scholarly journals Infection of Hysterectomized Mice with Chlamydia muridarum and Chlamydia trachomatis

2017 ◽  
Vol 85 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunfu Yang ◽  
William M. Whitmire ◽  
Gail L. Sturdevant ◽  
Kevin Bock ◽  
Ian Moore ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We studied infection and immunity of hysterectomized mice infected with Chlamydia muridarum and Chlamydia trachomatis to determine if there were differences between these species in their ability to infect vaginal squamous epithelial cells in vivo independently of proximal upper genital tract tissues. We found that C. muridarum readily colonized and infected vaginal squamous epithelial cells, whereas C. trachomatis did not. Primary infection of the vaginal epithelium with C. muridarum produced infections of a duration longer than that reported for normal mice. Infection resulted in an inflammatory response in the vagina characterized by neutrophils and infiltrating submucosal plasma cells consisting primarily of T cells. Despite the delayed clearance, rechallenged C. muridarum-infected mice were highly immune. Mice vaginally infected with C. muridarum produced serum and vaginal wash antibodies and an antigen-specific gamma interferon-dominated Th1-biased T cell response. By comparison, mice vaginally infected with C. trachomatis exhibited transient low-burden infections, produced no detectable tissue inflammatory response, and failed to seroconvert. We discuss how these marked differences in the biology of vaginal infection between these otherwise genetically similar species are possibly linked to pathogen-specific virulence genes and how they may influence pathology and immunity in the upper genital tract.

mBio ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amber Leah Jolly ◽  
Sameeha Rau ◽  
Anmol K. Chadha ◽  
Ekhlas Ahmed Abdulraheem ◽  
Deborah Dean

ABSTRACTChlamydia trachomatisocular strains cause a blinding disease known as trachoma. These strains rarely cause urogenital infections and are not found in the upper genital tract or rectum. Urogenital strains are responsible for a self-limited conjunctivitis and the sequelae of infertility, ectopic pregnancy, and hemorrhagic proctitis. However, the differential cellular responses that drive these clinically observed disease outcomes are not completely understood. Primary conjunctival, endocervical, and endometrial epithelial and stromal fibroblast cells, HeLa229 cells, and immortalized conjunctival epithelial (HCjE) cells were infected with the ocular A/Har-13 (A) and Ba/Apache-2 (Ba) strains and urogenital D/UW-3 (D) and E/Bour (E) strains. Infection rates, progeny production, and cytokine/chemokine secretion levels were evaluated in comparison with those in uninfected cells. All strain types infected all cell types with similar levels of efficacy and development. However, progeny production levels differed among primary cells: Ba produced significantly more progeny than E in endocervical and endometrial fibroblasts, while A progeny were less abundant than E progeny.C.trachomatisinfection of primary epithelial cells elicited an increase in pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators compared to levels in uninfected cells, but there were no significant differences by strain type. In contrast, for primary fibroblasts, ocular strains elicited significant increases in the pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1β, thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC), interleukin (IL)-2, IL-12p70, and interferon gamma-induced protein 10 (IP-10) compared to levels in urogenital strains, while urogenital strains elicited a distinct and significant increase in the proinflammatory mediators IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-8, gamma interferon (IFN-γ), and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Our data indicate that primary fibroblasts, not epithelial cells, drive host inflammatory responses that are dependent on strain type and likely influence disease outcomes, establishing their importance as a novel model for studies ofC. trachomatisdisease pathogenesis.IMPORTANCEChlamydia trachomatisis a human pathogen and the leading cause of preventable blindness and sexually transmitted diseases in the world. CertainC. trachomatisstrains cause ocular disease, while others cause upper genital tract pathology. However, little is known about the cellular or immunologic basis for these differences. Here, we compared the abilities of the strain types to infect, replicate, and initiate an immune response in primary human ocular and urogenital epithelial cells, as well as in fibroblasts from the underlying stroma. While there were no significant differences in infection rates or intracellular growth for any strain in any cell type, proinflammatory responses were driven not by the epithelial cells but by fibroblasts and were distinct between ocular and urogenital strains. Our findings suggest that primary fibroblasts are a novel and more appropriate model for studies of immune responses that will expand our understanding of the differential pathological disease outcomes caused by variousC. trachomatisstrain types.


