/108 | NV | Kidn−; Liv−; Lun−; Spl−; Eye−; BL− (qPCR, dpi 21) | |||||||
| LPS synthesis | Manilae strain L495 | Gerbil | ND | ND | IP/104 | NV ( | Kidn− (qPCR, culture, dpi 20) | Eshghi et al. ( | |
| Manilae strain L495 | Gerbil | ND | ND | IP/104 | V | Kidn+ (qPCR, culture, dpi 20) | Eshghi et al. ( | ||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | ND | ND | IP/103 | NV | Kidn− (culture, dpi 21) | Murray et al. ( | ||
| CJ/106 | NV | ND | |||||||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | ND | ND | IP/103 | NV | Kidn− (culture, dpi 21) | Murray et al. ( | ||
M, male; F, female; ND, not described; w.o., weeks old; IP, intraperitoneal; CJ, via conjunctiva; NV, non-virulent; V, virulent; .
The numbers in brackets refer to the corresponding annotated genes in .
Highlighted in light orange are the genes involved in virulence.
Animal models to study .
| Function | Gene/name | Biological variables | Bacterial phenotype | Tissue dissemination (technique, dpi) | Reference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | Sex | Age (w.o.) | Infection route/dose | ||||||
| OMPs | Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | ND | ND | IP/103 | V | Kidn+; Lun+; Liv+ (HP, dpi 7–14) | Murray et al. ( | |
| ND | ND | CJ/106 | V | ND | |||||
| Wistar rat | ND | 6 | IP/108 | V | Kidn+ (HP, dpi 15) | ||||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M/F | 4–6 | IP/103, 104 | V | Kidn+ (culture, dpi 21) | King et al. ( | ||
| Lai strain Lai 56601 | Hamster | M | 6–8 | IP/5 × 107, 108 | NV ( | ND | Ristow et al. ( | ||
| Guinea pig | M | 2–3 | IP/2 × 108, 4 × 108 | NV ( | Kidn+; Liv− (culture, dpi 21) | ||||
| Lai strain Lai 56601 | Hamster | M | ND | IP/106 | NV ( | Kidn+; Lun+; Liv+; Uri+; BL+ (CFU, dpi 14) | Kassegne et al. ( | ||
| strain Lai | Hamster | M | 4 | IP/105, 106, 107, 108, 109 | NV ( | Uri+ (CFU, dpi 14) | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Copenhageni strain Fiocruz L1-130 | Hamster | M | 5–8 | IP/10, 102,104 106 | V | Kidn+ | Croda et al. ( | ||
| Wistar rat | ND | 4–5 | IP/108 | V | Kidn+ (culture, dpi 9) | ||||
| Other factors | Manilae strain L495 | LIC12327 | Hamster | F | 4 | IP/106 | NV | BL+; Kidn+; Liv+ (qPCR, dpi 4) | Lourdault et al. ( |
| Manilae strain L495 | LB139 | Hamster | ND | ND | IP/106 | NV ( | BL−; Kidn−; Liv− (qPCR and IF dpi 5 and 25) | Eshghi et al. ( | |
| CJ/107 | NV ( | ND | |||||||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M/F | 4–6 | IP/103, 105, 107 | NV ( | Kidn+; Lun+; Liv+ (qPCR, dpi 5) | King et al. ( | ||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M | 4 | IP/103 | NV | Kidn+ (qPCR, dpi 21) | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| Manilae strain L495 | Hamster | M | 4 | IP/106 | NV (L495) | ND (dpi 21) | Eshghi et al. ( | ||
| NV (LT993) | ND (dpi21) | ||||||||
M, male; F, female; ND, not described; w.o., weeks old; IP, intraperitoneal; CJ, via conjunctiva; NV, non-virulent; V, virulent; NV A, attenuated or partially virulent; .
The numbers in brackets refer to the corresponding annotated genes in .
Highlighted in light orange are the genes involved in virulence and in light yellow the attenuated mutant strains, non virulent but still colonizing the kidneys.