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Infect Immun, June 1998, p. 2471-2485, Vol. 66, No. 6
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Analysis of Host Cells Associated with the Spv-Mediated Increased
Intracellular Growth Rate of Salmonella typhimurium in
Mice
Paul A.
Gulig,1,*
Thomas J.
Doyle,1
Jeffrey A.
Hughes,2 and
Hidenori
Matsui1,3
Department of Molecular Genetics and
Microbiology, University of Florida College of
Medicine,1 and
Department of
Pharmaceutics, University of Florida College of
Pharmacy,2 Gainesville, Florida 32610-0266, and
Laboratory of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Center for
Basic Research, The Kitasato Institute, Tokyo 108, Japan3
Received 13 October 1997/Returned for modification 6 January
1998/Accepted 7 March 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
The 90-kb virulence plasmid of Salmonella typhimurium
encodes five spv genes which increase the growth rate of
the bacteria within host cells within the first week of systemic
infection of mice (P. A. Gulig and T. J. Doyle, Infect.
Immun. 61:504-511, 1993). The presently described study was aimed at
identifying the host cells associated with Spv-mediated virulence
by manipulating the mouse host and the salmonellae. To test the effects
of T cells and B cells on the Spv phenotype, salmonellae were orally
inoculated into nude and SCID BALB/c mice. Relative to normal BALB/c
mice, nude and SCID BALB/c mice were unaffected for splenic infection with either the Spv+ or Spv
S. typhimurium strains at 5 days postinoculation. When mice were pretreated with cyclophosphamide to induce granulocytopenia, there was a variable increase in total salmonella infection, but the relative
splenic CFU of Spv+ versus Spv
S. typhimurium was not changed after oral inoculation. In contrast, depletion of macrophages from mice by treatment with cyclophosphamide plus liposomes containing dichloromethylene diphosphate resulted in
equivalent virulence of Spv+ and Spv
salmonellae. To examine if the spv genes affected the
growth of salmonellae in nonphagocytic cells, an
invA::aphT mutation was transduced
into Spv+ and Spv
S. typhimurium
strains. InvA
Spv+ salmonellae were not
significantly affected for splenic infection after subcutaneous
inoculation compared with the wild-type strain, and InvA
Spv
salmonellae were only slightly attenuated relative to
InvA+ Spv
salmonellae. Invasion-defective
salmonellae still exhibited the Spv phenotype. Therefore, infection of
nonphagocytes is not involved with the Spv virulence function. Taken
together, these data demonstrate that macrophages are essential for
suppressing the infection by Spv
S. typhimurium, by serving as the primary host cell for
Spv-mediated intracellular replication and possibly by inhibiting the
replication of salmonellae within other macrophages.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Nontyphoidal serovars of
Salmonella spp. which possess related virulence plasmids
have the potential to cause systemic disease, particularly in
immunocompromised humans (65). In a mouse model, these
virulence plasmids are essential for systemic infection within a week
after oral inoculation (29). By genetic analysis of
virulence genes on the plasmids, five spv genes,
spvRABCD, were identified (29) and were
sufficient to express the virulence phenotype of systemic infection for
Salmonella typhimurium (26). We determined that
the spv genes of S. typhimurium
primarily enabled more rapid growth rate in mice but did not
significantly affect killing or movement through tissues, by
using a temperature-sensitive genetic marker to measure the
relative number of bacterial cell divisions in vivo (30). In
the natural infection, the bacteria enter the host by the oral route
and invade the intestinal epithelial cells and/or M cells
(3) in a plasmid-independent manner (28). Salmonellae then invade and proliferate in Peyer's patches and mesenteric lymph nodes (3). The bacteria reach the
liver and spleen through the lymphatics and blood. The virulence
plasmid is not necessary for infection of the intestines, resistance to complement-mediated bacteriolysis of serum, resistance to phagocytosis and killing by macrophages, or adherence to, invasion into, and growth
within certain cell lines in vitro (28, 29).
Since the spv genes affect the virulence of salmonellae
primarily in lymphoid tissues, many investigators have proposed that the Spv phenotype is manifested in phagocytes, primarily macrophages. However, until recently (53), direct proof of this
hypothesis has been lacking. In fact, irrespective of the role of the
spv genes in salmonella virulence, the cellular location of
salmonellae in the host has been controversial. Most reports support
infection of macrophages as essential for salmonella virulence
(15, 23, 68). However, others propose that salmonellae
either are extracellular (35, 41) or infect nonphagocytic
cells (6, 8) or polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs)
(11). Ultimately, a comprehensive histological analysis of
infected tissues from mice that were inoculated in a relevant manner
with a relevant inoculum will be required to settle these
controversies.
We pursued a biological approach to examine the interaction of
Spv+ and Spv
S. typhimurium
with different populations of host cells. We used mice genetically
deficient for lymphocytes, mice depleted of phagocytes by different
drugs, and mutant S. typhimurium strains that were rendered defective for infecting nonphagocytic cells. Our results presented here indicate that invasion of nonphagocytes is irrelevant for virulence of either Spv+ or Spv
salmonellae during infection beyond the intestines, and that T cells
and B cells have no detectable role in suppressing or enabling systemic
infection by S. typhimurium within 5 days after oral
inoculation. PMNs had a variable role in suppressing overall salmonella infection but did not differentially suppress
Spv
salmonellae. However, quantitative depletion of
macrophages from mice by using drugs rendered Spv+ and
Spv
S. typhimurium equal for systemic
infection. Together, these data indicate that within a week after
oral inoculation of BALB/c mice the spv genes increase the
growth rate of salmonellae within macrophages and suggest that
macrophages are the only relevant host cells for replication of
salmonellae beyond the intestines.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and culture.
The S. typhimurium strains used in this study are described in Table
1. Spv+ virulence
plasmid-containing S. typhimurium SR-11,
3456
(tetracycline resistant),
3306 (nalidixic acid resistant), and
isogenic Spv
virulence plasmid-cured
3337 have been
described elsewhere (28). A more isogenic Spv
strain was constructed in which the 6.3-kb ClaI fragment
encoding spvRABCD' was deleted from the virulence plasmid
and replaced with the tet gene of pBR322. Construction of
this strain, described elsewhere (43), involved construction
of the mutation in a cloned spv sequence and recombining the
mutation into
3181 by using the suicide allelic exchange vector
pCVD442 (10). The invA::aphT mutation originally constructed in S. typhimurium SB147
(21) was transduced into
3456 and
3337 by using
generalized transduction with P22HTint (56) grown
on SB136, yielding UF102 and UF103, respectively.
Bacteria were grown in L broth or on L agar (39)
supplemented with antibiotics at the following concentrations as
appropriate: chloramphenicol, 30 µg/ml; tetracycline, 12.5 µg/ml
(7.5 µg/ml for UF110); kanamycin, 30 µg/ml; and nalidixic acid, 25 µg/ml.
Infection of mice.
All of these studies used
specific-pathogen-free BALB/c mice, which are sensitive to infection by
S. typhimurium because of the
Itys mutation (57). Mice were orally
inoculated with S. typhimurium as described previously
(27). Approximately 108 CFU of S. typhimurium was fed to 7- to 11-week-old female BALB/c mice
(Charles River, Wilmington, Mass., and University of Florida Department
of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine Mouse Facility) after
food and water deprivation and feeding of bicarbonate. Unless noted
otherwise, 4 or 5 days later, spleens and livers were removed,
homogenized in glass tissue homogenizers with phosphate-buffered saline
(PBS) containing gelatin (BSG) (9), and plated to enumerate CFU. Nude BALB/c mice (Charles River) and SCID BALB/c mice (Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine; maintained at the University of Florida
Department of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine Mouse
Facility) were also used with oral inoculation. Alternatively, mice
were inoculated subcutaneously (s.c.) into both hind footpads as
described previously (30) with 105 CFU of
salmonellae suspended in 0.02 ml of BSG per footpad. Three or four days
later, spleens were removed, homogenized in BSG, and plated to
enumerate CFU. Mice were either inoculated with a single salmonella
strain or equal mixtures of two strains as described (30).
Treatment of mice with cyclophosphamide.
To examine the
effects of PMNs, mice were treated with cyclophosphamide as described
previously (45). Cyclophosphamide (Sigma Chemical Co., St.
Louis, Mo.) was dissolved in sterile, pyrogen-free distilled water or
saline and injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) at 3 days preinfection and
on the day of infection at a dose of 150 mg/kg of body weight.
Peripheral blood leukocytes (WBC) were enumerated by hemocytometer
counts of EDTA-anticoagulated whole blood diluted in 3% (vol/vol)
acetic acid. Differential WBC counts were performed on Wright-Giemsa
(Camco Quik Stain II; Baxter, McGaw Park, Ill.)-stained smears.
Absolute neutrophil counts were calculated at the time of necropsy by
multiplying the total WBC by the percentage of neutrophils obtained
from differential counts (45). We routinely observed at
least 90% reduction of peripheral blood PMNs after cyclophosphamide
treatment.
Treatment of mice with liposomes containing dCMdP.
To
examine the effects of functional depletion of macrophages, mice were
treated with liposomes containing dichloromethylene diphosphate (dCMdP)
as described by van Rooijen (61). Briefly, liposomes
consisted of 87% (wt/wt) phosphatidylcholine and 13% (wt/wt)
cholesterol (Sigma). dCMdP (a gift of Boehringer Mannheim) was
dissolved in PBS at a concentration of 18.9% (wt/vol) and was
incorporated into liposomes by sonication. Liposomes were sized to 150 to 200 nm and washed in PBS before use in mice. Mice were injected
intravenously (i.v.) in the lateral tail vein with approximately 4 mg
of dCMdP contained in 0.2 ml of liposome suspension. For initial
experiments using liposome-dCMdP alone, injection was on the day before
inoculation with salmonellae. For subsequent experiments with
liposome-dCMdP and experiments involving combined cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP treatment, injection of liposomes was
on the day of oral inoculation at the time of preinoculation food and
water deprivation. Liposomes containing only PBS and occasionally PBS
without liposomes were used as negative controls.
Immunohistochemical analysis of mouse tissues.
To confirm
the effects of depleting mice of PMNs by using cyclophosphamide or
depleting macrophages with liposome encapsulated dCMdP, a portion of
infected mouse spleens and livers was quick frozen in OCT embedding
medium (TisTek; Sakura Finetek, Torrance, Calif.), while the remainder
was homogenized and plated as described above. Tissues were sectioned
in 5-µm sections and mounted at the University of Florida Department
of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine Diagnostic Referral
Laboratory and stored at
70°C. On the day of analysis, sections
were thawed and fixed in absolute methanol containing 1% (vol/vol)
hydrogen peroxide to block endogenous peroxidase activity. Endogenous
biotin was blocked with Biotin Blocking System (Dako Corp.,
Carpenteria, Calif.). Fc activity was blocked with 10% (vol/vol)
normal porcine serum. Primary antibodies consisted of rabbit anti-mouse
macrophage serum (Inter-Cell Technologies, Hopewell, N.J.) followed by
porcine anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG) conjugated with peroxidase (Dako) and then rabbit peroxidase-antiperoxidase (Harlan Bioproducts, Indianapolis, Ind.); rat monoclonal antibody FA/11 directed against the
CD68 pan-macrophage, macrophage-specific antigen (22, 51) followed by donkey anti-rat IgG conjugated with peroxidase (Jackson ImmunoResearch); or rat monoclonal antibody RB6-8C5 against
granulocytes (Gr-1 antigen) (17) conjugated with biotin
(CalTag) followed by avidin conjugated to peroxidase (Biostain Super
ABC Basic Detector; Biomeda, Foster City, Calif.).
Peroxidase-conjugated complexes were developed with diaminobenzidine
(Metal Enhanced DAB Substrate kit; Pierce, Rockford, Ill.), and slides
were counterstained with hematoxylin. Negative control antibodies were
rat antidinitrophenol monoclonal antibody conjugated with biotin
(CalTag) for RB6-8C5 and rat IgG1 monoclonal antibody R187 directed
against the murine leukemia virus p30gag protein
(5).
Statistical analysis.
Analysis of bacterial numbers as mean
log10 ± standard deviation CFU was performed as described
previously (2). In experiments in which individual mice were
inoculated with single strains, the difference between the mean
log10 CFU of different groups was determined by using the
Student t test. For analysis of mixed infections, the
Student t test was used to examine the mean paired difference in log10 CFU of the strains being different from
0. In all cases, two or three experiments were performed, and results were pooled for analysis when indicated.
 |
RESULTS |
Our previous results established that the spv genes of
the S. typhimurium virulence plasmid primarily increase
the growth rate of salmonellae during infection of host cells in
infected mice (30). The central question was then which
cells acted as the primary hosts for Spv-mediated increased growth and
which cells, if any, acted as secondary effectors which
suppressed the replication of the Spv
salmonellae. To
gain insight into the function of the spv genes, we
examined how the mouse host could be altered so that Spv
salmonellae would no longer be suppressed relative to
Spv+ salmonellae, that is, so that the suppressive
environment to which the Spv
bacteria were susceptible
would be eliminated. The objective of most of the experiments described
below, therefore, consisted of infecting mice depleted of certain
cells, either pharmacologically or by genetic mutation, with
Spv+ and/or Spv
S. typhimurium. If the primary or secondary host cells responsible for suppression of Spv
salmonellae were eliminated, the
Spv
strain would be recovered from deep tissues such as
the spleen and liver in the same or nearly the same numbers as the
Spv+ parent.
Lymphocytes do not have a role in restricting the growth of
Spv+ or Spv
S. typhimurium
within 5 days after oral inoculation.
We considered the
possibility that T cells and/or B cells were involved in suppressing
the replication of Spv
S. typhimurium;
i.e., the spv genes are involved either in increased replication within these lymphocytes or in overcoming
lymphocyte-mediated suppression of salmonella replication within
another host cell. To examine the role of T cells in differentially
suppressing plasmid-cured S. typhimurium, nude BALB/c
and normal BALB/c mice were inoculated orally with 108 CFU
of both wild-type
3456 and plasmid-cured
3337 in mixed infections. Five days later, spleens were examined for total CFU of
each strain (Fig. 1A). There was no
effect of the nude BALB/c background on recovery of either
Spv+ or Spv
S. typhimurium
compared with normal BALB/c mice. Furthermore, the mean paired
differences between plasmid-containing and plasmid-cured salmonellae
were unchanged between normal and nude BALB/c mice. Therefore, T cells
do not significantly affect splenic infection within 5 days of oral
inoculation and have no role in the Spv phenotype.

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FIG. 1.
Lack of effect of the nude and SCID mutations on the
splenic infection of BALB/c mice inoculated orally with
Spv+ and Spv S. typhimurium.
(A) Normal and nude BALB/c mice were orally inoculated with mixtures of
wild-type, Spv+ 3456 and virulence plasmid-cured,
Spv 3337. (B) Normal and SCID BALB/c mice were orally
inoculated with mixtures of wild-type 3306 and
spv::tet, Spv UF110.
Five days later, CFU of each strain in spleens were enumerated, and the
mean paired difference (Diff.) between the Spv+ and
Spv strains was calculated. Standard deviations are shown
as vertical lines, and n for each infection is shown above
the data for the mean paired difference. These are the combined results
of at least two experiments each for nude and SCID BALB/c mice. The
log10 CFU recoveries for either salmonella strain between
either nude and SCID BALB/c mice and the matched normal BALB/c mice
were not significant (P > 0.2). The mean paired
differences between Spv+ and Spv strains were
always significantly greater than 0 (P < 0.005 to
P < 0.001).
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To examine a more completely lymphocyte-deficient background for T
cells, as well as B cells, SCID BALB/c mice were orally
inoculated with
a mixture of Spv
+ (

3306) and Spv

(UF110)
S. typhimurium. Five days later, results essentially
identical to those obtained with nude BALB/c mice were obtained:
the
SCID mutation had no effect on splenic infection by either
Spv
+ or Spv
S. typhimurium
compared with normal BALB/c controls (Fig.
1B).
Lymphocytes therefore
have no role in the Spv phenotype, either
as the primary cells in which
the
spv genes exert their effect
or as secondary cells
regulating the replication of salmonellae
within a different primary
cell.
Neutrophils have a variable role in suppressing Spv+
and Spv
S. typhimurium but do not affect
the Spv phenotype.
It has been proposed that PMNs are the relevant
site of intracellular residence for wild-type S. typhimurium in the spleens of mice shortly after i.v. infection
(11) and are involved in suppressing infection of
hepatocytes after i.v. inoculation (6, 8). To examine the
role of PMNs in suppressing intracellular growth of plasmid-cured
salmonellae relative to wild-type salmonellae, mice were treated i.p.
with the chemotherapeutic agent cyclophosphamide to induce
granulocytopenia (45). At necropsy, we routinely observed at
least a 90% decrease in peripheral blood granulocytes after cyclophosphamide treatment compared to mice treated i.p. with PBS.
Furthermore, no PMNs were detectable in spleens and livers of
cyclophosphamide-treated mice, using monoclonal antibody RB6-8C5 directed against the granulocyte-specific antigen Gr-1 (Fig.
2E). Mice were orally
inoculated with single or mixed strains of wild-type (
3456 or
3306) and/or Spv
(
3337 or UF110) S. typhimurium and were examined for splenic infection 4 to 5 days
after inoculation.

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FIG. 2.
Immunochemical analysis of PMNs and macrophages in
spleens of normal and cyclophosphamide-treated mice infected with a
mixture of Spv+ and Spv S. typhimurium. Mice were treated with cyclophosphamide or PBS and
orally inoculated with S. typhimurium as described in
the text. Four days later, spleens and livers (not shown) were frozen
in OCT and sectioned for immunochemical analysis of PMNs and
macrophages as described in the text. Hamster anti-mouse granulocyte
monoclonal antibody was RB6-8C5 (A, E, and G), and rat anti-mouse
macrophage monoclonal antibody was FA/11 (B, F, and H). RB6-8C5 was
conjugated with biotin and detected with avidin-horseradish peroxidase.
FA/11 was detected using donkey anti-rat IgG conjugated with
peroxidase. Reactions were developed with diaminobenzidine. Negative
control antibodies were rat anti-murine leukemia virus
p30gag protein (5) (C) and rat
antidinitrophenol (D) and consistently produced clean reactions.
Sections were counterstained with hematoxylin. All images are at a
magnification of ×200. (A to D) Normal mouse spleen demonstrating
specificity of the primary antibodies and lack of reactivity for the
negative control antibodies; (E and F) spleen from infected mouse
treated with cyclophosphamide for depletion of PMNs; (G and H) spleen
from infected mouse injected with PBS in place of cyclophosphamide.
Note the absence of PMNs in panel E and the continued presence of
macrophages in panel F.
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The data in Fig.
3A are combined results
of two experiments each for mixed inoculation with wild-type

3306
and
spv::
tet UF110.
Cyclophosphamide-treated mice possessed few, if any, detectable
PMNs in
spleens (Fig.
2E) and livers (not shown), even during
the course of
systemic salmonella infection. Furthermore, as expected,
the presence
of macrophages, detected with monoclonal antibody
FA/11, was
not decreased by treatment of mice with cyclophosphamide
(Fig.
2F). As
above, peripheral blood granulocyte levels were
decreased by at least
90% by cyclophosphamide treatment. Even
though three of eight
cyclophosphamide-treated mice died from
causes other than salmonellae,
the splenic and hepatic CFU of
wild-type
S. typhimurium
were not changed by depletion of PMNs
from mice, and no significant
differences in splenic and hepatic
CFU of the isogenic
Spv

strain were observed (Fig.
3A). Similar results were
obtained
in at least three other experiments using wild-type

3456
and
virulence plasmid-cured

3337 in mixed and single strain
infections
of cyclophosphamide-treated mice (data not shown).

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FIG. 3.
Depletion of PMNs by cyclophosphamide treatment does not
affect the Spv virulence phenotype of S. typhimurium
after oral inoculation of mice. Cyclophosphamide (Cyclo.) at a dose of
150 mg/kg of body weight or PBS (Control) was injected i.p. at 3 days
preinfection and on the day of infection. Mice were orally inoculated
with Spv+ 3306 and
spv::tet Spv UF110 at
a dose of 108 CFU. Four days later, spleens and livers were
examined for salmonella CFU, with the exception of two
cyclophosphamide-treated mice in panel B, which were harvested 18 h earlier. Data shown are for total CFU/spleen or CFU/gram of
liver. The mean paired difference (Diff.) was calculated between the
salmonella strains for each mouse. Each bar represents the mean
log10 CFU with standard deviation shown. The number of mice
is indicated above the mean paired difference. The mean paired
differences between Spv+ and Spv salmonellae
were significantly greater than 0 in every case (P < 0.05 to P < 0.001). (A) Representative data from
a series of three experiments in which treatment with
cyclophosphamide did not result in a significant change in CFU of
either Spv+ or Spv salmonellae or the mean
paired difference between the strains (P > 0.1 to
P > 0.5). (B) Representative data from a series of
three experiments in which treatment with cyclophosphamide resulted in
significant increases in CFU for both Spv+ and
Spv salmonellae (P < 0.01 to
P < 0.001), but the mean paired difference between the
strains was not significantly changed (P 0.2).
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We performed a semiquantitative analysis using immunohistology of the
relative numbers of macrophages in spleen and liver
sections from
cyclophosphamide-treated and control-treated mice
infected with
S. typhimurium to examine if increases in
macrophages
could have compensated for lack of PMNs (data not shown).
There
was no observable effect on the numbers of hepatic macrophages
between cyclophosphamide-treated and control mice; however, there
was a
tendency for increased infiltration by splenic macrophages
into the
white pulp of spleens of cyclophosphamide-treated mice
versus
control-treated mice as a result of salmonella infection.
Because of
the density of macrophages in the red pulp, we could
make no
conclusions about total numbers of macrophages in spleens.
These
results indicated that granulocytes, in particular PMNs,
were not
essential for restricting systemic infection by
S. typhimurium within 5 days after oral inoculation and that PMNs do
not have
a detectable role in suppressing Spv

salmonellae
relative to Spv
+ salmonellae. The resident macrophages
in tissues appeared to
be capable of both suppressing salmonella
infection in general
and exerting differential suppression
against the Spv

strain.
Several months later, we repeated this series of experiments exactly,
except that two of five cyclophosphamide-treated mice
infected with
salmonellae were killed 18 h earlier than the regular
harvest at 4 days postinoculation. We obtained results
somewhat
different from those of the first set of experiments
(Fig.
3B).
The splenic CFU for both Spv
+ and
Spv

salmonellae increased with treatment of mice with
cyclophosphamide
(32-fold [
P = 0.01] and 250-fold
[
P < 0.02], respectively); however,
the
mean paired difference between the strains was not significantly
affected by cyclophosphamide treatment (
P > 0.2).
Similarly, hepatic
CFU for both strains were increased by
cyclophosphamide treatment
of mice (125-fold [
P < 0.001] and 630-fold [
P < 0.002], respectively,
for
Spv
+ and Spv