2013 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 983-992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Lei ◽  
Jianlin Chen ◽  
Shuping Hou ◽  
Yiling Ding ◽  
Zhangsheng Yang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPlasmid-freeChlamydia trachomatisandChlamydia muridarumfail to induce severe pathology. To evaluate whether the attenuated pathogenicity is due to insufficient infection or inability of the plasmidless chlamydial organisms to trigger pathological responses, we compared plasmid-competent and plasmid-freeC. muridaruminfections in 5 different strains of mice. All 5 strains developed hydrosalpinx following intravaginal inoculation with plasmid-competent, but not inoculation with plasmid-free,C. muridarum. The lack of hydrosalpinx induction by plasmid-freeC. muridarumcorrelated with significantly reduced live organism recovery from the lower genital tract and shortened infection in the upper genital tract. The plasmid-freeC. muridarumorganisms failed to induce hydrosalpinx even when the organisms were directly inoculated into the oviduct via an intrabursal injection, which was accompanied by significantly reduced survival of the plasmidless organisms in the genital tracts. Furthermore, plasmid-competentC. muridarumorganisms after UV inactivation were no longer able to induce hydrosalpinx even when directly delivered into the oviduct at a high dose. Together, these observations suggest that decreased survival of and shortened infection with plasmid-freeC. muridarummay contribute significantly to its attenuated pathogenicity. We conclude that adequate live chlamydial infection in the oviduct may be necessary to induce hydrosalpinx.


2015 ◽  
Vol 83 (9) ◽  
pp. 3568-3577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Yumeng Huang ◽  
Siqi Gong ◽  
Zhangsheng Yang ◽  
Xin Sun ◽  
...  

Intravaginal infection withChlamydia muridarumin mice can ascend to the upper genital tract, resulting in hydrosalpinx, a pathological hallmark for tubal infertility in women infected withC. trachomatis. Here, we utilizedin vivoimaging ofC. muridaruminfection in mice following an intravaginal inoculation and confirmed the rapid ascent of the chlamydial organisms from the lower to upper genital tracts. Unexpectedly, theC. muridarum-derived signal was still detectable in the abdominal area 100 days after inoculation.Ex vivoimaging of the mouse organs revealed that the long-lasting presence of the chlamydial signal was restricted to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, which was validated by directly measuring the chlamydial live organisms and genomes in the same organs. TheC. muridarumorganisms spreading from the genital to the GI tracts were detected in different mouse strains and appeared to be independent of oral or rectal routes. Mice prevented from orally taking up excretions also developed the long-lasting GI tract infection. Inoculation ofC. muridarumdirectly into the upper genital tract, which resulted in a delayed vaginal shedding of live organisms, accelerated the chlamydial spreading to the GI tract. Thus, we have demonstrated that the genital tract chlamydial organisms may use a systemic route to spread to and establish a long-lasting infection in the GI tract. The significance of the chlamydial spreading from the genital to GI tracts is discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 1881-1892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaoqun Chen ◽  
Zhou Zhou ◽  
Turner Conrad ◽  
Zhangsheng Yang ◽  
Jin Dai ◽  
...  

