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result(s) for
"Dysentery, Bacillary - pathology"
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Bioimage analysis of Shigella infection reveals targeting of colonic crypts
by
Jean-Yves Tinevez
,
Martin Sachse
,
Spencer L. Shorte
in
animal disease models
,
Animals
,
bacteria
2015
Significance Shigella spp . are responsible for devastating diarrheal diseases, primarily in children, within underdeveloped countries. Shigella invades the mucosa of the large intestine, causing inflammation and damage to the epithelium. Here, we have measured the progression of Shigella infection in a small animal model of the disease to better understand the mechanism of invasion of the colonic mucosa. The novelty of our approach relies on the tracking of fluorescent bacteria inside the infected tissue at various time points using confocal microscopy and subsequent quantitative bioimage analyses. Our approach is readily applicable to other hostâpathogen systems to quantify hostâpathogen interactions.
Few studies within the pathogenic field have used advanced imaging and analytical tools to quantitatively measure pathogenicity in vivo. In this work, we present a novel approach for the investigation of hostâpathogen processes based on medium-throughput 3D fluorescence imaging. The guinea pig model for Shigella flexneri invasion of the colonic mucosa was used to monitor the infectious process over time with GFP-expressing S. flexneri . A precise quantitative imaging protocol was devised to follow individual S. flexneri in a large tissue volume. An extensive dataset of confocal images was obtained and processed to extract specific quantitative information regarding the progression of S. flexneri infection in an unbiased and exhaustive manner. Specific parameters included the analysis of S. flexneri positions relative to the epithelial surface, S. flexneri density within the tissue, and volume of tissue destruction. In particular, at early time points, there was a clear association of S. flexneri with crypts, key morphological features of the colonic mucosa. Numerical simulations based on random bacterial entry confirmed the bias of experimentally measured S. flexneri for early crypt targeting. The application of a correlative light and electron microscopy technique adapted for thick tissue samples further confirmed the location of S. flexneri within colonocytes at the mouth of crypts. This quantitative imaging approach is a novel means to examine hostâpathogen systems in a tailored and robust manner, inclusive of the infectious agent.
Journal Article
The interplay between regulated necrosis and bacterial infection
2016
Necrosis has long been considered as a passive event resulting from a cell extrinsic stimulus, such as pathogen infection. Recent advances have refined this view and it is now well established that necrosis is tightly regulated at the cell level. Regulated necrosis can occur in the context of host–pathogen interactions, and can either participate in the control of infection or favor it. Here, we review the two main pathways implicated so far in bacteria-associated regulated necrosis: caspase 1-dependent pyroptosis and RIPK1/RIPK3-dependent necroptosis. We present how these pathways are modulated in the context of infection by a series of model bacterial pathogens.
Journal Article
Shigella sonnei: virulence and antibiotic resistance
2021
Shigella sonnei is the emerging pathogen globally, as it is the second common infectious species of shigellosis (bloody diarrhoea) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the leading one in developed world. The multifactorial processes and novel mechanisms have been identified in S. sonnei, that are collectively playing apart a substantial role in increasing its prevalence, while replacing the S. flexneri and other Gram-negative gut pathogens niche occupancy. Recently, studies suggest that due to improvement in sanitation S. sonnei has reduced cross-immunization from Plesiomonas shigelliodes (having same O-antigen as S. sonnei) and also found to outcompete the two major species of Enterobacteriaceae family (Shigella flexneri and Escherichia coli), due to encoding of type VI secretion system (T6SS). This review aimed to highlight S. sonnei as an emerging pathogen in the light of recent research with pondering aspects on its epidemiology, transmission, and pathogenic mechanisms. Additionally, this paper aimed to review S. sonnei disease pattern and related complications, symptoms, and laboratory diagnostic techniques. Furthermore, the available treatment reigns and antibiotic-resistance patterns of S. sonnei are also discussed, as the ciprofloxacin and fluoroquinolone-resistant S. sonnei has already intensified the global spread and burden of antimicrobial resistance. In last, prevention and controlling strategies are briefed to limit and tackle S. sonnei and possible future areas are also explored that needed more research to unravel the hidden mysteries surrounding S. sonnei.
