Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Bioreactor Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, China
2. Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Maricultured Animal Vaccines, Shanghai, China
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Edwardsiella tarda
is an important pathogenic bacterium that can replicate in macrophages. However, how the intramacrophage infection process affects the virulence of this bacterium is essentially unknown. Here, we show that
E. tarda
replicates and induces a caspase-1-dependent cell pyroptosis in a murine macrophage model. Via pyroptosis, intracellular
E. tarda
escapes to the extracellular milieu, forming a unique bacterial population. Being different from the bacteria cultured alone, this unique population possesses a reprogrammed transcriptional profile, particularly with upregulated type III secretion system (T3SS)/T6SS cluster genes. Subsequent studies revealed that the macrophage-released population gains enhanced infectivity for host epithelial cells and increases resistance to multiple host defenses and hence displays significantly promoted virulence
in vivo
. Further studies indicated that T3SS is essentially required for the macrophage infection process, while T6SS contributes to infection-induced bacterial virulence. Altogether, this work demonstrates that
E. tarda
can utilize macrophages as a niche for virulence priming and for spreading infection, suggesting a positive role for intramacrophage infection in bacterial pathogenesis.
IMPORTANCE
Many pathogens can replicate in macrophages, which is crucial for their pathogenesis. To survive in the macrophage cell, pathogens are likely to require fitness genes to counteract multiple host-killing mechanisms. Here,
Edwardsiella tarda
is proved to exit from macrophages during infection. This macrophage-released population displays a reprogrammed transcriptional profile with significantly upregulated type III secretion system (T3SS)/T6SS-related genes. Furthermore, both enhanced infectivity in epithelial cells and activated resistance to complex host defenses were conferred on this macrophage-primed population, which consequently promoted the full virulence of
E. tarda
in vivo
. Our work provides evidence that
E. tarda
can utilize macrophages as a niche for virulence priming and for spreading infection, highlighting the importance of the intramacrophage infection cycle for the pathogenesis of
E. tarda
.
Funder
National High Technology Research and Development Program of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
52 articles.
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