Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin—Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Pasteurella multocida
is a highly infectious, facultative intracellular bacterium which causes fowl cholera in birds. This study reports, for the first time, the observed interaction between
P. multocida
and free-living amoebae. Amoebal trophozoites were coinfected with fowl-cholera-causing
P. multocida
strain X-73 that expressed the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Using confocal fluorescence microscopy, GFP expressing X-73 was located within the trophozoite. Transmission electron microscopy of coinfection preparations revealed clusters of intact X-73 cells in membrane-bound vacuoles within the trophozoite cytoplasm. A coinfection assay employing gentamicin to kill extracellular bacteria was used to assess the survival and replication of
P. multocida
within amoebae. In the presence of amoebae, the number of recoverable intracellular X-73 cells increased over a 24-h period; in contrast, X-73 cultured alone in assay medium showed a consistent decline in growth. Cytotoxicity assays and microscopy showed that X-73 was able to lyse and exit the amoebal cells approximately 18 h after coinfection. The observed interaction between
P. multocida
and amoebae can be considered as an infective process as the bacterium was able to invade, survive, replicate, and lyse the amoebal host. This raises the possibility that similar interactions occur in vivo between
P. multocida
and host cells. Free-living amoebae are ubiquitous within water and soil environments, and
P. multocida
has been observed to survive within these same ecosystems. Thus, our findings suggest that the interaction between
P. multocida
and amoebae may occur within the natural environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
15 articles.
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