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Infect. Immun., 05 1997, 1863-1869, Vol 65, No. 5
CR Hauck, D Lorenzen, J Saas and TF Meyer
The extreme host specificity of pathogenic neisseriae limits investigations
aimed at the analysis of bacterial-host interactions almost completely to
the use of in vitro models. Although permanent epithelial and endothelial
cell lines are already indispensable tools with respect to initial
infection processes, studies concerning the interaction of neisseriae with
phagocytic cells have been confined to primary human blood cells. We
investigated the use of human leukemia- derived monocytic and
myelomonocytic cell lines that can be differentiated in vitro towards
phagocytic cells by a panel of chemical and biological reagents including
cytokines, vitamin analogs, and antileukemia drugs. Whereas tumor necrosis
factor alpha, gamma interferon, bufalin, or granulocyte-macrophage
colony-stimulating factor only marginally increased the ability of
monocytic MonoMac-6 and myelomonocytic JOSK-M cells to interact with the
bacteria, retinoic acid and vitamin D3 treatment for 2 to 4 days led to
highly phagocytic cells that internalized gonococci in an Opa
protein-specific manner. This is comparable to the phagocytosis by primary
monocytes from human blood, where more than 80% of cells are infected with
intracellular bacteria. The increased phagocytic activity of JOSK-M cells
following in vitro differentiation was paralleled by enhanced oxidative
burst capacity. Whereas undifferentiated cells responded to neither phorbol
12-myristate 13-acetate nor other known soluble and particulate stimuli,
cells incubated with retinoic acid and bufalin showed the same pattern and
the same intensity of oxidative burst activity in response to Neisseria
gonorrhoeae as primary cells: Opa-expressing gonococci elicited an
oxidative burst, whereas Opa- gonococci did not. The surface expression of
major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules was only slightly
changed after retinoic acid treatment. Also, phagocytosis of gonococci had
no influence on MHC class II surface expression. Taken together, our
results demonstrate that in vitro-differentiated human myelomonocytic
JOSK-M cells provide a suitable model for the study of a variety of aspects
of the gonococcal interaction with phagocytes.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
An in vitro-differentiated human cell line as a model system to study the interaction of Neisseria gonorrhoeae with phagocytic cells
Abteilung Infektionsbiologie, Max-Planck-Institut fur Biologie, Tubingen, Germany.
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