Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Science, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In order to initially colonize a host, bacteria must avoid various components of the innate immune system, one of which is complement. The genus
Bordetella
includes three closely related species that differ in their ability to resist complement-mediated killing.
Bordetella parapertussis
and
Bordetella bronchiseptica
resist killing in naïve serum, a characteristic that may aid in efficient respiratory tract colonization and has been attributed to expression of O antigen.
Bordetella pertussis
lacks O antigen and is sensitive to naïve serum in vitro, yet it also efficiently colonizes the respiratory tract. Based on these observations, we hypothesized that
B. pertussis
may have an alternate mechanism to resist complement in vivo. While a number of reports on serum sensitivity of the bordetellae have been published, we show here that serum concentration and growth conditions can greatly alter the observed level of sensitivity to complement and that all but one strain of
B. pertussis
observed were sensitive to some level of naïve serum in vitro, particularly when there was excess complement. However,
B. pertussis
rapidly acquires increased resistance in vivo to naïve serum that is specific to the alternative pathway. Resistance is not efficiently acquired by
B. parapertussis
and
B. bronchiseptica
mutants lacking O antigen. This
B. pertussis
-specific mechanism of complement resistance does not appear to be dependent on either
brkA
or other genes expressed specifically in the Bvg
+
phase. This in vivo acquisition of alternative pathway resistance suggests that there is a novel O antigen-independent method by which
B. pertussis
evades complement-mediated killing.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
15 articles.
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