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Infection and Immunity, September 2000, p. 5354-5363, Vol. 68, No. 9
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae Elicits Membrane
Ruffling and Cytoskeletal Rearrangements upon Infection of Primary
Human Endocervical and Ectocervical Cells
Jennifer L.
Edwards,1
Jian Q.
Shao,1
Kevin A.
Ault,2 and
Michael A.
Apicella1,*
Departments of
Microbiology1 and Obstetrics and
Gynecology,2 The University of Iowa, Iowa City,
Iowa 52242
Received 23 February 2000/Returned for modification 27 April
2000/Accepted 15 May 2000
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ABSTRACT |
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a strict human pathogen that
is, primarily, transmitted by close sexual contact with an infected individual. Gonococcal infection of the male urogenital tract has been
well studied in experimental human models and in urethral cell culture
systems. Recent studies, using tissue culture cell systems, have
suggested a role for the cervical epithelium in gonococcal infection of
females; however, the nature of gonococcal infection of the normal
uterine cervix remains controversial. To address this enigma, we have
developed two primary human cervical epithelial cell systems from
surgical biopsies. Gonococcal infection studies and electron microscopy
show that N. gonorrhoeae is capable of infecting and
invading both the endo- and the ectocervix. Invasion was found to occur
primarily in an actin-dependent manner, but it does not appear to
require de novo protein synthesis by either the bacterium or the host
cervical cell. Membrane ruffles appear to be induced in response to
gonococci. Consistent with membrane ruffling, gonococci were found
residing within macropinosomes, and a concentrated accumulation of
actin-associated proteins was observed to occur in response to
gonococcal infection. Electron microscopy of clinically derived
cervical biopsies show that lamellipodia formation and cytoskeletal
changes, suggestive of membrane ruffles, also occur in the cervical
epithelium of women with naturally acquired gonococcal cervicitis.
These studies demonstrate the ability of N. gonorrhoeae to
infect and invade both the endo- and the ectocervix of the normal
uterine cervix. Gonococcal induced ruffling is a novel finding and may
be unique to the cervical epithelium.
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INTRODUCTION |
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
remains one of the leading causes of sexually transmitted disease.
Gonorrhea persists in the general population, in part, because of the
presence of asymptomatic carriers who unknowingly transmit gonococci to
another individual via close sexual contact. The lower-genital-tract,
asymptomatic, carriage rate of N. gonorrhoeae in females has
been estimated to be between 25 and 80% of infected individuals
(24). Asymptomatic infection of the lower female genital
tract can, eventually, become acute. This can result in an ascending
infection of the uterus and fallopian tubes, thereby causing an acute
pelvic inflammatory disease that, if left untreated, can lead to
infertility or ectopic pregnancies (21, 33).
Our laboratory previously reported the use of primary urethral tissue
culture systems to study gonococcal infection as it pertains to the
male urethra (23). Christodoulides et al. (3) recently described the use of primary human endometrial cells to study
gonococcus-host interactions as they pertain to the female endometrium.
Primary cell culture systems confer several advantages over the use of
immortalized and malignant tissue culture cell lines in that
gonococcal-host interactions can be simulated in vitro in an
environment that closely mimics that environment encountered by the
bacterium in vivo. Cellular immortalization and continued laboratory
passage of cell lines can alter their protein expression patterns
(8, 16, 25, 27, 29, 30, 31, 35, 47, 49, 51, 52, 54).
Therefore, it is not clear if cell lines are truly representative of
the in vivo cellular environment encountered by the gonococcus within
the female genital tract.
During the 1940s, Harkness provided the framework for our current
understanding of gonococcal pathogenesis as it pertains to the female
genital tract. Harkness concluded, through clinical observations and
light microscopic studies of tissue derived from patients naturally
infected with gonococci, that N. gonorrhoeae was incapable
of invading the stratified squamous epithelium of the ectocervix
(22). He also concluded that progressive infection occurred
as the result of colonization of the endocervical columnar epithelium
with subsequent transmigration through the intercellular junctions to
the subepithelial tissues or lymphatic vessels (22). Evans
(11) performed electron microscopic examination of biopsies derived from the cervical squamocolumnar junction of patients infected
with N. gonorrhoeae. These studies implied that N. gonorrhoeae could infect the stratified squamous epithelium.
Although these studies suggested a role for the cervical epithelium in
female gonococcal infection, the gonococcal pathogenesis of the
cervical epithelium remains unclear. In order to elucidate the
mechanism(s) associated with gonococcal infection of the cervical
epithelium, we have developed two primary cell culture systems derived
from ectocervical and endocervical tissues. These studies demonstrate the ability of N. gonorrhoeae to invade both the endo- and
the ectocervical epithelium by several mechanisms. Our studies indicate that the cervical epithelium may serve as a primary site of gonococcal infection in females.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacteria.
