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Infect. Immun., Jan 1995, 271-279, Vol 63, No. 1
RL Gibson, C Soderland, WR Henderson Jr, EY Chi and CE Rubens
Neonatal group B streptococcal (GBS) sepsis and pneumonia cause lung
endothelial cell injury. GBS invasion of the lung endothelium may be a
mechanism for injury and the release of vasoactive eicosanoids. Pulmonary
artery endothelial cells (PAEC) and lung microvascular endothelial cells
(LMvEC) were isolated from neonatal piglets and were characterized as
endothelial on the basis of morphology, uptake of acyl low-density
lipoprotein, factor VIII staining, and formation of tube- like structures
on Matrigel. PAEC and LMvEC monolayers were infected with COH-1 (parent GBS
strain), isogenic mutants of COH-1 devoid of capsular sialic acid or all
capsular polysaccharide, or a noninvasive Escherichia coli strain, DH5
alpha. Intracellular GBS were assayed by plate counting of colony-forming
units resistant to incubation with extracellular antibiotics. All GBS
strains invaded LMvEC significantly more than PAEC, showing that the site
of lung endothelial cell origin influences invasion. DH5 alpha was not
invasive in either cell type. Both isogenic mutants invaded PAEC and LMvEC
more than COH-1 did, showing that GBS capsular polysaccharide attenuates
invasion. Live GBS caused both LMvEC and PAEC injury as assessed by lactate
dehydrogenase release; heat-killed GBS and DH5 alpha caused no significant
injury. Supernatants from PAEC and LMvEC were assayed by radioimmunoassay
for prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), the stable metabolite of prostacyclin (6-keto-
PGF1 alpha), and the thromboxane metabolite thromoxane B2. At 4 h, live
COH-1 caused no significant increases in eicosanoids from both PAEC and
LMvEC. At 16 h, live COH-1, but not heat-killed COH-1, caused a significant
increase in 6-keto-PGF1 alpha greater than PGE2 from LMvEC, but not PAEC.
We conclude that live GBS injure and invade the lung microvascular
endothelium and induce release of prostacyclin and PGE2. We postulate that
GBS invasion and injury of the lung microvasculature contribute to the
pathogenesis of GBS disease.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Group B streptococci (GBS) injure lung endothelium in vitro: GBS invasion and GBS-induced eicosanoid production is greater with microvascular than with pulmonary artery cells
Division of Neonatal and Respiratory Diseases, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
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