Journal Article
The Zebrafish as a New Model for the In Vivo Study of Shigella flexneri Interaction with Phagocytes and Bacterial Autophagy
by
Boucontet, Laurent
,
Sirianni, Andrea
,
Colucci-Guyon, Emma
in
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - genetics
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - metabolism
2013
Autophagy, an ancient and highly conserved intracellular degradation process, is viewed as a critical component of innate immunity because of its ability to deliver cytosolic bacteria to the lysosome. However, the role of bacterial autophagy in vivo remains poorly understood. The zebrafish (Danio rerio) has emerged as a vertebrate model for the study of infections because it is optically accessible at the larval stages when the innate immune system is already functional. Here, we have characterized the susceptibility of zebrafish larvae to Shigella flexneri, a paradigm for bacterial autophagy, and have used this model to study Shigella-phagocyte interactions in vivo. Depending on the dose, S. flexneri injected in zebrafish larvae were either cleared in a few days or resulted in a progressive and ultimately fatal infection. Using high resolution live imaging, we found that S. flexneri were rapidly engulfed by macrophages and neutrophils; moreover we discovered a scavenger role for neutrophils in eliminating infected dead macrophages and non-immune cell types that failed to control Shigella infection. We observed that intracellular S. flexneri could escape to the cytosol, induce septin caging and be targeted to autophagy in vivo. Depletion of p62 (sequestosome 1 or SQSTM1), an adaptor protein critical for bacterial autophagy in vitro, significantly increased bacterial burden and host susceptibility to infection. These results show the zebrafish larva as a new model for the study of S. flexneri interaction with phagocytes, and the manipulation of autophagy for anti-bacterial therapy in vivo.
Journal Article
MAIT Cells Detect and Efficiently Lyse Bacterially-Infected Epithelial Cells
by
Coré, Maxime
,
Premel, Virginie
,
Sleurs, David
in
Bacteria
,
Bacterial infections
,
Bacteriology
2013
Mucosal associated invariant T cells (MAIT) are innate T lymphocytes that detect a large variety of bacteria and yeasts. This recognition depends on the detection of microbial compounds presented by the evolutionarily conserved major-histocompatibility-complex (MHC) class I molecule, MR1. Here we show that MAIT cells display cytotoxic activity towards MR1 overexpressing non-hematopoietic cells cocultured with bacteria. The NK receptor, CD161, highly expressed by MAIT cells, modulated the cytokine but not the cytotoxic response triggered by bacteria infected cells. MAIT cells are also activated by and kill epithelial cells expressing endogenous levels of MRI after infection with the invasive bacteria Shigella flexneri. In contrast, MAIT cells were not activated by epithelial cells infected by Salmonella enterica Typhimurium. Finally, MAIT cells are activated in human volunteers receiving an attenuated strain of Shigella dysenteriae-1 tested as a potential vaccine. Thus, in humans, MAIT cells are the most abundant T cell subset able to detect and kill bacteria infected cells.
Journal Article
Inflammation-associated Adherent-invasive Escherichia coli Are Enriched in Pathways for Use of Propanediol and Iron and M-cell Translocation
by
Stanhope, Michael J.
,
Bitar, Paulina P.