N. gonorrhoeae strains 1291, 1291-green
(1291 expressing green fluorescent protein and to be described
elsewhere; the plasmid pLES98 was a gift from V. Clark), FA1090, MS11-A
(a gift from M. So), and MS11mkC were used in these
infection studies. N. gonorrhoeae strains 1291, FA1090,
MS11-A, and MS11mkC are clinically isolated gonococci.
N. gonorrhoeae FA1090 is a serum-resistant, genital isolate
from a patient with disseminated gonococcal infection, while N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291 is a urethral isolate from a male patient
with gonococcal urethritis. MS11mkC is a hyperinfectious gonococcal variant that was isolated from a male patient who was experimentally infected with MS11mkA. These strains are
P+ and Opa+. Strains 1291, 1291-green, MS11-A,
and MS11mkC contain the pathogenicity island recently
described by Dillard (7).
Development of primary cervical cell culture systems.
Surgical biopsies were obtained from 30 premenopausal women undergoing
hysterectomy at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics (Iowa
City, Iowa). Endocervical (proximal to the cervical os) and
ectocervical (distal to the cervical os) tissue biopsies were obtained
in 4- to 6-mm2 sections and further subdivided into 2- to
3-mm2 sections. Sectioned tissues were rinsed twice for 10 min in Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) supplemented with 1%
amphotericin B (Fungizone; Irvine Scientific, Santa Ana, Calif.) and
1% penicillin (100 U/ml)-streptomycin (1 mg/ml). The tissue was placed
with the epithelium downward on polystyrene, 35-mm tissue culture
dishes (Falcon; Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, N.J.). Tissue
explants were incubated in filtered airway medium (1 part Dulbecco
modified Eagle medium, 1 part Ham's F-12, 5% fetal calf serum (FCS),
1% nonessential amino acids (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Mo.), 1%
penicillin-streptomycin, and insulin (10 µg/ml). After 48 h,
airway medium was replaced with keratinocyte growth medium 2 (KGM-2)
Bullet Kit (Clonetics, San Diego, Calif.). KGM-2 was replaced every 2 to 3 days until near confluence was obtained (1 to 2 weeks), at which
time the cells were passaged as outlined below. Although variability
exists among tissue samples, this process allows for an average of
three passages of cell growth to fresh tissue culture dishes from a single tissue explant prior to fibroblast development, at which time
tissue explants were discarded.
Cell passage.
At near-confluent growth the cells were
passaged by a 5-min, 37°C incubation in HBSS-0.25% trypsin-0.1%
EDTA. Cell suspensions were collected and centrifuged at 5,000 rpm for
5 min. The resulting cell pellet was rinsed in HBSS, resuspended in
KGM-2, and used to seed glass, eight-well chamber slides (Nalge Nunc
International, Naperville, Ill.) or human, placental collagen-coated,
12-mm glass coverslips previously placed in 24-well tissue culture
dishes (Falcon). Cells were seeded to transwell membrane systems
(Biocoat Cell Environments; Becton Dickinson, Bedford, Mass.) to allow for polarized cell growth. Primary cervical cells were maintained in
KGM-2 until near confluence was again obtained, at which time they were
infected with N. gonorrhoeae as outlined below. Where applicable, cellular polarity was determined as an electrical resistance greater than 2 K
/cm2 as measured across the
cell monolayer. Infected and uninfected (i.e., control) cervical
cell-harboring membranes (from transwell systems) were subsequently
subdivided into equal sections. Sections to be used for scanning
electron microscopy (SEM) were processed while attached to the well
apparatus so that the cellular orientation would be maintained.
Remaining sections were removed from the well structure and
subsequently processed independently for either confocal, transmission
electron, or bright-field light microscopy.
Infection of the primary cells.
N. gonorrhoeae cells
allowed to grow overnight (37°C, 5% CO2) on
GC-IsoVitaleX agar plates were harvested using a sterile swab and
resuspended in sterile saline. Culture density was determined spectrophotometrically, where an optical density of 1 at 600 nm was
equivalent to 109 bacteria ml
1 of cell
culture. Bacterial cells were then diluted to a concentration of
107 bacteria ml
1 in KGM-2 lacking gentamicin
and used to infect 105 primary cervical cells (maintained
as outlined above). Gonococcal infection was allowed to progress for
variable time periods, after which the infection was stopped by the
removal of the infection medium, rinsing infected cervical cells with
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and cell fixation. Samples to be used
in laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) or
differential-interference contrast (DIC) analyses were immunolabeled
directly following fixation. SEM, transmission electron microscopy
(TEM), and bright-field light microscopy (BFLM) samples were further
processed by graded ethanol dehydration and resin (TEM) or paraffin
(BFLM) embedment. Embedded samples were sectioned and immunolabeled as
noted. Where indicated, the infection medium was harvested from the
cervical cell monolayer and reused to infect fresh, uninfected cell
cultures, which were subsequently processed for SEM analysis.
Invasion assays in the presence of inhibitors of cytoskeletal
motility and protein synthesis.
Cervical cells were passed to
12-mm collagen-coated coverslips as outlined above. Prior to infection
with N. gonorrhoeae 1291 wild-type cells, primary cell
cultures were left untreated, or they were preincubated with 300 nM
wortmannin (Sigma), 1 µM cytochalasin D (Sigma), or 400 mM EGTA
(Amresco, Solon, Ohio) for 2 h, 30 min, or 30 min, respectively,
or else they were pretreated with 100 µg of nocodazole
(Calbiochem-Novabiochem Corp., La Jolla, Calif.) per ml for 1 h at
4°C, followed by a 30-min incubation at 37°C. The requirement for
de novo protein synthesis, either by the bacteria or by the primary
cervical cells, was tested by pretreatment (30 min, 37°C) of the
bacterial cultures or cervical cell monolayers with 4 µg of
chloramphenicol (Sigma) per ml or 25 µM cycloheximide (Calbiochem-Novabiochem Corp.), respectively. All chemical reagents used were maintained in the infection medium throughout the course of
the infection. Trypan blue exclusion revealed no significant toxicity
to the primary cervical cells at the indicated concentrations for each
of the chemical reagents used. Infection was allowed to progress at
37°C and 5% CO2 for 1.5 h, after which the medium was removed, and the cells were rinsed with PBS and then incubated with
KGM-2 containing 100 µg of gentamicin per ml to kill extracellular bacteria. Postincubation the cervical cells were lysed with 0.5% saponin to release invasive bacteria. The percent invasion was determined as a function of the original inoculum and the number of
colonies formed with subsequent plating of the cellular lysate. Kruskal-Wallis analysis of variance was used to determine the statistical significance of the calculated percent invasion for each of
the cytoskeletal motility inhibitors used with respect to the
untreated, infected cell cultures.
Microscopy.
Samples were processed for LSCM, SEM, or TEM as
previously described (28). Samples to be analyzed by BFLM
were paraffin embedded using an automated tissue processor (RMC 1530 Paraffin Tissue Processor; RMC, Tucson, Ariz.), cut into thick (1-µm)
sections, and mounted onto glass microscope slides. Immunolabeling of
infected and uninfected cervical cells for TEM analysis was performed
using the monoclonal antibody 2C3, which specifically recognizes the H.8 gonococcal surface protein, or the antigonococcal porin monoclonal antibody, 3H1 (a gift from M. Blake), in conjunction with a polyclonal antibody to filamentous (F) actin. Secondary labeling proceeded with
the use of 30- and 10-nm colloidal gold-beaded antibody conjugates (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.) to the bacterium- and
actin-specific antibodies, respectively. B. A. Evans generously provided clinical biopsies used in TEM analysis. The samples were viewed with an H-7000 Hitachi Transmission Electron Microscope (Hitachi
Corp., Mountain View, Calif.).
Primary antibodies used for LSCM or DIC microscopy were as follows:
anti-cytokeratin 8.12 (Sigma), -cytokeratin 4 (Sigma), -talin (Sigma),
-vinculin (Sigma), -
-actinin (Sigma), -myosin (Sigma), -ezrin (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, Calif.), -CD66 (Dako, Carpinteria,
Calif.), and -CD46 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and 2C3. Immunolabeling
of cervical cell monolayers with anti-cytokeratin, -talin, -vinculin,
-myosin, -ezrin, and -
-actinin occurred subsequent to a 15-min
incubation in 0.2% Triton X-100 to allow cervical cells to become
permeable. Where indicated, counterstaining occurred at room
temperature for 6 min. The counterstains used were specific for nucleic
acids and consisted of YOYO-1 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) or
ethidium bromide. Samples were viewed using the Bio-Rad MRC-1024 or the
Zeiss 510 Laser Scanning Confocal viewing systems.
Cervical tissue biopsies (obtained as outlined above) to be used for
LSCM cytokeratin analysis were processed (within 1 to
2 h of
obtaining the tissue specimen) for cyrosectioning by a
30-min
incubation in 1% paraformaldehyde, followed by infiltration
with 30%
sucrose prior to embedment in Tissue-Tek O.C.T. compound
(Sakura
Finetek USA, Inc., Torrance, Calif.) and sectioning (6
to 8 nm). Frozen
sections were allowed to stand at room temperature
for 1 h prior
to immunolabeling with the indicated anti-cytokeratin
antibody. A
fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated secondary
antibody was
applied, and tissues were subsequently counterstained
with ethidium
bromide (0.5 ng/ml, 6
min).