), but the mean paired difference
was not significantly affected
(
P = 0.2). Similar
results were obtained on two other contemporary
repetitions of this
experiment. These latter experiments demonstrated
a significant effect
on systemic salmonella infection by depletion
of PMNs; however, as in
the previous set of experiments, the Spv
phenotype was not affected by
severe granulocytopenia. Therefore,
PMNs are not likely to be involved
in specific suppression of
Spv
S. typhimurium, but macrophages were candidates for such a role.
Macrophages are essential for suppression of Spv
S. typhimurium.
To examine the role of macrophages in
suppressing the growth of Spv
S. typhimurium, mice were treated in a variety of ways which have
been used by several investigators to physically or functionally deplete mice of macrophages. These treatments included i.v. injection of silica (1, 50) and i.v. injection of liposomes containing dCMdP (59, 61). After treatment of mice to deplete
macrophages, mice were orally inoculated with Spv+ and/or
Spv
S. typhimurium, and splenic CFU were
measured 4 to 5 days later. With these treatments, we observed that
both Spv+ and Spv
strains were increased for
splenic infection 10- to 100-fold. However, the recoveries of the two
strains relative to each other either remained the same or the
difference increased
approximately 100-fold-higher numbers of
Spv+ than Spv
salmonellae (data are provided
for liposome-dCMdP treatment in Fig. 4).
Injection of liposome-PBS resulted in splenic infection no different
than injection of PBS alone (Fig. 4). The mean paired difference
between Spv+
3456 and Spv
3337
was unchanged as a result of liposome-dCMdP treatment (Fig. 4). Our
initial interpretation was that macrophages were essential for
suppression of systemic disease by S. typhimurium but
that macrophages were not involved in differential suppression of
replication of Spv
S. typhimurium.
However, when we stained macrophages in frozen sections of infected
mouse tissues with rabbit anti-murine macrophage antiserum and later
with monoclonal antibody FA/11 (22, 51), we observed that
treatment with silica or liposome-dCMdP failed to completely deplete
infected spleens of macrophages (data are shown for liposome-dCMdP in
Fig. 5A and B). We further reasoned that
although the treatments may have initially depleted resident macrophages, the increased systemic infection with salmonellae may have
elicited monocytes and macrophages from the bone marrow. In fact,
Samsom et al. showed that liposome-dCMdP treatment does not inhibit the
elicitation of macrophages as part of an inflammatory response
(55). We therefore treated mice with liposome-dCMdP on the
day of inoculation and 2 days later to deplete any elicited macrophages. However, even with this double treatment, spleens still contained readily detectable macrophages, and the differential growth yields persisted between Spv+ and Spv
salmonellae (data not shown).

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FIG. 4.
Treatment of mice with liposome-dCMdP alone increases
splenic infection by Spv+ and Spv
S. typhimurium but does not relieve differential
suppression of Spv S. typhimurium. Mice
were injected i.v. with PBS, liposome (Lip.)-PBS, or liposome-dCMdP
1 day before oral inoculation with mixtures of Spv+ 3456
and Spv 3337 as described in the text. Four days
later, spleens were removed, and CFU were enumerated. Data are mean
log10 CFU with standard deviations shown, and the
mean paired difference between 3456 and 3337 (Diff.) is shown
(n = 4 for all groups). In all three sets, the mean
paired difference is significantly greater than 0 (P < 0.05 to P < 0.005).
Liposome-dCMdP treatment resulted in significantly increased splenic
infection for both 3456 and 3337 compared with PBS treatment or
liposome-PBS treatment (P < 0.05), except for 3337,
which was not significantly increased compared with liposome-PBS.
Note that as shown in Fig. 5, liposome-dCMdP treatment did not
completely eliminate splenic macrophages.
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FIG. 5.
Immunochemical analysis of PMNs and macrophages in
spleens of liposome-dCMdP and control treated mice infected with
wild-type S. typhimurium. Spleens and livers (not
shown) were prepared as described for Fig. 2 with rat anti-mouse
granulocyte monoclonal antibody RB6-8C5 (A, C, and E) and rat
anti-mouse macrophage monoclonal antibody FA/11 (B, D, and F). All
images are at a magnification of ×200. (A and B) Spleen from infected
mouse treated with PBS; (C and D) spleen from infected mouse treated
with liposome-PBS; (E and F) spleen from infected mouse treated with
liposome-dCMdP for depletion of macrophages. Note the continued
presence of PMNs and macrophages with all treatments. Reactions from
the negative control antibodies were clean (data not shown).
|
|
Since it was possible that monocytes and macrophages were still being
recruited from the bone marrow as a result of the infection
process, we
attempted depletion of these phagocytes by combining
cyclophosphamide
and liposome-dCMdP treatment. The cyclophosphamide
would destroy the
macrophage-regenerative function of the bone
marrow, and the
liposome-dCMdP would kill peripheral macrophages.
These mice would also
be depleted of PMNs; however, results described
above indicated that
PMNs did not affect the Spv phenotype. Immunochemical
staining of
spleens and livers indicated that the efficiency of
depletion of
macrophages by cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP treatment
was sometimes
variable, whereas tissues were consistently depleted
of PMNs (Fig.
6). Reading depletion
of macrophages was complicated
by the fact that once macrophages had
been destroyed, FA/11-staining
debris remained in tissues, presumably
because there were no phagocytes
to clear the material. However,
examination of tissues at a magnification
of ×1,000 (Fig.
6I to K) and
with immunofluorescence (data not
shown) enabled the distinction
between residual intact macrophages
and debris due the lack of nuclei
associated with debris and any
cellular morphology. We made no
conclusions as to the viability
of intact-appearing macrophages.