Although modernChlamydia muridarumhas been passaged for decades, there are no reports on the consequences of serial passage with strong selection pressure on its fitness. In order to explore the potential for Pasteurian selection to induce genomic and phenotypic perturbations toC. muridarum, a starter population was passaged in cultured cells for 28 generations without standard infection assistance. The resultant population, designated CMG28, displays markedly reducedin vitrodependence on centrifugation for infection and low incidence and severity of upper genital tract pathology following intravaginal inoculation into mice compared to the parentalC. muridarumpopulation, CMG0. Deep sequencing of CMG0 and CMG28 revealed novel protein variants in the hypothetical genes TC0237 (Q117E) and TC0668 (G322R).In vitroattachment assays of isogenic plaque clone pairs with mutations in either TC0237 and TC0668 or only TC0237 reveal that TC0237(Q117E) is solely responsible for enhanced adherence to host cells. Paradoxically, double mutants, but not TC0237(Q117E) single mutants, display severely attenuatedin vivopathogenicity. These findings implicate TC0237 and TC0668 as novel genetic factors involved in chlamydial attachment and pathogenicity, respectively, and show that serial passage under selection pressure remains an effective tool for studyingChlamydiapathogenicity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 82 (8) ◽  
pp. 3341-3349 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. H. Ramsey ◽  
J. H. Schripsema ◽  
B. J. Smith ◽  
Y. Wang ◽  
B. C. Jham ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe native plasmid of bothChlamydia muridarumandChlamydia trachomatishas been shown to control virulence and infectivity in mice and in lower primates. We recently described the development of a plasmid-based genetic transformation protocol forChlamydia trachomatisthat for the first time provides a platform for the molecular dissection of the function of the chlamydial plasmid and its individual genes or coding sequences (CDS). In the present study, we transformed a plasmid-free lymphogranuloma venereum isolate ofC. trachomatis, serovar L2, with either the original shuttle vector (pGFP::SW2) or a derivative of pGFP::SW2 carrying a deletion of the plasmid CDS5 gene (pCDS5KO). Female mice were inoculated with these strains either intravaginally or transcervically. We found that transformation of the plasmid-free isolate with the intact pGFP::SW2 vector significantly enhanced infectivity and induction of host inflammatory responses compared to the plasmid-free parental isolate. Transformation with pCDS5KO resulted in infection courses and inflammatory responses not significantly different from those observed in mice infected with the plasmid-free isolate. These results indicate a critical role of plasmid CDS5 inin vivofitness and in induction of inflammatory responses. To our knowledge, these are the firstin vivoobservations ascribing infectivity and virulence to a specific plasmid gene.


2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 635-641 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rishein Gupta ◽  
Shradha Wali ◽  
Jieh-Juen Yu ◽  
James P. Chambers ◽  
Guangming Zhong ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. e00401-20
Author(s):  
Raghuveer Singh ◽  
Jessica A. Slade ◽  
Mary Brockett ◽  
Daniel Mendez ◽  
George W. Liechti ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe Chlamydia trachomatis genome encodes multiple bifunctional enzymes, such as DapF, which is capable of both diaminopimelic acid (DAP) epimerase and glutamate racemase activity. Our previous work demonstrated the bifunctional activity of chlamydial DapF in vitro and in a heterologous system (Escherichia coli). In the present study, we employed a substrate competition strategy to demonstrate DapFCt function in vivo in C. trachomatis. We reasoned that, because DapFCt utilizes a shared substrate-binding site for both racemase and epimerase activities, only one activity can occur at a time. Therefore, an excess of one substrate relative to another must determine which activity is favored. We show that the addition of excess l-glutamate or meso-DAP (mDAP) to C. trachomatis resulted in 90% reduction in bacterial titers, compared to untreated controls. Excess l-glutamate reduced in vivo synthesis of mDAP by C. trachomatis to undetectable levels, thus confirming that excess racemase substrate led to inhibition of DapFCt DAP epimerase activity. We previously showed that expression of dapFCt in a murI (racemase) ΔdapF (epimerase) double mutant of E. coli rescues the d-glutamate auxotrophic defect. Addition of excess mDAP inhibited growth of this strain, but overexpression of dapFCt allowed the mutant to overcome growth inhibition. These results confirm that DapFCt is the primary target of these mDAP and l-glutamate treatments. Our findings demonstrate that suppression of either the glutamate racemase or epimerase activity of DapF compromises the growth of C. trachomatis. Thus, a substrate competition strategy can be a useful tool for in vivo validation of an essential bifunctional enzyme.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melisa Gorosito Serrán ◽  
Facundo Fiocca Vernengo ◽  
Laura Almada ◽  
Cristian G Beccaria ◽  
Pablo F Canete ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDuring infections with protozoan parasites or virus, T cell immunosuppression is generated simultaneously with a high B cell activation. Here, we show that in T. cruzi infection, all plasmablasts detected had higher surface expression of PD-L1, than other mononuclear cells. PD-L1hi plasmablasts were induced in vivo in an antigen-specific manner and required help from Bcl-6+CD4+T cells. PD-L1hi expression was not a characteristic of all antibody-secreting cells since plasma cells found during the chronic phase of infection express PD-L1 but at lower levels. PD-L1hi plasmablasts were also present in mice infected with Plasmodium or with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, but not in mice with autoimmune disorders or immunized with T cell-dependent antigens. PD-L1hi plasmablasts suppressed T cell response, via PD-L1, in vitro and in vivo. Thus, this study reveals that extrafollicular PD-L1hi plasmablasts, which precede the germinal center (CG) response, are a suppressive population in infections that may influence T cell response.Brief summaryPathogens develop different strategies to settle in the host. We identified a plasmablats population induced by pathogens in acute infections which suppress T cell response.


