Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Louisville College of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky 40292
2. Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Legionella pneumophila
is the predominant cause of Legionnaires' disease in the United States and Europe, while
Legionella longbeachae
is the common cause of the disease in Western Australia. Although clinical manifestations by both intracellular pathogens are very similar, recent studies have shown that phagosome biogeneses of both species within human macrophages are distinct (R. Asare and Y. Abu Kwaik, Cell. Microbiol., in press). Most inbred mouse strains are resistant to infection by
L. pneumophila
, with the exception of the A/J mouse strain, and this genetic susceptibility is associated with polymorphism in the
naip5
allele and flagellin-mediated early activation of caspase 1 and pyropoptosis in nonpermissive mouse macrophages. Here, we show that genetic susceptibility of mice to infection by
L. longbeachae
is independent of allelic polymorphism of
naip5. L. longbeachae
replicates within bone marrow-derived macrophages and in the lungs of A/J, C57BL/6, and BALB/c mice, while
L. pneumophila
replicates in macrophages in vitro and in the lungs of the A/J mouse strain only. Quantitative real-time PCR studies on infected A/J and C57BL/6 mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages show that both
L. longbeachae
and
L. pneumophila
trigger similar levels of
naip5
expression, but the levels are higher in infected C57BL/6 mouse macrophages. In contrast to
L. pneumophila
,
L. longbeachae
has no detectable pore-forming activity and does not activate caspase 1 in A/J and C57BL/6 mouse or human macrophages, despite flagellation. Unlike
L. pneumophila
,
L. longbeachae
triggers only a modest activation of caspase 3 and low levels of apoptosis in human and murine macrophages in vitro and in the lungs of infected mice at late stages of infection. We conclude that despite flagellation, infection by
L. longbeachae
is independent of polymorphism in the
naip5
allele and
L. longbeachae
does not trigger the activation of caspase 1, caspase 3, or late-stage apoptosis in mouse and human macrophages. Neither species triggers caspase 1 activation in human macrophages.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
32 articles.
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