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FIG. 6.
Immunochemical analysis of PMNs and macrophages in
spleens and livers of cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP and control
treated mice. Mice were treated with cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP
or PBS-liposome-PBS and orally infected with Spv+ 3456
or Spv UF110 (not shown) as described in the text. Three
days later, spleens and livers were prepared as described for Fig. 2
with rat anti-mouse granulocyte monoclonal antibody RB6-8C5 (A, B, E,
and F) and rat anti-mouse macrophage monoclonal antibody FA/11 (C, D,
and G to K). Magnifications: A to H, are ×200; I to K, ×1,000. Images
show spleens (A, C, and J) and livers (B and D) from infected mice
treated with PBS/liposome-PBS, spleens (E, G, and K) and livers (F and
H) from infected mice treated with cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP for
depletion of macrophages, and spleen from a normal, uninfected mouse
(I). Note the absence of PMNs in panels E and F and the lack of
macrophages in panel H. The FA/11-staining material in panel G is
debris, not intact macrophages, as determined by examination at higher
power in panel K. Note the lack of nuclei associated with the
FA/11-staining debris in panel K compared with the associated nuclei
and cellular staining in panels I and J.
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|
Initial experiments using the cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP
depletion procedure involved inoculation of mice with either
Spv
+ or Spv
S. typhimurium.
The cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP-treated mice
were extremely sick
and had to be sacrificed as soon as 3 days
postinoculation, even
without infection with salmonellae. The
recoveries of Spv
+
and Spv

salmonellae from spleens and livers were greatly
increased, but
extremely large ranges of recoveries were observed (Fig.
7A).
The relative level of macrophage
depletion correlated with the
yield of salmonellae. In fact, mice which
did not contain intact
macrophages or PMNs in spleens and livers
possessed similar levels
of Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium, and the highest three splenic
recoveries were
from mice infected with Spv

UF110. When
cellular depletion of mice was less efficient, the
recoveries of both
strains were reduced, and the recovery of Spv
+ was higher
than for Spv

salmonellae.

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FIG. 7.
Combined treatment with cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP
results in equivalent splenic infection by Spv+ and
Spv S. typhimurium. Mice were treated
with cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP (Cyc./Lip.-dCMdP) or
PBS-liposome-PBS (Control) as described in the text and infected with
Spv+ and/or Spv S. typhimurium. (A) Single-strain inoculation. Mice were infected
with either Spv+ 3456 or Spv UF110. Three
days later, splenic CFU were examined. Mean with standard deviation of
log10 splenic CFU for 3456 or UF110 are shown;
n for each group is shown above the bars. In control-treated
mice, 3456 was significantly higher than UF110 for splenic CFU
(P < 0.05); however, in
cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP-treated mice, recovery of the
Spv strain was insignificantly higher than the
Spv+ strain (P > 0.05). Similar results
were obtained for livers (data not shown). (B) Mixed-strain
inoculation. Mice were infected with a mixture of Spv+
3306 and Spv UF110. Two to three days later, CFU of
each strain in spleens were examined. Mean log10 CFU with
standard deviation for 3306, UF110, and the mean paired difference
(Diff.) are shown. In control-treated mice, the mean paired difference
between 3306 and UF110 was significantly greater than 0 (P < 0.05); however, in
cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP-treated mice the mean paired
difference between 3306 and UF110 was not significantly greater than
0 (P > 0.5). Similar results were obtained for livers
(data not shown). Numbers of mice in each group are shown above the bar
for the mean paired difference.
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|
To examine the relative infection with Spv
+ and
Spv

salmonellae together in the same mouse experiencing
the same macrophage
background in light of variable phagocyte depletion
noted above,
we inoculated cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP-treated
mice with
mixtures of Spv
+ 
3306 and Spv

UF110 (Fig.
7B). The cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP
treatment
for the mixed infection was more efficient than the
previous attempts
and made the mice so sick that the experiment had to
be terminated
between 2 and 3 days postinoculation. In control-treated
mice,
the mean paired difference between Spv
+ and
Spv
S. typhimurium was 10
1.3
(
P < 0.05 for mean paired difference greater than 0),
while in
the macrophage-depleted mice, the mean paired
difference was 10
0.3 (
P > 0.5 for
mean paired difference greater than 0). Similar
results were
obtained with livers from the same mice (data not
shown). These
results demonstrate that macrophages are essential
for mice to
differentially suppress the replication of Spv
S. typhimurium, either by serving as the primary host
cells in
which Spv-mediated intracellular replication occurs or by
acting
as secondary cells which suppress infection of a different,
primary
host cell by Spv

salmonellae.
Invasion of nonphagocytic host cells is not necessary for the
functional expression of the Spv phenotype or systemic infection by
S. typhimurium after s.c. inoculation.
The
experiments described above left open the possibility that Spv-mediated
growth occurred within a nonphagocytic host cell, e.g., hepatocyte. In
fact, Conlan and North (8) reported that S. typhimurium proliferates within hepatocytes of i.v.-inoculated mice. To examine if infection of nonphagocytic host cells was important
in the Spv phenotype of increased intracellular growth rate,
salmonellae were mutated so as to be defective for intracellular infection of nonphagocytes. This was accomplished by transduction with
the invA::aphT mutation, which inhibits
invasion into, but not adherence to, nonphagocytic cells
(21). We confirmed that InvA
Spv+
UF102 and InvA
Spv
UF103 were approximately
1,000-fold inhibited for invasion into Henle-407 cells and that the
invasion defective genotype could be complemented in trans
by plasmid pYA2217 encoding the S. typhimurium inv region (20) (data not shown). To examine
if InvA
salmonellae could still be
phagocytosed by macrophages after opsonization with complement, which
would most closely mimic the in vivo condition, J774.1 cells or
peritoneal macrophages were infected with InvA+ and
InvA
S. typhimurium. We detected a slight
difference in the abilities of the bacteria to adhere to and be taken
up by macrophages in the absence of complement. However, opsonization
with 10% normal rat serum more than compensated for any deficiency of
InvA
salmonellae to enter macrophages (data not shown).
Since InvA
S. typhimurium strains are
attenuated by the oral route (
20), mice were injected s.c.
with 10
5 CFU of

3456,

3337, UF102, or UF103 by single
or mixed inoculation.
We previously showed that the Spv virulence
function is required
for systemic infection after s.c. inoculation in
our model system
(
30). Five days later, spleens and livers
were examined for
log
10 CFU of each strain (Fig.
8). The
invA::
aphT mutation resulted
in an
average 0.4-log decrease in splenic CFU for both virulence
plasmid-containing and cured salmonellae,
P > 0.1 to
0.5 for the
differences being >0. However, there was still a
1,000-fold difference
in the splenic recoveries between
Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium,
regardless of the
invA genotype (
P < 0.01 to
0.005). Similar results were obtained for hepatic infection;
however,
the
invA::
aphT mutation
resulted in slightly higher, yet still
insignificant, decreases in
hepatic recovery (Fig.
8). In other
experiments, we noted either no
decrease in splenic infection
at all for either Spv background or as
high as 2.2-log decreases
for plasmid-cured recovery from spleens
(although very rare) in
InvA

salmonellae. However, in
every case, inhibition of invasion into
nonphagocytes did not affect
the Spv phenotype of increased recovery
of Spv
+ versus
Spv

salmonellae from spleens. Therefore, invasion of
nonphagocytic
cells is irrelevant to the Spv virulence function of
increased
intracellular growth rate. Furthermore, these results suggest
that invasion of nonphagocytic cells by
S. typhimurium
is not
essential for systemic infection if inoculation bypasses the
intestines.
Therefore, the only cells identified in this study as being
related
to the Spv virulence function were macrophages.