Cervical cells passaged to 12-mm coverslips were used to assay for
gonococcus-induced macropinocytosis. Cervical cell monolayers
were
infected with 1291-green for variable time periods in the
presence of 1 mg of tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate (TRITC)-dextran
(
Mr, 150,000) per ml. Infection was stopped by
the removal of
the infection medium. Infected monolayers were
extensively washed
prior to fixation with 2% paraformaldehyde.
Coverslips were mounted
onto glass microscope slides and viewed using
the Bio-Rad MRC-1024
Laser Scanning Confocal viewing
system.
Slides prepared for BFLM were hematoxylin-eosin stained using a
standard protocol and then viewed with a Leitz Diaplan microscope
with
an Optronics Engineering viewing system. SEM analysis was
performed
using an H-4000 Hitachi Scanning Electron Microscope
(Hitachi).
All of the microscopes used for these studies are located at the
University of Iowa Central Microscopy Research Facility (Iowa
City,
Iowa).
 |
RESULTS |
Characterization of primary human endocervical epithelial
cells.
Primary cervical epithelial cells were allowed to grow as
described above. Epithelial cells could be seen extending from the cervical explants within 2 to 3 days from the start of the cultures. Growth radiated from the tissue foci in a contiguous monolayer, and
confluence was observed within 10 to 14 days. Transfer of endocervix-derived cells to transwell membrane systems resulted in
polarized cell growth, as determined by an electrical resistance greater than 2 K
/cm2 as measured across the cell monolayer.
The cytokeratin expression pattern of the normal human uterine cervix
has been well characterized. LSCM was used to determine
the cytokeratin
expression pattern of the primary cervical cell
monolayers with respect
to the tissue from which they were derived.
Sectioned tissue biopsies
(obtained from the endo- and ectocervix)
and the cervix-derived cell
monolayers were immunohistochemically
examined with antibodies to
cytokeratins 4, 13, 15, and 16. The
results of these studies can be
seen in Fig.
1. Immunolabeling
of ectocervical tissue sections revealed
that expression of cytokeratin
4 was modest at the intermediate
epithelial layers and intense
at the superficial ectocervical
epithelium. Labeling with anti-cytokeratin
8.12, which specifically
recognizes cytokeratins 13, 15, and 16,
occurred throughout the
thickness of the ectocervical tissue with
the exception of the
suprabasal layer in which label was not detected.
Similar results were
obtained for the ectocervix-derived cell
monolayers, which labeled
positively for cytokeratins 4, 13, 15,
and 16. In contrast, a small
subpopulation of endocervical cells
were visible when the sectioned
tissue biopsy was immunolabeled
with the anti-cytokeratin 4 antibody,
but vivid labeling occurred
with the use of anti-cytokeratin 8.12. Immunolabeling of the endocervix-derived
cell monolayers yielded
consistent results in that the endocervix-derived
cells labeled poorly
with the anti-cytokeratin 4 antibody and
intensely with
anti-cytokeratin 8.12. The specific cytokeratin
staining character of
the endo- and ectocervical tissue was, therefore,
retained in the
primary cell monolayers (Fig.
1).

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FIG. 1.
LSCM demonstrates that the characteristic
cytokeratin-staining pattern of the tissue biopsies has been retained
in the respective primary cervical epithelial cell cultures. Sectioned
tissue biopsies (left column, ×20 magnification) and primary cervical
epithelial cell monolayers (right column, oil immersion, ×60
magnification) were incubated with an FITC-conjugated antibody to the
noted specific cytokeratin. Ethidium bromide was used to counterstain
the tissue sections. (A) As can be seen, endocervical cells were
labeled intensely with antibody 8.12, which is specific for type I
cytokeratins 13, 15, and 16. (C) The labeling of endocervical cells
with an antibody specific for type II cytokeratin 4 was considerably
less intense, and it was not uniformly distributed. Ectocervical cells
were labeled positive with an antibody specific for cytokeratins 13, 15, and 16 (B) and cytokeratin 4 (D).
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LSCM analysis of sectioned tissue biopsies and cervix-derived cell
monolayers demonstrated the expression of CD66 and CD46
in both the
endo- and the ectocervix (data not
shown).
N. gonorrhoeae infection of primary cervical epithelial
cells.
SEM analysis of N. gonorrhoeae 1291-, MS11-A-,
MS11mkC-, and FA1090-infected polarized and nonpolarized
cells showed that bacteria could adhere to both types of primary
cervical cells. Electron micrographs representative of data obtained
are shown in Fig. 2
and 3.
Bacteria were found distributed across the monolayer surface. The
interaction of the bacteria with the cervical cell surface appeared to
occur by multiple mechanisms. At approximately 10 min postinfection,
gonococci could be found associated with the cervical cell membrane
both dependent (Fig. 2A) and independent (Fig. 2B) of microvilli. Small
tufts of microvilli were associated with bacteria on some cervical
cells. Gonococci associated with the cervical cells independent of
microvilli appeared to be entering the cervical cell by an endocytic
process. At approximately 20 and 30 min postinfection, filopodia and
lamellipodia formation was readily observed (Fig. 2C) and bacteria
appeared to be undergoing internalization (Fig. 2D). Additionally, a
visible smoothing of the cervical cell membrane was evident around the
periphery of some sites of bacterial infection (Fig. 2E). By 60 min
postinfection, the filopodia and lamellipodia became less prominent.
Large membrane ruffles (Fig. 2F and G) became prominent at about 90 min
postinfection of cervical cells. Membrane ruffles were abutting and
contiguous with gonococci. Generally, ruffles could be readily
identified by a smoothing of the cervical cell membrane that encircled
the ruffle (Fig. 2H). At 3 h post-gonococcal infection, membrane
ruffles and bacteria associated with microvilli were still evident.
Perturbations of the cell membrane that were reminiscent of ruffles
were also evident. The delay observed in the onset of ruffling
suggested that time was required either by the gonococcus or by the
cervical cell to produce and/or release a factor(s) that facilitated
the ruffling process. To test this idea, we performed infection studies in which media and bacteria from endo- and ectocervical infections were
collected at various time points and reused to infect uninfected cervical cell monolayers. We found that ruffling could be induced to
occur at approximately 30 min post-gonococcal infection in both primary
cell systems when uninfected cervical cells were infected with a primed
infection inoculum derived from 1-h (ectocervical) (Fig. 2G) and 90-min
(endocervical) infections.

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FIG. 2.
SEM analysis shows the predominant changes that
occur in the cervical cell membrane over the course of a 3-h infection
as the result of cervical-cell-gonococcus interactions. At early
phases of infection (0 to 60 min) N. gonorrhoeae could be
found on the surface of endocervical cells either associated with
microvilli (A) or undergoing an endocytic process (B). Bacteria appear
to be entering the cell in a phagosome; however, rudimentary
lamellipodia or microvilli could also account for the apparent membrane
perturbations. As the infection process continued, microvilli appeared
to acquire directionality. (C) Filopodia and/or lamellipodia became
evident after 30 min postinfection. (D) Bacteria appeared to be in the
process of internalization. (E) Loss of microvilli with a smoothing of
the cervical cell membrane around the periphery of some sites of
gonococcal infection also became evident at approximately 30 min
postinfection. Membrane ruffles (F, endocervical; G, ectocervical)
appeared at 60 min, and they became prevalent at 90 min postinfection.
(G) Ruffles could be induced to occur at approximately 30 min
postinfection with use of a primed infection inoculum (see Materials
and Methods). (H) A visible smoothing of the cervical cell membrane
encircling membrane ruffles can be seen. By 3 h postinfection
large ruffles could readily be observed.
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FIG. 3.
BFLM and immuno-TEM studies demonstrate ruffling of the
endocervical surface and invasion of the primary endocervical
epithelial cells at 90 min and 3 h postinfection. For TEM
analysis, bacteria were labeled with an antibody specific to the
gonococcal surface protein, H.8; cervical cells were labeled with a
polyclonal antibody to actin. Then, 30- and 10-nm gold bead-antibody
conjugates were used to label the bacterium- and host-specific primary
antibodies, respectively. (A) Membrane protrusions can be seen that are
labeled with actin and that are encompassing gonococci at 90 min after
the onset of infection. (B) Bacteria can also be seen entering the
endocervical cell as individual entities in actin-lined, spacious
vacuoles. (C and D) Large membrane ruffles can be seen associating with
gonococci at 3 h postinfection. For BFLM (panel D), thick (1-µm)
paraffin sections of endocervical cells were stained with hematoxylin
and eosin. Bacteria appear purple; the cervical cell membrane appears
pink. Arrows denote bacteria. Bar, 2 µm.
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BFLM and TEM analysis of polarized endocervical cells infected with
N. gonorrhoeae confirmed the observation made by SEM
analysis
(Fig.
3). Actin-filled membrane protrusions were readily
observed
encompassing gonococci (Fig.
3A) at 90 min and 3 h
postinfection.
Clusters of bacteria were found breaching the
superficial cervical
epithelial layer; however, bacteria entered the
cervical cells
as single entities, with each bacterium being surrounded
by its
own actin-lined vacuole (Fig.