Author(s):  
Alexa N. Lauer ◽  
Rene Scholtysik ◽  
Andreas Beineke ◽  
Christoph Georg Baums ◽  
Kristin Klose ◽  
...  

Streptococcus suis (S. suis) is an important opportunistic pathogen, which can cause septicemia and meningitis in pigs and humans. Previous in vivo observations in S. suis-infected pigs revealed lesions at the choroid plexus (CP). In vitro experiments with primary porcine CP epithelial cells (PCPEC) and human CP epithelial papilloma (HIBCPP) cells demonstrated that S. suis can invade and traverse the CP epithelium, and that the CP contributes to the inflammatory response via cytokine expression. Here, next generation sequencing (RNA-seq) was used to compare global transcriptome profiles of PCPEC and HIBCPP cells challenged with S. suis serotype (ST) 2 infected in vitro, and of pigs infected in vivo. Identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were, amongst others, involved in inflammatory responses and hypoxia. The RNA-seq data were validated via quantitative PCR of selected DEGs. Employing Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA), 18, 28, and 21 enriched hallmark gene sets (GSs) were identified for infected HIBCPP cells, PCPEC, and in the CP of pigs suffering from S. suis ST2 meningitis, respectively, of which eight GSs overlapped between the three different sample sets. The majority of these GSs are involved in cellular signaling and pathways, immune response, and development, including inflammatory response and hypoxia. In contrast, suppressed GSs observed during in vitro and in vivo S. suis ST2 infections included those, which were involved in cellular proliferation and metabolic processes. This study suggests that similar cellular processes occur in infected human and porcine CP epithelial cells, especially in terms of inflammatory response.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bryan E. McQueen ◽  
Avinash Kollipara ◽  
Clare E. Gyorke ◽  
Charles W. Andrews ◽  
Ashley Ezzell ◽  
...  

Genital infections with Chlamydia trachomatis can lead to uterine and oviduct tissue damage in the female reproductive tract. Neutrophils are strongly associated with tissue damage during chlamydial infection, while an adaptive CD4 T cell response is necessary to combat infection. Activation of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (TREM-1) on neutrophils has previously been shown to induce and/or enhance degranulation synergistically with TLR-signaling. Additionally, TREM-1 can promote neutrophil transepithelial migration. In this study, we sought to determine the contribution of TREM-1,3 in immunopathology in the female mouse genital tract during Chlamydia muridarum infection. Relative to control mice, trem1,3 -/- mice had no difference in chlamydial burden or duration of lower genital tract infection. We also observed a similar incidence of oviduct hydrosalpinx 45 days post-infection in trem1,3 -/- compared to WT mice. However, compared to WT, trem1,3 -/- mice developed significantly fewer uterine horn hydrometra. Early in infection, trem1,3 -/- mice displayed a notable decrease in the number of uterine glands containing polymorphonuclear cells and uterine horn lumens had fewer neutrophils, with increased G-CSF. Trem1,3 -/- mice also had reduced erosion of the luminal epithelium. These data indicate TREM-1,3 contributes to transepithelial neutrophil migration in the uterus and uterine glands, promoting the development of uterine hydrometra in infected mice.


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