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FIG. 8.
Preventing invasion of nonphagocytes by the
invA::aphT mutation does not
significantly affect systemic infection by either Spv+ or
Spv S. typhimurium after s.c. inoculation
of mice. Mice were inoculated s.c. with
Spv+/InvA+ 3306,
Spv+/InvA UF102,
Spv /InvA+ 3337, or
Spv /InvA UF103. Five days later, splenic
and hepatic CFU were enumerated. Data are shown as mean with standard
deviation for log10 CFU/spleen or CFU/gram of liver. All
groups contain four mice. Differences between 3306 and 3337 or
UF102 and UF103 were significant (P < 0.02 to
P < 0.005); however, differences between 3306 and
UF102 or 3337 and UF103 were not significant (P > 0.1 to P > 0.5).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Molecular genetic analysis of the spv genes of the
salmonella virulence plasmid has proceeded at a rapid pace (reviewed in references 25 and 29). Although a
region of the virulence plasmid encoding five genes,
spvRABCD, has been identified through cloning, mutagenesis,
and DNA sequencing, the exact roles of most of these genes in virulence
are not known (29). The SpvR protein is a positive regulator
of spvABCD (29). Regulation of the spv genes is dependent on the alternative sigma factor RpoS (14, 48,
66), and the genes are expressed within host cells (16, 52,
66). We have determined that the spv genes do not
require a cessation of bacterial growth for induction but instead can be greatly induced in minimal medium mimicking the intracellular environment of animal cells (66, 67).
The elucidation of the virulence plasmid phenotype has undergone
significant evolution since the first description of the plasmid as
being associated with virulence (36). Initial studies suggested that the plasmid of S. typhimurium was
involved with adherence and invasion into tissue culture cells, serum
resistance, and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis; however, each of these
hypotheses has not proven reproducible (29). Our own data
demonstrated that plasmid-cured S. typhimurium was
deficient in recovery from lymphoid tissues after oral inoculation of
BALB/c mice but was capable of surviving in the lymph nodes and spleen
for extended periods (28). These results were not consistent
with the plasmid affecting resistance to complement or survival within
phagocytes. Indeed, short-term survival rates of virulence
plasmid-containing and cured salmonellae were equivalent in murine
macrophages (28). Others have confirmed this result and
extended in vitro infection of macrophages to as long as 24 h
without demonstrable differences between wild-type and cured strains
(54). In only a single study by Libby et al. (40)
was a moderate divergence achieved in recoveries of plasmid-containing
and cured S. dublin in cultured bovine macrophages. However, the difficulty in reproducing the Spv phenotype in vitro does
not definitively disprove a role for the spv genes in these phenotypes in vivo. In vitro models may not sufficiently mimic the
complexities of the host-pathogen interaction which occurs in vivo. We
therefore concentrated our studies of the Spv phenotype by using the
mouse model. By using genetic markers (temperature-sensitive antibiotic
resistance plasmid pHSG422) and genetic manipulation (
aroA), we previously demonstrated that the
spv genes primarily increase the growth rate of
S. typhimurium in BALB/c mice without significantly
affecting either the killing or movement of the bacteria in the mice
(30). The resistance to in vivo-administered gentamicin
by both virulence plasmid-containing and cured S. typhimurium strongly suggested that both strains were located
intracellularly within host cells. The equal yields of both strains
from the extracellular environment of peritoneal chamber implants
supported this conclusion. However, the relevant host cell(s) for
either permitting the intracellular proliferation of Spv+
S. typhimurium or conversely suppressing the
intracellular growth of the Spv
derivative was not
identified. Our study described here was executed to probe the roles of
different host cells in the salmonella Spv-mediated phenotype of
increased intracellular growth rate.
Lymphocytes are not involved with Spv-mediated virulence.
Since T cells can affect the abilities of macrophages and other cells
to control intracellular pathogens such as S. typhimurium (37) and since S. typhimurium has been shown to infect lymphocyte cell lines in
vitro (62), we examined the effect of lymphocytes on the Spv phenotype in BALB/c mice by using homozygous nude BALB/c mice and SCID BALB/c mice. By infection of normal and
lymphocyte-deficient mice with mixtures of Spv+ and
Spv
S. typhimurium, we observed no
significant effect on recoveries of either bacterial strain from
spleens of orally inoculated mice within 5 days of inoculation (Fig.
1). We also demonstrated that T cells and B cells do not have a
significant role in the Spv phenotype of increased intracellular growth
rate. This is not surprising since the Spv phenotype is exerted as soon
as 3 days after oral inoculation (28), and T cells probably
do not have time to be stimulated and have any effect at this early
time of the disease process. Our results are most consistent with those of Weintraub et al. (64) and Guilloteau et al.
(24). Weintraub et al. performed a comprehensive analysis of
the roles of 
and 
T cells in both
Ityr and Itys mice which
were genetically deficient in T-cell subsets (64). In
Itys C57BL/6 mice, infection with wild-type
S. dublin was unaffected within 4 days of oral
inoculation even when 
- and 
-T cells were lacking.
Guilloteau et al. found that splenic and hepatic infection of SCID
CB-17/IcrCru mice after i.p. inoculation was unaffected compared with
normal BALB/c mice until 11 days postinoculation. Others have used a
variety of congenic mouse strains, reconstitution, and depletion
procedures to show in Ityr mice that T cells are
not important in suppressing the initial net replication of
S. typhimurium after i.v. inoculation (34, 42,
49). In contrast, Emoto et al. (13) reported that mice genetically deficient for 
T cells were more resistant to i.p. infection with S. choleraesuis. Mixter et al.
(46) depleted BALB/c mice of T-cell subsets by using
monoclonal antibodies to the 
and 
T-cell receptors and
reported that depletion of 
T cells decreased the oral 50%
lethal dose (LD50) of S. enteritidis 104-fold, whereas depletion of 
T cells decreased the
LD50 300-fold. The oral LD50
determinations using S. enteritidis involved infection for as long as 14 days. A protective role for 
T cells within a
week of i.p. inoculation of BALB/c mice with S. choleraesuis was reported by Matsumoto et al. (44), who
depleted mice by using a monoclonal antibody. We feel that most
emphasis should be placed on the use of genetically deficient mice and
that care should be taken in interpreting results obtained by depleting mice of cell populations with antibodies. Phagocytes such as
macrophages could become occupied clearing lysed host cells in tissues
and thereby be less available for inhibiting the salmonella infection.
The fact that mixing of Spv
+ and Spv

strains
in infection of mice does not result in either the functional
complementation
of the mutant strain or adverse consequences to the
wild-type
strain (
28,
30) suggests that the
spv
genes do not exert their
effect via induction or suppression of global
immune responses
in mice. Instead, the
spv genes probably
affect the host-pathogen
interaction at the individual cell level.
Consistent with this
hypothesis, we found that depletion of gamma
interferon and/or
tumor necrosis factor alpha from BALB/c mice did not
increase
the virulence of Spv
S. typhimurium relative to the Spv
+ strain
(
32). These cytokines therefore are not responsible
for
differential suppression of growth of Spv

salmonellae.
This result is consistent with a lack of effect
of T cells on the Spv
phenotype, since T cells would be expected
to produce gamma interferon
as well as tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Contrary to our hypothesized
lack of involvement of the
spv genes
in global regulation of
immune stimulation, Emoto et al. (
12)
reported data
suggesting that the virulence plasmid of
S. choleraesuis inhibited the elicitation of