3B). Consistent with SEM analysis,
gonococcus-associated membrane ruffles were readily observed at
3 h postinfection by both high (TEM, Fig.
3C)- and low (BFLM,
Fig.
3D)-powered magnification with microscopy. TEM analysis revealed
that,
within the host cell cytoplasm, bacterium-containing vacuoles
appeared
to coalesce prior to bacterial exocytosis to the subepithelial
space.
TEM analysis of Epon-embedded, clinically derived cervical
biopsies
from women naturally infected with gonococci revealed
similar processes
(Fig.
4). Large membrane protrusions
(indicative
of ruffles) (Fig.
4) and smaller, less-organized membrane
structures
(Fig.
4A) were readily observed. Gonococci were again
observed
to enter the cervical cells as single entities in spacious
vacuoles
(data not shown).

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FIG. 4.
TEM studies of cervical biopsies from women with
gonococcal cervicitis. The panels show evidence that extensive
cytoskeletal rearrangements and membrane changes, which are suggestive
of ruffling, occur during naturally acquired gonococcal infection. The
large arrows highlight structures resembling lamellipodia. Extensive
cytoskeletal rearrangement is also visible in proximity to the bacteria
in panel A and may be suggestive of filopodia or microvilli extensions
that are similar to those seen in Fig. 3.
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Primary cell monolayers infected with gonococci in the presence of a
TRITC-conjugated dextran, which would be excluded by
nonmacropinocytic
cellular events, demonstrated that, upon invasion,
gonococci reside
within macropinosomes (data not
shown).
LSCM analysis of infection studies performed using polarized
endocervical cells and ectocervical cell monolayers suggested
colocalization of CD66 and CD46 with gonococci. With extended
infection
(i.e., 6 h) clustering of CD46 molecules, which was
not observed
to occur at earlier time points in the infection,
became prevalent in
response to gonococci (data not
shown).
Cytoskeletal changes occur in cervical cells with gonococcal
infection.
Immunolabeling of N. gonorrhoeae-infected
primary cells with antibody conjugates to actin-associated proteins
confirmed that changes of the cervical cell cytoskeletal network were
occurring (Fig. 5). Antibodies to talin,
vinculin, ezrin, myosin, and
-actinin demonstrated a focused
accumulation of these proteins, in membrane projections, at 10 min
postinfection with gonococci. Membrane projections were also observed
to colocalize with gonococci. This effect was most pronounced with the
use of vinculin (Fig. 5) and ezrin; however, a modest accumulation of
talin and
-actinin was also observed to occur. Immunolabeled
projections were not observed upon analysis of uninfected cervical
cells.

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FIG. 5.
DIC and LSCM analysis demonstrates colocalization of
N. gonorrhoeae 1291-green with a concentrated accumulation
of the actin-associated protein, vinculin. In panel A, vinculin has
been immunolabeled with a TRITC-conjugated antibody and is visible as a
red fluorescence (A); in panel B, bacteria have been transformed with
GFP and are visible as a green fluorescence. (C) In a merged image of
panels A and B, arrows denote colocalization of bacteria (green) with
vinculin (red), which is visualized as a yellow-orange because of the
combined signal of the individual fluorophores. (D) Merged LSCM and DIC
image (of the ectocervical cells). Similar results were seen with
endocervical cells and for the actin-associated proteins ezrin and
myosin, but the focal accumulation of -actinin and talin was less
pronounced. No accumulation of actin-associated proteins was observed
in uninfected (control) cervical epithelial cells. Magnification,
×20.
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Gonococcal invasion of cervical cells occurs primarily in an
actin-dependent manner and does not require de novo protein
synthesis.
Standard gentamicin resistance assays performed with
endo- and ectocervix-derived cells confirmed results obtained by BFLM and TEM analysis and the invasive nature of gonococci with respect to
both the endo- and the ectocervix. Gonococci were found to invade
endocervix-derived cells at a proportion of 1.57% (Table 1). A slightly higher percentage (2.70%)
was observed to occur with gonococcal invasion of the
ectocervix-derived cells (Table 1). The inclusion of wortmannin,
cytochalasin D, and EGTA in the invasion assay prohibited bacterial
entry into both cell types (Table 1). Pretreatment of primary cervical
cell monolayers with the microtubule-specific depolymerizing agent
nocodazole resulted in an approximate 67% decrease in gonococcal
invasion (Table 1). Chloramphenicol and cycloheximide, which inhibit
gonococcal and eukaryotic cell protein synthesis, respectively, did not
inhibit gonococcal invasion of the primary cervical cell monolayers
(Table 1).