,
Herlekar, Deepali
in
Animals
,
Bacterial Adhesion - physiology
,
Biodiversity and Ecology
2014
Perturbations of the intestinal microbiome, termed dysbiosis, are linked to intestinal inflammation. Isolation of adherent-invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC) from intestines of patients with Crohn's disease (CD), dogs with granulomatous colitis, and mice with acute ileitis suggests these bacteria share pathoadaptive virulence factors that promote inflammation.MethodsTo identify genes associated with AIEC, we sequenced the genomes of phylogenetically diverse AIEC strains isolated from people with CD (4), dogs with granulomatous colitis (2), and mice with ileitis (2) and 1 non-AIEC strain from CD ileum and compared them with 38 genome sequences of E. coli and Shigella. We then determined the prevalence of AIEC-associated genes in 49 E. coli strains from patients with CD and controls and correlated genotype with invasion of intestinal epithelial cells, persistence within macrophages, AIEC pathotype, and growth in standardized conditions.ResultsGenes encoding propanediol utilization (pdu operon) and iron acquisition (yersiniabactin, chu operon) were overrepresented in AIEC relative to nonpathogenic E. coli. PduC (propanediol dehydratase) was enriched in CD-derived AIEC, correlated with increased cellular invasion, and persistence in vitro and was increasingly expressed in fucose-containing media. Growth of AIEC required iron, and the presence of chuA (heme acquisition) correlated with persistence in macrophages. CD-associated AIEC with lpfA154 (long polar fimbriae) demonstrated increased invasion of epithelial cells and translocation across M cells.ConclusionsOur findings provide novel insights into the genetic basis of the AIEC pathotype, supporting the concept that AIEC are equipped to exploit and promote intestinal inflammation and reveal potential targets for intervention against AIEC and inflammation-associated dysbiosis.
Journal Article
Host PIK3C3 promotes Shigella flexneri spread from cell to cell through vacuole formation
by
Yum, Lauren K.
,
Agaisse, Hervé F.
,
Weddle, Erin A.
in
1-Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
,
Accumulation
,
Actin
2025
Shigella flexneri is a human intracellular pathogen responsible for bacillary dysentery (bloody diarrhea). S. flexneri invades colonic epithelial cells and spreads from cell to cell, leading to massive epithelial cell fenestration, a critical determinant of pathogenesis. Cell-to-cell spread relies on actin-based motility, which leads to formation of membrane protrusions, as bacteria project into adjacent cells. Membrane protrusions resolve into intermediate structures termed vacuole-like protrusions (VLPs), which remain attached to the primary infected cell by a membranous tether. The resolution of the membranous tether leads to formation of double-membrane vacuoles (DMVs), from which S. flexneri escapes to gain access to the cytosol of adjacent cells. Here, we identify the class III PI3K family member PIK3C3 as a critical determinant of S. flexneri cell-to-cell spread. Inhibition of PIK3C3 decreased the size of infection foci formed by S. flexneri in HT-29 cells. Tracking experiments using live-fluorescence confocal microscopy showed that PIK3C3 is required for efficient resolution of VLPs into DMVs. PIK3C3-dependent accumulation of PtdIns(3)P at the VLP membrane in adjacent cells correlated with the transient recruitment of the membrane scission machinery component Dynamin 2 at the neck of VLPs at the time of DMV formation. By contrast, Listeria monocytogenes did not form VLPs and protrusions resolved directly into DMVs. However, PIK3C3 was also required for L. monocytogenes dissemination, but at the stage of vacuole escape. Finally, we showed that PIK3C3 inhibition decreased S. flexneri dissemination in the infant rabbit model of shigellosis. We propose a model of Shigella dissemination in which vacuole formation relies on the PIK3C3-dependent accumulation of PtdIns(3)P at the VLP stage of cell-to-cell spread, thereby supporting the resolution of VLPs into DMVs through recruitment of the membrane scission machinery component, DNM2.
