| Literature DB >> 36121578 |
Sudarshan Singh Rathore1, Lalitha Cheepurupalli1, Jaya Gangwar1, Thiagarajan Raman2, Jayapradha Ramakrishnan3.
Abstract
Infectious bacteria in biofilm mode are involved in many persistent infections. Owing to its importance in clinical settings, many in vitro and in vivo studies are being conducted to study the structural and functional properties of biofilms, their drug resistant mechanism and the s urvival mechanism of planktonic and biofilm cells. In this regard, there is not sufficient information on the interaction between Klebsiella biofilm and macrophages. In this study, we have attempted to unravel the interaction between Klebsiella biofilm and macrophages in terms of phagocytic response and cytokine expression. In vitro phagocytosis assays were performed for heat inactivated and live biofilms of K. pneumoniae, together with the expression analysis of TLR2, iNOS, inflammatory cytokines such as IL-β1, IFN-γ, IL-6, IL-12, IL-4, TNF-α and anti-inflammatory cytokine, IL-10. A phagocytic rate of an average of 15% was observed against both heat inactivated and live biofilms when LPS + IFN-γ activated macrophages were used. This was significantly higher than non-activated macrophages when tested against heat inactivated and live biofilms (average 8%). Heat-inactivated and live biofilms induced similar phagocytic responses and up-regulation of pro-inflammatory genes in macrophages, indirectly conveying that macrophage responses are to some extent dependent on the biofilm matrix.Entities:
Keywords: Biofilm; Cytokine; Immune response; K. pneumoniae; Macrophage; Phagocytosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 36121578 PMCID: PMC9485320 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-022-01465-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 4.126
Primer sequence used for the cytokine gene expression
| Gene | Type | Sequence | Product Size (bp) | Annea-ling Temp | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GAPDH | Forward | 5′-CTGCCCAGAACATCATCCCT-3′ | 266 | 61 °C | (Stephens et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-GGTCCTCAGTGTAGCCCAAGA-3′ | ||||
| TLR2 | Forward | 5′-TCGTTGTTCCCTGTGTTGCT-3′ | 389 | 65 °C | (Oshikawa and Sugiyama, 2003) |
| Reverse | 5′-CCACGCCCACATCATTCTCA-3′ | ||||
| iNOS | Forward | 5′-CACCTTGGAGTTCACCCAGT-3′ | 170 | 60 °C | (Chaturvedi et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-ACCACTCGTACTTGGGATGC-3′ | ||||
| IL-β1 | Forward | 5′-ATGGCAACTGTTCCTGAACTCAACT-3′ | 563 | 60 °C | (Sjögren et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-CAGGACAGGTATAGATTCTTTCCTTT-3′ | ||||
| IFN-γ | Forward | 5′-GGTTGGACAAAAAGAATCTG-3′ | 227 | 55 °C | (Munder et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-ACCACAGAGAGCAAGGACTT-3′ | ||||
| IL-6 | Forward | 5′-GCCTATTGAAAATTTCCTCTG-3′ | 310 | 59 °C | (Tsoi et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-TAGGTTTGCCGAGTAGATCTC-3′ | ||||
| IL-12 | Forward | 5′-CGT GCT CAT GGC TGG TGC AAA G-3′ | 220 | 61 °C | (Sisto et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-CTT CAT CTG CAA GTT CTT GGG C-3′ | ||||
| IL-4 | Forward | 5′-TCG GCA TTT TGA ACG AGG TC-3′ | 216 | 57 °C | (Sisto et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-GGTTGGACAAAAAGAATCTG-3′ | ||||
| TNF-α | Forward | 5′-GAGCTTTCAACAACTACTCAG-3′ | 276 | 58 °C | (Sisto et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-GGAAGGCCTGAGATCTTATC-3′ | ||||
| IL-10 | Forward | 5′-CGGGAAGACAATAACTG-3′ | 186 | 62 °C | (Sisto et al., |
| Reverse | 5′-CATTTCCGATAAGGCTTGG-3′ |
Fig. 1Heat-inactivated K. pneumoniae biofilm. A Heat treatment at 56 °C for 30 min in water bath; B 56 °C for 1 h using bacteriological incubator; C Untreated biofilm (Scale bar = 144 µm)
Fig. 2Estimation of heat-inactivated K. pneumoniae biofilm by CV assay. Live K. pneumoniae biofilm was inactivated by incubation at56°C for 1 h using bacteriological incubator and 56 °C for 30 min in water bath. Statistics performed by t-test, *represents significant fold increase (p < 0.05)
Fig. 3Interaction between Macrophage (Mф) Raw264.7 and K. pneumoniae biofilm Non- activated Mф exposed to the live biofilm (A) and heat inactivated biofilm (B); Phagocytosis assay in the presence of LPS and IFN-γ (co-treated) to the live biofilm (A) and Heat inactivated biofilm (B). Increased phagocytic response was observed in both the cases of heat inactivated and live biofilm in the presence of LPS. Where arrow represents internalized bacterial biofilm by macrophages (Scale bar = 10 µm). Statistics performed by t-test, * represents significant fold increase (p < 0.05)
Fig. 4Cytokine gene expression assay. Evaluation of cytokines in RAW 264.7 Macrophage cell lines (Mф) in various conditions. Heat inactivated or live biofilms of K. pneumoniae exposed to activated Mф showed an increased level of cytokines(TLR2, iNOS, IL6, IL-β1, IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-12, TNF-α) except IL-10. Two Way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test was performed for comparing the mean cytokine expression between the groups.*represents significant fold increase (p < 0.05)