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DISCUSSION |
We have described primary human ecto- and endocervical epithelial
cell models whose cytokeratin, CD66, and CD46 profiles are identical to
the tissue from which they were derived. Confocal and electron
microscopic analysis of primary, human, cervical cells infected with
N. gonorrhoeae 1291, FA1090, and MS11 have demonstrated the
ability of gonococci to adhere to and to induce cytoskeletal changes
within both of these cell systems. Bacteria were found to associate
with the primary cervical cells by more than one mechanism, as
evidenced by microvillus-dependent and -independent modes of bacterial
attachment. Membrane perturbations resulted in the formation of
membrane ruffles, which became prominent by 90 min postinfection and
after which ruffles remained readily observable. Ruffling could be
induced to occur at 30 min post-gonococcal infection in both primary
cell systems when uninfected cervical cells were infected with a primed
infection inoculum; however, de novo protein synthesis was not required
to prime the infection process for invasion. Actin-associated proteins
were also observed to accumulate in response to gonococcal infection.
Gonococci were found to be internalized within the cervical cells in
actin-lined spacious vacuoles.
The ability of gonococci to attach to the endocervical epithelium is
well accepted. In contrast, attachment to the stratified squamous
epithelium of the ectocervix and to transitional cells of the cervical
squamocolumnar junction (10, 11) remains controversial. Studies conducted in vitro with our primary cell culture systems demonstrated gonococcal adherence to both the endo- and the ectocervix. Considerable anatomical variation exists in the length of the squamocolumnar transition zone of the cervix (14).
Additionally, to a variable measure, columnar epithelium may overlap
the stratified squamous epithelium (of the ectocervix) at the
transition zone. This may, in part, account for the controversy
associated with gonococcal attachment to the cervical epithelium.
Cervical biopsies used in the studies described herein were obtained
from sites distinct from the transformation zone, i.e., >0.5 cm from
the squamocolumnar junction. Of the 30 cervical specimens used to generate primary cell cultures for use in these studies, all have supported gonococcal adherence with minimal variability. Gonococcal adherence has, to date, primarily been associated with microvilli formation; however, we found gonococci associated with the cervical epithelium both dependent and independent of microvilli.
Attachment is not synonymous with tissue damage or with the initiation
of a diseased state; it is a discrete event from phagocytic internalization, i.e., invasion. Four general mechanisms of bacterial invasion of host cells have been proposed to occur: receptor-mediated endocytosis (44), microtubule-dependent endocytosis
(37, 41, 48), zippering (19, 20), and triggering
(9, 12, 36, 42, 58). Several eukaryotic cell surface
molecules have been proposed to serve as receptors for gonococcal
invasion (reviewed in references 6, 9, 26, 32, 34, 38,
39, and 40). In fallopian tube organ
culture gonococcal invasion has been proposed to occur in a manner
reminiscent of "zipper-type" phagocytosis (9, 32, 53).
The observation that gonococci appear to induce membrane ruffling is a
novel finding. Ruffling is the result of a complex interaction that
occurs between a bacterium and a host cell and is associated with a
triggering mechanism (48) that leads to macropinocytosis
(1, 15, 17, 56). Infection of our primary cell culture
systems resulted in ruffling of both the endo- and the
ectocervix-derived cells. Ruffling was evident in the endocervical cells as convoluted spheres, whereas ruffling of the ectocervical cells
was observed to occur as long, ribbon-like folds. The characteristic structural morphology of endo- and ectocervix-associated ruffles appeared to be specific for each of their respective cell types; hence,
we have described the ruffles found on the ectocervical cells as ribbons.
Salmonella and Shigella spp. have been shown to
induce membrane ruffling in a contact-dependent manner in which a
(highly conserved) type III secretion system (TTSS) allows for the
secretion of numerous effector proteins that initiate the cellular
response required for the observed cytoskeletal rearrangements
(13, 45, 57). A TTSS has not been described for N. gonorrhoeae. A search of the N. gonorrhoeae strain
FA1090 genome database (University of Oklahoma Advanced Center for
Genome Technology) for the possible existence of Salmonella
and Shigella TTSS and effector protein homologs yielded no
significant matches to ruffling-associated proteins. Dillard
(7) recently described the existence of a pathogenicity
island in N. gonorrhoeae strain MS11, which encodes a
secretion system. This pathogenicity island is also present in N. gonorrhoeae 1291, but it is absent in N. gonorrhoeae
FA1090. This pathogenicity island (and its encoded secretion system)
may therefore share homology with Salmonella and
Shigella TTSS and effector proteins; however, these data are
currently unavailable.
