| Literature DB >> 31883521 |
E Soemirien Kasanmoentalib1, Mercedes Valls Serón1, Joo Yeon Engelen-Lee1, Michael W Tanck2, Richard B Pouw3,4, Gerard van Mierlo3, Diana Wouters3, Matthew C Pickering5, Arie van der Ende6, Taco W Kuijpers3,4,7, Matthijs C Brouwer1, Diederik van de Beek8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The complement system is a vital component of the inflammatory response occurring during bacterial meningitis. Blocking the complement system was shown to improve the outcome of experimental pneumococcal meningitis. Complement factor H (FH) is a complement regulatory protein inhibiting alternative pathway activation but is also exploited by the pneumococcus to prevent complement activation on its surface conferring serum resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Anti-inflammatory therapy; Bacterial meningitis; Complement factor H; Complement system; Pneumococcal meningitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31883521 PMCID: PMC6935240 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-019-1675-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Baseline characteristics of 1009 episodes of community-acquired bacterial meningitisa
| Clinical characteristics | n/N (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 60 (45–69) |
| Male | 509 (49%) |
| Predisposing conditions | 580/1009 (57%) |
| Otitis or sinusitis | 329/1007 (24%) |
| Pneumonia | 90/975 (9%) |
| Immunocompromised state b) | 258/1009 (26%) |
| Symptoms and signs at admission | |
| Symptoms < 24 h | 452/973 (46%) |
| Headache | 742/891 (83%) |
| Neck stiffness | 722/956 (76%) |
| Temp > 38 °C | 757/1002 (76%) |
| Score on Glasgow coma scale c) | 11 (9–14) |
| < 8 indicating coma | 135/1008 (13%) |
| CSF values d) | |
| White blood cell count (/μl) | 2497 (561–7561) |
| Protein (g/l) | 3.82 (2.30–5.99) |
| CSF/blood glucose ratio | 0.03 (0.00–0.25) |
| Causative pathogen | |
| | 727 (72%) |
| | 111 (11%) |
| Other | 171 (17%) |
| Score on Glasgow outcome scale | |
| 1—death | 182 (18%) |
| 2—vegetative state | 1 (0.1%) |
| 3—severe disability | 48 (5%) |
| 4—moderate disability | 160 (16%) |
| 5—good recovery | 618 (61%) |
aData are number/number evaluated (%) or median (interquartile range).
bImmunocompromise was defined by the use of immunosuppressive drugs, a history of splenectomy, or the presence of diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, as well as patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
cScore on the Glasgow Coma Scale Score was evaluated in 1008 patients
dCSF white blood cell count was determined in 970 patients, CSF proteins levels in 963 patients and the CSF/blood glucose ratio in 946 patients
Fig. 1Association of SNP rs6677604 with mortality and cerebrospinal fluid FH concentration in patients with bacterial meningitis. In immunocompetent bacterial meningitis patients of Caucasian descent, the rs6677604 major allele G (minor allele frequency A EUR 0.187) was associated with an increased mortality under an additive model (a). P value was determined with the Pearson chi-square test. The rs6677604 major allele G was also associated with lower FH CSF levels under an additive model (b). P value was determined with the Kruskal-Wallis test. In bacterial meningitis patients the CSF FH concentration was significant higher compared to controls (c). Bacterial meningitis patients with an unfavorable outcome had slightly increased FH levels compared to patients with a favorable outcome. After correction for CSF total protein CSF FH levels were similar in bacterial meningitis patients with a unfavourable and a favourable outcome. P value was determined with the Mann-Whitney U test. Each dot represents an individual patient, gray dots represent deceased patients, lines represent median values and error bars are interquartile ranges
Fig. 2Immunohistochemical staining of brain tissue of a pneumococcal meningitis patient.
In the pneumococcal meningitis FH was expressed in the brain parenchymal cells (a), with strong expression in Purkinje cells (a, asterisk) and in cells in the granular layer (a, arrows). In the control case the parenchyma was negative (b) and FH expression was confined in the blood within blood vessels (b, arrow). Inflammatory cells in the meninges of the pneumococcal meningitis case showed strong expression of FH (c) and macrophages show stronger positivity than granulocytes (c, arrowheads). In the control case, meningeal cells showed variable intensity FH expression (d, arrowheads)
Fig. 3Expression of FH during experimental pneuomococcal meningitis and the effect of FH deficiency on clinical severity and survival. FH brain levels are increased during experimental pneumococcal meningitis at 6, 24, and 48 h after infection compared to saline inoculated mice (a). Lines represent median values, P values were determined with the Mann-Whitney U test. Kaplan-Meier curve of wt and Cfh mice with pneumococcal meningitis. P value was determined with the log-rank test (b). Clinical severity scores for Cfh mice increased faster as compared to wt mice (0.112 vs. 0.088 points/h). P value was determined using exponential regression (c)
Fig. 4.Effect of FH deficiency on bacterial outgrowth, complement, and inflammatory response during experimental pneumococcal meningitis. Bacterial outgrowth in CSF, brain, blood, lung, and spleen of Cfh and wt mice at 20 h after infection (a). Plasma and brain C3 levels were decreased in Cfh mice compared to wt mice at 5 and 20 h after infection (b). Cfh mice had significantly lower cytokine and chemokine brain levels at 5 h after infection and significant higher cytokine and chemokine brain levels at 20 h after infection (c). Data are given as medians and interquartile ranges, P values were determined with the Mann-Whitney U test
Fig. 5Adjuvant treatment with human FH in experimental pneumococcal meningitis. Mortality rates were similar between hFH- and PBS-treated mice (45% vs. 50%) (a). Bacterial outgrowth was increased in hFH-treated mice compared to PBS-treated mice in lung and spleen at 24 h after infection (b). Activation of the terminal complement pathway indicated by C5b-9 level was significant lower in mice treated with hFH compared to mice treated with PBS in the brain at 48 h after infection, median 9.37 μg/mg tissue vs. 11.71 μg/mg tissue (c). Lines represent median values and error bars are interquartile ranges, P values were determined with the Mann-Whitney U test