| Literature DB >> 31671896 |
Rosanna Herold1, Horst Schroten2, Christian Schwerk3.
Abstract
Infections of the central nervous system (CNS) are still a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Traversal of the barriers protecting the brain by pathogens is a prerequisite for the development of meningitis. Bacteria have developed a variety of different strategies to cross these barriers and reach the CNS. To this end, they use a variety of different virulence factors that enable them to attach to and traverse these barriers. These virulence factors mediate adhesion to and invasion into host cells, intracellular survival, induction of host cell signaling and inflammatory response, and affect barrier function. While some of these mechanisms differ, others are shared by multiple pathogens. Further understanding of these processes, with special emphasis on the difference between the blood-brain barrier and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier, as well as virulence factors used by the pathogens, is still needed.Entities:
Keywords: bacteria; blood–brain barrier; blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier; meningitis; virulence factor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671896 PMCID: PMC6862235 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1CNS entry pathways and stages during the pathogenesis of bacterial meningitis. Bacterial pathogens can cross the BBB or BCSFB paracellularly between neighboring cells, in a “Trojan horse” fashion inside infected host macrophages, or transcellularly by invading epithelial or endothelial cells. Cellular entry can be launched by the zipper mechanism involving binding to host cell receptors or by the trigger mechanism (see main text for details). During this process, activation of signal transduction pathways can cause initiation of actin rearrangements. Activation of signal transduction can also be triggered during the transcellular pathway or the “Trojan horse” mechanism, but is not indicated in the figure for reasons of clarity. Once in the cytoplasm, the pathogens need to survive inside the cells for further disease progress. Activation of host genes causes an inflammatory response that can lead to disruption of tight junctions.
Figure 2Multiple virulence factors are involved in the different steps of pathogenesis during bacterial meningitis. Expression of a capsule can support bloodstream survival of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. It has been described that down-regulation of capsule expression occurs during adhesion to and invasion into host cells, which is mediated by adhesins, internalins, pili, and pore-forming toxins. Pore-forming toxins can also be involved during escape from vacuoles inside of host cells, as well as intracellular survival. These steps are further supported by pore-forming toxins and the capsule. Several virulence factors, including internalins and pore-forming toxins, activate host cell signal transduction and mediate gene activation causing an inflammatory response.
Evidence for the involvement of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria during brain entry at the BBB and BCSFB.
| Pathogen | Entry Mechanisms | Major Virulence Factors | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Transcellular route [ | Transcellular route [ | Major invasion protein InlB inducing receptor-mediated endocytosis [ | Major invasion proteins InlA and InlB inducing receptor-mediated endocytosis [ |
|
| Invasion at low rates in porcine models [ | Invasion demonstrated for porcine and human in vitro models [ | Enolase increasing BBB permeability [ | Regulation of capsule expression [ |
|
| Translocation across BBB in vivo and in vitro [ | Only attachment observed in an in vivo mouse model during late stages of infection with high levels of bacteremia [ | Altered expression of the capsule for attachment [ | |
| GBS | Traversal of BBB in vivo and in vitro [ | Expression of cell-wall anchored pili [ | ||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Traversal of BBB in vivo and in vitro [ | Traversal of BCSFB in vitro [ | Attachent facilitated by type 1 fimbriae and OmpA [ | Role of fimH during adhesion [ |
|
| Traversal of BBB in vivo and in vitro [ | Traversal of BCSFB in vitro of choroid plexus epithelial cells [ | Protective function of the polysaccharide capsule during bloodstream survival but attenuated tissue invasion [ | Capsule attenuates invasion in vitro [ |
|
| Traversal of BBB in vitro [ | Traversal of BCSFB in vitro [ | Entry via binding of PAFR [ | Capsule and fimbriae attenuate invasion [ |