Affiliation:
1. Divisions of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine1 and
2. Infectious Diseases,3 Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and
3. University Hospitals of Cleveland,2 Cleveland, Ohio
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We assessed the applicability of an in vitro model of low-level infection of human monocytes to the characterization of the virulence of strains of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
family. Peripheral blood monocytes were infected at a 1:1 ratio with the virulent
M. tuberculosis
strain H37Rv, the avirulent
M. tuberculosis
strain H37Ra, and the attenuated
M. bovis
strain BCG. Both the percentages of cells infected by the three strains and the initial numbers of intracellular organisms were equivalent, as were levels of monocyte viability up to 7 days following infection. Intracellular growth reflected virulence, as H37Rv replicated in logarithmic fashion throughout the assay, BCG growth reached a plateau at 4 days, and H37Ra did not grow at all. The same patterns of growth were observed following infection of human alveolar macrophages with H37Rv and H37Ra. Monocyte production of tumor necrosis factor alpha was significantly higher following infection with virulent H37Rv than with either BCG or H37Ra. In contrast, there was no clear correlation of interleukin 10 production with virulence. Nonadherent cells of purified-protein-derivative-positive donors mediated equivalent degrees of reduction of the intracellular growth of H37Rv, BCG, and H37Ra. Low-level infection of human monocytes with H37Rv, BCG, and H37Ra thus provides an in vitro model for assessment of the virulence of these
M. tuberculosis
family strains. Furthermore, it is suggested that the virulence of these strains is expressed primarily by their differing abilities to adapt to the intracellular environment of the mononuclear phagocyte.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
113 articles.
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