Journal Article
Shigella promotes major alteration of gut epithelial physiology and tissue invasion by shutting off host intracellular transport
by
Nigro, Giulia
,
Malardé, Valérie
,
Sauvonnet, Nathalie
in
Biological Sciences
,
Biological Transport
,
Caco-2 Cells
2019
Intracellular trafficking pathways in eukaryotic cells are essential to maintain organelle identity and structure, and to regulate cell communication with its environment. Shigella flexneri invades and subverts the human colonic epithelium by the injection of virulence factors through a type 3 secretion system (T3SS). In this work, we report the multiple effects of two S. flexneri effectors, IpaJ and VirA, which target small GTPases of the Arf and Rab families, consequently inhibiting several intracellular trafficking pathways. IpaJ and VirA induce large-scale impairment of host protein secretion and block the recycling of surface receptors. Moreover, these two effectors decrease clathrin-dependent and -independent endocytosis. Therefore, S. flexneri infection induces a global blockage of host cell intracellular transport, affecting the exchange between cells and their external environment. The combined action of these effectors disorganizes the epithelial cell polarity, disturbs epithelial barrier integrity, promotes multiple invasion events, and enhances the pathogen capacity to penetrate into the colonic tissue in vivo.
Journal Article
A Mouse Model of Shigellosis by Intraperitoneal Infection
by
Kweon, Mi-Na
,
Yang, Jin-Young
,
Ryu, Sangryeol
in
Animal Structures - microbiology
,
Animal Structures - pathology
,
Animals
2014
In human and nonhuman primates, Shigella spp. cause bacillary dysentery by invading colon epithelium and promoting a strong inflammatory response; however, adult mice are resistant to oral Shigella infection. In this study, intraperitoneal challenge with virulent S. flexneri 2a (YSH6000) resulted in diarrhea and severe body weight loss in adult B6 mice. Of note, virulent S. flexneri 2a could invade and colonize not only systemic tissues but also the serosa and lamina propria region of the large intestine. In addition, epithelial shedding, barrier integrity, and goblet cell hyperplasia were found in the large intestine by 24 hours post-intraperitoneal Shigella infection. Of note, predominant expression of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines were found in the large intestine after intraperitoneal challenge. Monocytes played a critical role in attenuating diarrhea and in providing protective efficacy against intraperitoneal Shigella infection. Most importantly, mice prevaccinated with attenuated S. flexneri 2a (SC602) strain were protected against intraperitoneal challenge with YSH6000. When taken together, these findings show that intraperitoneal challenge with virulent S. flexneri 2a can provoke bacillary dysentery and severe pathogenesis in adult mice. This model may be helpful for understanding the induction mechanism of bacillary dysentery and for evaluating Shigella vaccine candidates.
Journal Article
Improved Outcome in Shigellosis Associated with Butyrate Induction of an Endogenous Peptide Antibiotic
by
Lindh, Monica
,
Bergman, Peter
,
Sack, David A.
in
Administration, Oral
,
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
2006
Shigella is a major cause of morbidity, mortality, and growth retardation for children in developing countries. Emergence of antibiotic resistance among Shigellae demands the development of effective medicines. Previous studies found that the endogenous antimicrobial peptide LL-37 is down-regulated in the rectal epithelium of patients during shigellosis and that butyrate upregulates the expression of LL-37 in colonic epithelial cells in vitro and decreases severity of inflammation in experimental shigellosis. In this study, Shigella-infected dysenteric rabbits were treated with butyrate (0.14 mmol/kg of body weight) twice daily for 3 days, and the expression levels of the rabbit homologue to LL-37, CAP-18, were monitored in the colon. Butyrate treatment resulted in (01 reduced clinical illness, severity of inflammation in the colon, and bacterial load in the stool, (ii) significant up-regulation of CAP-18 in the surface epithelium, and (iii) disappearance of CAP-18-positive cells in lamina propria. The active CAP-18 peptide was released in stool from its proform by butyrate treatment. In healthy controls, CAP-18 expression was localized predominantly to the epithelial surface of the colon. In infected rabbits, CAP-18 expression was localized to immune and inflammatory cells in the colon, whereas the ulcerated epithelium was devoid of CAP-18 expression. The combination of CAP-18 and butyrate was more efficient in killing Shigella in vitro than CAP-18 alone. Our findings indicate that oral butyrate treatment in shigellosis may be of clinical value because of induction of the endogenous cathelicidin CAP-18 in the colonic epithelium, stimulation of the release of the active peptide CAP-18, and promoting elimination of Shigella.
Journal Article