Ruffling and subsequent invasion by Salmonella and
Shigella spp. show an actin dependence but occur independent
of microtubules. It has previously been demonstrated that gonococcal
invasion of tissue culture cell lines is dependent upon microtubules
and a functional actin cytoskeleton (2, 18, 43). Using
standard gentamicin resistance assays, we examined endo- and
ectocervical cells to determine if these primary cells displayed a
microtubule or actin dependence for gonococcal invasion. Cytochalasin
D, wortmannin, and EGTA brought invasion levels down to (essentially)
zero in both cell systems, suggesting that gonococcal entry is
dependent upon actin rearrangements. TEM analysis of N. gonorrhoeae-infected polarized cervical cells supported a role for
actin in the gonococcal invasion process in that actin-filled ruffles
and large, spacious, actin-lined vacuoles encompassed invading
gonococci. The latter finding is in contrast to the study by
Grassmé et al. (18), who demonstrated that gonococcal
association with actin was transient. In multiple experiments using
cervical cell monolayers derived from different patients, invasion was
not found to be significantly inhibited when primary cervical cells
were pretreated with nocodazole to disrupt microtubules.
A concentrated accumulation of actin-associated proteins has been
demonstrated to occur in response to membrane ruffling (5, 13,
50). To our knowledge, the role of actin-associated proteins in
gonococcal infection has not been examined. We found that in response
to gonococcal invasion a concentrated accumulation of predominantly
ezrin and vinculin occurs in a manner analogous to Shigella
infections. A modest accumulation of talin and
-actinin also was
observed during gonococcal infection of cervical cells. Additionally,
although myosin was observed to accumulate in response to, and
colocalize with, gonococci at 5 and 10 min postinfection, myosin was
also observed to be fairly diffuse throughout some of the infected
cervical cells. This may reflect the relative abundance of this protein
in comparison to the other actin-associated proteins that were
examined. Alternatively, the observed myosin distribution may be
indicative of the initiation of a concurrent change occurring in the
actin cytoskeleton, or it is possible that gonococci elicit only a
minimal recruitment of myosin upon ruffle induction.
The host cell surface molecule exploited by Salmonella spp.
to initiate ruffling has, to date, not been elucidated. The
Shigella protein complex of IpaB/C/D has been shown to bind
the fibronectin receptor, integrin
5
1
(58). The predominant accumulation of ezrin and vinculin in
N. gonorrhoeae-infected primary cervical cells and the
ability of these actin-associated proteins to directly interact with
integrin molecules to initiate cellular responses (4, 46)
make integrin molecules attractive candidates as potential gonococcal
receptors that serve to initiate gonococcus-induced ruffling. Studies
using the larynx carcinoma cell line, HEp-2, have demonstrated that
gonococcal binding of fibronectin results in coligation of heparan
sulfate proteoglycan to gonococcal Opa proteins and subsequent binding
to the
5
1 integrin (40).
Ruffling was not observed to occur in these cells, suggesting that
gonococcal induction of ruffles may be unique to the cervical
epithelium. Investigation of male primary urethral cells has shown that
some gonococci can enter these cells by focal macropinocytosis, but no
evidence of ruffling was seen (H. A. Harvey and M. K. Zenni, unpublished data). This would suggest that perhaps a cell surface molecule unique to the cervical epithelium may be involved in ruffle
induction and that gonococci invoke membrane ruffles by a mechanism
distinct from that observed for Shigella strains. Salmonella and Shigella strains share many common
characteristics with respect to their ability to induce membrane
ruffles; however, they each also display ruffling characteristics that
are unique to their genus.
Through coevolution with their exclusive human hosts the pathogenic
Neisseria have developed several mechanisms by which they successfully persist in the general population. Previous studies of
N. gonorrhoeae have demonstrated the ability of these
organisms to invade eukaryotic cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis,
microtubule-dependent endocytosis, and zippering. We have described yet
another mechanism by which gonococci are able to exploit their human
host. Ruffling, via a triggering mechanism, has not been observed to
occur in male primary urethral cells, tissue culture cell lines, or
fallopian tube organ culture, nor has ruffling been described to occur
with Neisseria meningiditis infections. Ruffling of primary
cervical cells, which is induced with gonococcal infection, therefore, is a novel finding. Future studies will concentrate on identifying the
bacterial and host factors involved in gonococcal induction of ruffling
in the hope that identification of these factors will aid in the
delineation of the gonococcal infection process as it pertains to the
female genital tract.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Meg Ketterer and Hillery Harvey for their assistance in
development of the primary cell culture systems and Peter Giardina for
constructing the 1291-green used in these studies. We also thank
the staff at the University of Iowa Central Microscopy Research Facility.
This work was funded by NIH grants 5T32HL07638, AI45728, AI43924, and AI45424.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, The University of Iowa, 51 Newton Rd., Iowa City, IA
52242. Phone: (319) 335-7807. Fax: (319) 335-9006. E-mail:
michael-apicella{at}uiowa.edu.
Editor:
E. I. Tuomanen
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