Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clostridium perfringens
is the most common cause of clostridial myonecrosis (gas gangrene). Polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) appear to play only a minor role in preventing the onset of myonecrosis in a mouse animal model of the disease (unpublished results). However, the importance of macrophages in the host defense against
C. perfringens
infections is still unknown. Two membrane-active toxins produced by the anaerobic
C. perfringens
, alpha-toxin (PLC) and perfringolysin O (PFO), are thought to be important in the pathogenesis of gas gangrene and the lack of phagocytic cells at the site of infection. Therefore,
C. perfringens
mutants lacking PFO and PLC were examined for their relative cytotoxic effects on macrophages, their ability to escape the phagosome of macrophages, and their persistence in mouse tissues.
C. perfringens
survival in the presence of mouse peritoneal macrophages was dependent on both PFO and PLC. PFO was shown to be the primary mediator of
C. perfringens
-dependent cytotoxicity to macrophages. Escape of
C. perfringens
cells from phagosomes of macrophage-like J774-33 cells and mouse peritoneal macrophages was mediated by either PFO or PLC, although PFO seemed to play a more important role in escape from the phagosome in peritoneal macrophages. At lethal doses (10
9
) of bacteria only PLC was necessary for the onset of myonecrosis, while at sublethal doses (10
6
) both PFO and PLC were necessary for survival of
C. perfringens
in mouse muscle tissue. These results suggest PFO-mediated cytotoxicity toward macrophages and the ability to escape macrophage phagosomes may be important factors in the ability of
C. perfringens
to survive in host tissues when bacterial numbers are low relative to those of phagocytic cells, e.g., early in an infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology