Affiliation:
1. Departments of Microbiology
2. Medicine
3. Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
4. Pathology
5. Immunology
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The zebrafish, a genetically tractable model vertebrate, is naturally susceptible to tuberculosis caused by
Mycobacterium marinum
, a close genetic relative of the causative agent of human tuberculosis,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
. We previously developed a zebrafish embryo-
M. marinum
infection model to study host-pathogen interactions in the context of innate immunity. Here, we have constructed a flowthrough fish facility for the large-scale longitudinal study of
M. marinum
-induced tuberculosis in adult zebrafish where both innate and adaptive immunity are operant. We find that zebrafish are exquisitely susceptible to
M. marinum
strain M. Intraperitoneal injection of five organisms produces persistent granulomatous tuberculosis, while the injection of ∼9,000 organisms leads to acute, fulminant disease. Bacterial burden, extent of disease, pathology, and host mortality progress in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. Zebrafish tuberculous granulomas undergo caseous necrosis, similar to human tuberculous granulomas. In contrast to mammalian tuberculous granulomas, zebrafish lesions contain few lymphocytes, calling into question the role of adaptive immunity in fish tuberculosis. However, like
rag1
mutant mice infected with
M. tuberculosis
, we find that
rag1
mutant zebrafish are hypersusceptible to
M. marinum
infection, demonstrating that the control of fish tuberculosis is dependent on adaptive immunity. We confirm the previous finding that
M. marinum
ΔRD1 mutants are attenuated in adult zebrafish and extend this finding to show that ΔRD1 predominantly produces nonnecrotizing, loose macrophage aggregates. This observation suggests that the macrophage aggregation defect associated with ΔRD1 attenuation in zebrafish embryos is ongoing during adult infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
271 articles.
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