Growth of Virulent and Avirulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains in Human Macrophages

Author:

Zhang Ming1,Gong Jianhua1,Lin Yuanguang2,Barnes Peter F.134

Affiliation:

1. Center for Pulmonary and Infectious Disease Control,1

2. The University of Texas Health Center at Tyler, Tyler, Texas 75710, and the Department of Medicine, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 900332

3. Department of Medicine,3 and

4. Department of Cell Biology,4

Abstract

ABSTRACT Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv causes progressive disease in animals, whereas the H37Ra strain does not. The relevance of this difference in virulence to human infection is uncertain because these strains have been shown to have similar growth rates in human macrophages. To evaluate the intracellular growth of M. tuberculosis strains in macrophages under conditions similar to those encountered in vivo, we infected human monocyte-derived macrophages with H37Ra, H37Rv, or one of four isolates from tuberculosis patients at a low bacillus-to-macrophage ratio. H37Rv and the patient isolates grew significantly faster than H37Ra, based on the numbers of CFU and acid-fast bacilli. These findings did not result from extracellular mycobacterial growth, differential macrophage viability, or bacillary clumping. In contrast to other published results, these findings indicate that the virulence characteristics of M. tuberculosis strains in animal models are relevant to human tuberculosis infection.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

Reference12 articles.

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2. Mycobacterium tuberculosis invades and replicates within type II alveolar cells

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4. Interleukin-12 production by human monocytes infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis: role of phagocytosis

5. Complement receptor-mediated uptake and tumor necrosis factor-α-mediated growth inhibition of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by human alveolar macrophages.;Hirsch C. S.;J. Immunol.,1994

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