T cells during
infection of mice.
However, Guilloteau et al. (
24) and we
(
45a) could not reproduce
this result in studies using
S. dublin and
S. typhimurium,
respectively.
Macrophages are essential for Spv-mediated virulence.
We
next examined the roles of phagocytes in selecting against the
growth of Spv
S. typhimurium. We
envisioned that either phagocytes were the permissive cell type for
Spv-mediated intracellular growth or these cells suppressed
Spv
salmonellae within nonphagocytic cells. The potential
roles of phagocytes in Spv-mediated virulence were examined by
depletion of phagocyte populations from mice. At necropsy,
cyclophosphamide treatment depleted circulating PMNs by more than 90%,
depleted spleens and livers of PMNs, but did not decrease tissue
macrophages. However, PMN depletion had no significant effect on the
differential recovery of Spv+ S. typhimurium compared with Spv
S. typhimurium from the spleens and livers of orally inoculated mice
within 5 days of inoculation (Fig. 3). Between two sets of experiments
performed months apart, we obtained different results on the effects of
granulocytopenia on recovery of salmonellae from spleens and livers of
orally inoculated mice. In the first set of experiments, there was no
effect of granulocytopenia on either Spv+ or
Spv
salmonellae; however, in the second set of
experiments, there was a significant increase in CFU recovered from
systemic sites for both strains. These results suggest that PMNs may
have a role in suppressing systemic infection by S. typhimurium but are not involved with or necessary for the
suppression of Spv
salmonellae. At the present, we cannot
explain the differences between the two sets of experiments. In
addition to PMNs, cyclophosphamide treatment would be expected to
affect other rapidly dividing cell populations, including elicited
monocytes that are generated from bone marrow precursors. Additionally,
it is possible that the intestinal mucosa of the mice reacted
differently between the two sets of experiments and that in the latter
set, salmonellae were able to invade into deeper tissues more easily.
We did not examine for effects on other cell populations, other
than demonstrating that macrophages were still present in spleens
and livers of cyclophosphamide-treated mice. Alternatively, the
time course of functional PMN depletion may have been different between
the experiments, and in those experiments in which recovery of
salmonellae was increased by granulocytopenia, the PMN
depletion may have occurred more rapidly than in those in which no
significant effects on systemic infection were observed. The results
from the first set of granulocytopenic mice (Fig. 3A) differ from,
while those from the second set (Fig. 3B) agree with, results of Conlan
(6) and Conlan and North (7), who used the same
monoclonal antibody that we used for immunocytochemistry, RB6-8C5, to
eliminate PMNs from mice. In these studies, which involved i.v.
inoculation of mice with salmonellae, significant increases in systemic
infection by S. typhimurium were noted in
PMN-depleted mice. As discussed below, results from others
examining effects on systemic salmonella infection with total body
irradiation of mice, which induced granulocytopenia (24,
33), were as mixed as our own data shown in Fig. 3. A more
definitive analysis of the role of PMNs in salmonella infection to
reconcile all of these observations will require more detailed analysis utilizing granulocytopenia induced by both
chemical (e.g., cyclophosphamide) and other (e.g.,
antigranulocyte monoclonal antibody and irradiation) treatments.
Many investigators have postulated that the virulence plasmid affects
the interaction of salmonellae within murine macrophages
because the
plasmid affects the bacterial recoveries from lymphoid
tissues.
However, only a single reported study achieved differential
infection of cultured macrophages by plasmid-containing and cured
salmonellae in vitro (
40). To examine the role of
macrophages,
we attempted to deplete mice of macrophages by using
numerous
procedures, including injection of silica and liposome-dCMdP;
however, histological analysis of tissues from treated and infected
mice consistently revealed large numbers of residual macrophages
(Fig.
5). It is important to note that the choice of macrophage-specific
antibody had a large bearing on the sensitivity of this analysis.
Initial use of rabbit anti-murine macrophage antiserum failed
to
sensitively identify residual macrophages since white pulp
macrophages
were not stained, even in normal mouse tissues (data
not shown).
However, when we obtained monoclonal antibody FA/11
(
22,
51), greater sensitivity and specificity were possible,
thereby
demonstrating the lack of effectiveness of the aforementioned
macrophage depletion procedures. It is believed that treatment
of mice
with silica may stimulate and occupy macrophages (
58,
63);
however, some have stated that this treatment kills macrophages
(
1). The more recently developed treatment with
liposome-dCMdP
has been documented to kill and clear macrophages from
various
mouse organs and tissues, depending on the route of
administration
(
59-61). Macrophages phagocytose the
liposomes, degrade the vesicles,
and thereby release the toxic dCMdP to
kill themselves. Injection
i.v. of liposome-dCMdP primarily clears the
spleen and liver of
different macrophage populations for at least 1 week (
60). However,
when we used this treatment with mice
orally inoculated with
S. typhimurium, numerous
macrophages were still detectable in livers
and spleens 4 to 5 days
postinoculation (Fig.
5). In retrospect,
this was not unexpected
since liposome-dCMdP treatment does not
clear circulating monocytes or
prevent inflammatory responses
by monocytic cells (
55). With
all of the aforementioned treatments
to clear mice of macrophages, the
splenic and hepatic recoveries
of both Spv
+ and
Spv
S. typhimurium were increased as much
as 100-fold; however, the
100-fold difference in recoveries between
the Spv
+ and Spv

strains remained. Clearly,
macrophages were important for suppressing
systemic infection by both
Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium
after oral inoculation; however, their role in
specifically suppressing
Spv

salmonellae relative to Spv
+ salmonellae
was unclear. The residual macrophages in infected
tissues were a
serious concern. Since we reasoned that the macrophages
observed during
the course of the salmonella infection were recruited
from the bone
marrow, we performed experiments in which the bone
marrow was depleted
of precursor cells by cyclophosphamide followed
by depletion of
peripheral macrophages with liposome-dCMdP. This
double treatment often
produced spleens and livers devoid of intact
macrophages (Fig.
6).
There was still considerable material which
stained with
macrophage-specific anti-CD68 monoclonal antibody
FA/11; however, this
would be expected since there would be no
phagocytic cells to clear
lysed macrophages. Most important, when
depletion of macrophages was
complete or nearly so, Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium strains were equally virulent in terms
of splenic
and hepatic infection after oral inoculation. In fact, in
phagocyte-depleted
mice infected with single salmonella strains,
Spv

salmonellae produced the highest levels of infection
(Fig.
7A).
In mixed strain inoculations of
cyclophosphamide-liposome-dCMdP-treated
mice, there was not a
significant difference between Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium for splenic and hepatic infection (Fig.
7B).
These results argue that macrophages, as opposed to PMNs, are required
for the Spv phenotype of increased intracellular growth
rate in
systemic infection of mice. Macrophages could either act
as the primary
host cell in which Spv-mediated replication occurs
or suppress the
Spv

salmonellae in some other host cell. The fact that
the cyclophosphamide-plus-liposome-dCMdP-treated
mice were also
depleted of PMNs is of note. However, the lack
of effect on the Spv
phenotype by quantitatively depleting mice
of tissue as well as
circulating PMNs with cyclophosphamide treatment
strongly argues that
the simultaneous depletion of PMNs did not
significantly contribute to
the lack of Spv phenotype seen on
the double treatment of mice. We
cannot completely disprove this
possibility. As noted above, we
speculate that the continued Spv
phenotype in mice treated only with
liposome-dCMdP could be due
to the elicitation of monocytes and
macrophages from the bone
marrow after the resident macrophages were
cleared by the liposome-dCMdP
treatment. If this is true, it would
suggest that inflammatory,
elicited macrophages are
Spv

