Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Albuquerque Veterans Affairs Medical Center,1 and
2. The University of New Mexico School of Medicine,2 Albuquerque, New Mexico 87108
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The ability to persist in the host after the establishment of infection is an important virulence determinant for mycobacteria.
Mycobacterium abscessus
is a rapidly growing mycobacterial species which causes a variety of clinical syndromes in humans. We have obtained a rough, wild-type human clinical isolate of
M. abscessus (M. abscessus-R)
and a smooth, attenuated mutant
(M. abscessus-S
) which spontaneously dissociated from the clinical isolate. We have found that
M. abscessus-R
is able to persist and multiply in a murine pulmonary infection model in contrast to
M. abscessus-S
, which is rapidly cleared. To understand the basis for this difference, we characterized the behavior of these variants in human tissue culture models of infection.
M. abscessus-R
is able to persist and multiply in human monocytes, while
M. abscessus-S
is deficient in this ability. Both of these variants are phagocytized by human monocytes.
M. abscessus-R
resides in a phagosome typical for pathogenic mycobacteria with a tightly adherent phagosomal membrane. In contrast,
M. abscessus-S
resides in a “loose” phagosome with the phagosomal membrane separated from the bacterial cell wall. Both
M. abscessus
variants also have distinctive growth patterns in a recently described fibroblast-mycobacterium microcolony assay, with
M. abscessus-R
exhibiting growth characteristics similar to those previously reported for virulent
M. tuberculosis
and
M. abscessus-S
exhibiting growth characteristics similar to those previously reported for avirulent
M. tuberculosis
. In both the monocyte infection assay and the murine pulmonary infection model, numerous infected mononuclear phagocyte aggregates develop at sites of
M. abscessus-R
infection, but are absent with
M. abscessus-S
infection. We conclude that a mutation has occurred in the
M. abscessus-S
variant which has altered the ability of this organism to persist and multiply in host cells and that this may be related to the phenotypic changes we have observed in our tissue culture models of infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
157 articles.
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