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The Fim and FhaB adhesins play a crucial role in nasal cavity infection and Bordetella pertussis transmission in a novel mouse catarrhal infection model
J. Holubova, O. Stanek, A. Juhasz, I. Hamidou Soumana, P. Makovicky, P. Sebo
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
od 2005
Free Medical Journals
od 2005
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
od 2005
PubMed Central
od 2005
Europe PubMed Central
od 2005
ProQuest Central
od 2005-09-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2005-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2005-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
od 2005-09-01
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
od 2005-09-01
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
od 2005-09-01
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
od 2005
- MeSH
- adenylátcyklasový toxin MeSH
- bakteriální adheziny * metabolismus MeSH
- Bordetella pertussis * genetika MeSH
- faktory virulence rodu Bordetella genetika MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- modely nemocí na zvířatech MeSH
- myši inbrední C57BL MeSH
- myši MeSH
- nosní dutina mikrobiologie MeSH
- pertuse * přenos MeSH
- pertusová vakcína MeSH
- protein MyD88 MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- myši MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Pulmonary infections caused by Bordetella pertussis used to be the prime cause of infant mortality in the pre-vaccine era and mouse models of pertussis pneumonia served in characterization of B. pertussis virulence mechanisms. However, the biologically most relevant catarrhal disease stage and B. pertussis transmission has not been adequately reproduced in adult mice due to limited proliferation of the human-adapted pathogen on murine nasopharyngeal mucosa. We used immunodeficient C57BL/6J MyD88 KO mice to achieve B. pertussis proliferation to human-like high counts of 108 viable bacteria per nasal cavity to elicit rhinosinusitis accompanied by robust shedding and transmission of B. pertussis bacteria to adult co-housed MyD88 KO mice. Experiments with a comprehensive set of B. pertussis mutants revealed that pertussis toxin, adenylate cyclase toxin-hemolysin, the T3SS effector BteA/BopC and several other known virulence factors were dispensable for nasal cavity infection and B. pertussis transmission in the immunocompromised MyD88 KO mice. In contrast, mutants lacking the filamentous hemagglutinin (FhaB) or fimbriae (Fim) adhesins infected the nasal cavity poorly, shed at low levels and failed to productively infect co-housed MyD88 KO or C57BL/6J mice. FhaB and fimbriae thus appear to play a critical role in B. pertussis transmission. The here-described novel murine model of B. pertussis-induced nasal catarrh opens the way to genetic dissection of host mechanisms involved in B. pertussis shedding and to validation of key bacterial transmission factors that ought to be targeted by future pertussis vaccines.
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
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