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Infect. Immun., 04 1997, 1370-1376, Vol 65, No. 4
TS Zaidi, MJ Preston and GB Pier
The prevention of bacterial infections by the inhibition of binding to host
tissues is an oft-touted approach, but few studies with appropriate models
of infection have tested its feasibility. Pseudomonas aeruginosa causes
severe corneal infections in mice after inoculations with low doses, and
infection is thought to depend upon an initial adherence of the bacteria to
corneal cells. In vitro, adherence to corneal cells is mediated to a large
degree by the complete-outer- core oligosaccharide of the bacterial
lipopolysaccharide (LPS). However, bacteria adhering to tissues in vivo are
difficult to differentiate from nonadherent bacteria. Since a direct
correlate of P. aeruginosa adherence to corneal epithelial cells is the
degree to which these cells internalize P. aeruginosa, the level of
adherence in vivo can be approximated by measuring P. aeruginosa ingestion
by cells by using gentamicin exclusion assays. To determine the degree to
which inhibition of the corneal cell adherence affects the course of
infection and disease in the murine model, we evaluated the ability of
LPS-outer-core oligosaccharide to inhibit bacterial association and entry
into corneal cells and to modulate the development of disease. Mice were
anesthetized, and their corneas were scratched and inoculated with virulent
P. aeruginosa 6294 or PAO1, along with either 50 microg of oligosaccharide
derived from LPS from P. aeruginosa PAC557 (complete outer core but no O
side chains) or oligosaccharide derived from LPS of P. aeruginosa
PAC1RalgC::tet (incomplete-core oligosaccharide). After 4 h, there were no
differences between groups in the counts of infecting and internalized
bacteria. At 24 h, the complete-core oligosaccharide decreased the levels
of bacteria per eye by 70 to 99.7% compared with the levels achieved by
including the incomplete-core oligosaccharide in the infectious inoculum.
Epithelial cell ingestion of bacteria was comparably affected. However, the
effect on disease was modest and only evident at lower challenge doses that
elicited mild disease in controls and when the bacterial association and
ingestion were inhibited by >99%. Overall, it appears that in the murine
model of P. aeruginosa corneal infection at challenge doses of bacteria
10-fold or greater than the minimal amount needed to cause disease, the
absolute level of inhibition of bacterial adherence is insufficient to
reduce the bacterial counts below that which elicits disease.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Inhibition of bacterial adherence to host tissue does not markedly affect disease in the murine model of Pseudomonas aeruginosa corneal infection
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115-5899, USA.
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