| Literature DB >> 35004350 |
Guillaume Ménard1, Astrid Rouillon2, Vincent Cattoir1, Pierre-Yves Donnio1.
Abstract
The increasing interest for Galleria mellonella larvae as an infection model is evidenced by the number of papers reporting its use, which increases exponentially since the early 2010s. This popularity was initially linked to limitation of conventional animal models due to financial, technical and ethical aspects. In comparison, alternative models (e.g. models using Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster or G. mellonella) were cheap, simple to use and not limited by ethical regulation. Since then, similar results have been established with G. mellonella model comparatively to vertebrates, and it is more and more often used as a robust model per se, not only as an alternative to the murine model. This review attempts to summarize the current knowledge supporting the development of this model, both on immunological and microbiological aspects. For that, we focus on investigation of virulence and new therapies for the most important pathogenic bacteria. We also discuss points out directions for standardization, as well as recent advances and new perspectives for monitoring host-pathogen interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Galleria mellonella; antibacterial therapies; infection model; pathogenic bacteria; perspectives; standardization
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35004350 PMCID: PMC8727906 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.782733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Different stages of G. mellonella life cycle. The fourth stages are represented e.g. eggs, larvae, pupae and adult. Larvae are visible at first molting stage and final instar stage. Cocoons are also indicated. The entire life cycle was obtained using our rearing intern protocol. (Copyright®: Marie Suriray).
Figure 2Anatomy of (G) mellonella larvae. (A) External anatomy of G. mellonella larvae. The larval body is divided into 3 distinct parts e.g. head, thorax and abdomen. Prolegs are scattered on the thorax and the abdomen. (B) Integument system and inner cavity. The integumentary system includes the cuticle and a thin epithelial layer opening onto the inner cavity composed of the fat body and the hemolymph. Pictures are from our immunohistochemical analysis that obtained from non-infected larvae. Scale bar is indicated (Ménard et al., 2021). (C) Anatomy of G. mellonella larvae (adapted from Durieux et al., 2021).
Figure 3G. mellonella immune system activation after bacterial infection. Actors of the cellular immune response are shown on the left of the picture, those of the humoral response on the right and the pathophysiological consequences in the rectangular box. Red arrows indicate activation.
Selected studies focusing on bacteria-G. mellonella interactions throw different virulence assessments.
| Bacteria | Virulence assessment | References |
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| Clinical observations |
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Utilization of G. mellonella larvae as a screening model to test the efficacy of new antibacterial therapies.
| Antibiotic combinations or with adjuvants | Bacteriophages | Phytochemical therapies | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | Association | References | Bacteria | References | Bacteria | Products | References |
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| Linezolid + fosfomycin |
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| Cinnamaldehyde |
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| Oritavancin + others antibiotics |
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| Myricetin |
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| Linezolid + fosfomycin |
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| Ceftazidime/avibactam + others antibiotics |
| Enterobacterales |
| Epigallocatechin gallate |
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| Imipenem + colistin |
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| urea-derived compound + colistin |
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Main advantages and inconvenient among 3 major invertebrate models.
| Models | Comparisons between major invertebrates models | ||
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| Yes | No | No |
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| Yes | Yes | No |
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| Yes | Yes | No |
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| Significant | Small | Small |
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| No | Yes | Yes |
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| No | Yes | Yes |
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| No | Yes | Yes |
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| No | Yes | Yes |
Figure 4Microinjector (KDS 100 automated syringe pump, KD scientific) with a calibrated 0.3 ml tuberculin.
Health index score system of G. mellonella larvae (adapted from Loh et al., 2013).
| Grades | Details | Rating |
|---|---|---|
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| No activity | 0 |
| Minimal movement on stimulation | 1 | |
| Movement when stimulated | 2 | |
| Movement without stimulation | 3 | |
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| No cocoon | 0 |
| Partial cocoon | 0.5 | |
| Full cocoon | 1 | |
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| Black spots on brown larvae | 1 |
| ≥ 3 spots on beige larvae | 2 | |
| ≤ 3 spots on beige larvae | 3 | |
| No melanization | 4 | |
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| Dead | 0 |
| Alive | 2 |
This score ranges from 0 (dead larva) to 10 (healthy larva) and is determined according to 4 criteria.