Author:
González-Juarbe Norberto,Mares Chris A.,Hinojosa Cecilia A.,Medina Jorge L.,Cantwell Angelene,Dube Peter H.,Orihuela Carlos J.,Bergman Molly A.
Abstract
Serratia marcescens, a member of the carbapenem-resistantEnterobacteriaceae, is an important emerging pathogen that causes a wide variety of nosocomial infections, spreads rapidly within hospitals, and has a systemic mortality rate of ≤41%. Despite multiple clinical descriptions ofS. marcescensnosocomial pneumonia, little is known regarding the mechanisms of bacterial pathogenesis and the host immune response. To address this gap, we developed an oropharyngeal aspiration model of lethal and sublethalS. marcescenspneumonia in BALB/c mice and extensively characterized the latter. Lethal challenge (>4.0 × 106CFU) was characterized by fulminate hemorrhagic pneumonia with rapid loss of lung function and death. Mice challenged with a sublethal dose (<2.0 × 106CFU) rapidly lost weight, had diminished lung compliance, experienced lung hemorrhage, and responded to the infection with extensive neutrophil infiltration and histopathological changes in tissue architecture. Neutrophil extracellular trap formation and the expression of inflammatory cytokines occurred early after infection. Mice depleted of neutrophils were exquisitely susceptible to an otherwise nonlethal inoculum, thereby demonstrating the requirement for neutrophils in host protection. Mutation of the genes encoding the cytolysin ShlA and its transporter ShlB resulted in attenuatedS. marcescensstrains that failed to cause profound weight loss, extended illness, hemorrhage, and prolonged lung pathology in mice. This study describes a model ofS. marcescenspneumonia that mimics known clinical features of human illness, identifies neutrophils and the toxin ShlA as a key factors important for defense and infection, respectively, and provides a solid foundation for future studies of novel therapeutics for this important opportunistic pathogen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
31 articles.
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