-suppressive cells. Since mice treated only with
cyclophosphamide
should contain only resident macrophages with no PMNs
and elicited
macrophages, the continued difference in systemic
infection between
Spv
+ and Spv

salmonellae
argues that resident macrophages are capable of differentially
suppressing Spv

salmonellae as well as elicited
macrophages. Two other groups
have performed studies on phagocytes
which are relevant to our
study. Heffernan et al. (
33)
examined i.p. infection of irradiated
BALB/c mice with
virulence plasmid-cured
S. dublin. During the
first
week after irradiation and infection, when resident macrophages
would
be present in tissues but there would be no elicited monocytes,
hepatic
infection with virulence plasmid-cured
S. dublin was
unchanged
compared with normal mice. After the resident macrophages
were
expected to have been depleted from tissues, the plasmid-cured
strain began to proliferate and kill the mice. Since plasmid-containing
S. dublin was not examined in irradiated mice, a more
complete
analysis with respect to the Spv phenotype is not possible
from
that study. The equivalent infection by plasmid-cured
S. dublin during the first week of infection argues
that radiosensitive
host cells such as PMNs are dispensable for
suppressing salmonellae,
in agreement with our data in Fig.
3A.
Guilloteau et al. (
24)
similarly infected irradiated BALB/c
mice i.p. with virulence
plasmid-containing and cured
S. dublin but obtained results very
different from those of Heffernan
et al. (
33). During the first
week after irradiation and
infection, both plasmid-containing
and cured
S. dublin
strains were significantly increased for splenic
and hepatic infection,
but the differences between the recoveries
of the two salmonella
strains were maintained in the irradiated
mice. These results argue
that radiosensitive host cells such
as PMNs suppress
salmonella infection and that radioresistant
cells such as macrophages
are capable of differentially suppressing
Spv

salmonellae
relative to Spv
+ salmonellae. This is consistent with our
data in Fig.
3B. Between
the studies by Heffernan et al.
(
33), Guilloteau et al. (
24),
and us, the
complexities of oral versus i.p. inoculation of
S. typhimurium versus
S. dublin, and the different
means of depleting
phagocytes, make comparison of the data difficult.
However, all
of the data are consistent with macrophages being
suppressors
of salmonella infection in general and mediators of the
differential
suppression of Spv

salmonellae resulting in
the Spv phenotype.
Another interpretation to the equalized infectivities of
Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium
in cyclophosphamide plus liposome-dCMdP-treated
mice in our studies is
that all of the bacteria were extracellular
at the systemic sites. We
did not examine this possibility. There
would have been no phagocytes
for uptake of the bacteria, and
our results reported here and for
studies using immunofluorescence
(
31) demonstrate that
invasion of nonphagocytes is not important
during infection beyond the
intestines. Most recently, Richter-Dahlfors
et al. (
53) used
confocal microscopy to demonstrate that most
salmonellae reside within
macrophages in livers of i.v.-inoculated
mice; hepatocytes were not
significantly infected. The extracellular
infection in
phagocyte-depleted mice is reminiscent of our previous
study in which
Spv
+ and Spv
S. typhimurium
strains were maintained in an extracellular environment
within a porous
i.p. chamber implant and demonstrated equivalent
growth yields
(
30). In any case, it is clear that the presence
of
macrophages is critical for the Spv phenotype of increased
intracellular replication to occur.
Two technical points are worth emphasizing with regard to depletion of
macrophages since these are becoming highly used procedures.
First, the
procedures previously used (i.e., silica and liposome-dCMdP)
were not
sufficient in themselves to quantitatively deplete mice
of macrophages
in the face of systemic salmonella infection. Second,
the method used
for analysis of residual macrophages in tissues
is critical. When we
used an antimacrophage serum, we failed to
detect white pulp
macrophages. However, the use of anti-CD68 monoclonal
antibody FA/11
gave a greatly different result. Many investigators
have used a variety
of monoclonal antibodies, including F4/80,
MAC-1, MOMA-1 and MOMA-2,
and others, to detect macrophages (
18,
22,
38). It is
important to note that these antibodies recognize
subpopulations of
macrophages depending on their tissue localization
or stage of
activation/differentiation. It is our opinion that
FA/11 is the best
pan-macrophage marker available.
Invasion of nonphagocytes is not involved with Spv-mediated
virulence and systemic infection beyond the intestines.
Since we
could not deplete mice of nonphagocytic cells, as we did for phagocytes
and lymphocytes, we denied the bacteria access to the intracellular
location of nonphagocytes with a mutation known to inhibit invasion,
invA::aphT (21).
invA is the 5' gene of the invABC operon located
in pathogenicity island I at centisome 63 on the S. typhimurium chromosome (19). A polar mutation in invA, which abolished the expression of downstream
inv genes, severely impeded the invasive phenotype of
virulent strains of S. typhimurium and caused a
significant increase in the LD50 when administered orally
to BALB/c mice (20). Our intended use of an invA
mutation required that InvA
salmonellae not invade any
nonphagocytes in vivo and that InvA
salmonellae could
still be phagocytosed by phagocytes. Inv
S. typhimurium is unable to invade hepatocytes
in vitro (19a). We (data not shown) and others
(4, 47) have confirmed that Inv
salmonellae
are phagocytosed by macrophages in vitro in nearly normal levels. We
therefore assume that InvA
S. typhimurium
used in our studies have access to the intracellular environment of
murine macrophages in vivo after s.c. inoculation. In fact, we have
confirmed this hypothesis by using immunofluorescence analysis of
tissues from infected mice (31).
When
S. typhimurium was denied access to the
intracellular environment of nonphagocytic cells after s.c.
inoculation, there
was very little effect on splenic or hepatic
infection by Spv
+ salmonellae, and there was only a slight
effect on Spv

salmonellae. The former result argues that
salmonellae probably
do not infect nonphagocytes during infection after
s.c. inoculation
or that if invasion of nonphagocytes does occur, it is
without
significance for systemic infection. Our results differ with
those
of Conlan and North (
8), who investigated the location
of
S. typhimurium and other intracellular pathogens
in the livers of
i.v.-inoculated mice. Based on microscopic analysis of
infected
mouse tissues, they reported that salmonellae replicated
within
hepatocytes, and that PMNs acted to prevent this replication.
The major difference between our study and that of Conlan and
North
(
8) is the route of inoculation. We believe that i.v.
injection of broth-grown salmonellae into mice enables an artifactual
infection of nonphagocytic cells. However, it is clear from our
results
that salmonellae do not have to invade nonphagocytes to
exert the
Spv phenotype of increased intracellular replication.
This finding
argues that the relevant host cell for Spv-mediated
intracellular
growth is a phagocyte, and the results discussed
above indicate that
this phagocyte is a macrophage.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by NIH grant AI28421, USDA grant 9502044, and American Heart Association-Florida Affiliate grants 89GIA81 and
92GIA868 to P.A.G., who is an American Heart Association Established
Investigator with funds provided in part by the American Heart
Association-Florida Affiliate.
We thank Jorge E. Galán for providing S. typhimurium SB136 with the
invA::aphT mutation and for his advice
on these studies. We are extremely grateful to Siamon Gordon for
providing monoclonal antibody FA/11, which has been indispensable to
this work. We thank Steven Roberts and Vince A. Chiodo for expert
technical assistance. We thank Andreas Baumler and Michael
Clare-Salzler for review of the manuscript. We thank the reviewers of
the original study and manuscript, whose comments resulted in our
development of the improved techniques described in this paper and
greatly changed the conclusions of the study.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL 32610-0266. Phone: (352) 392-0050. Fax: (352)
392-3133. E-mail: gulig{at}college.med.ufl.edu.
Editor: P. J. Sansonetti
 |
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