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Infection and Immunity, December 2003, p. 7208-7210, Vol. 71, No. 12
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.12.7208-7210.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Functional BvgAS Virulence Control System in Bordetella bronchiseptica Is Necessary for Induction of Ca2+ Transients in Ciliated Tracheal Epithelial Cells
Nathan A. Groathouse,1,2 Robert A. Heinzen,1,3 and Scott Boitano1,4*
Department of Zoology and Physiology and Department of Molecular Biology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82701,1
Mycobacteria Research Laboratories, Department of Microbiology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1682,2
Laboratory of Intracellular Parasites, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana 59840,3
Department of Physiology, Arizona Respiratory Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85724-50304
Received 18 August 2003/
Returned for modification 2 September 2003/
Accepted 9 September 2003

ABSTRACT
To study initial
Bordetella bronchiseptica-tracheal epithelial
cell interactions, we coincubated
B. bronchiseptica with rabbit
tracheal explant cultures and assayed bacterial adherence and
host cell Ca
2+ signaling. Wild-type
B. bronchiseptica (RB50)
preferentially adhered to cilia and induced ciliated host cell
Ca
2+ transients within 2 min of coincubation, whereas coincubation
with an avirulent strain (RB57) resulted in limited binding
and Ca
2+ signaling. The described cell system allows for assessment
of initial
B. bronchiseptica-host cell interactions that can
contribute to pathogenicity or to host cell defense.

TEXT
The tracheal epithelium creates a physical barrier between respired
air and the underlying tissue of the upper respiratory tract.
In addition to the barrier, the epithelium generates a "mucociliary
escalator" to clear particulate materials, including pathogenic
bacteria, from the airway and keep them from reaching the lungs
(
15). Local environmental changes can influence coordinated
ciliary movement through second messenger signaling pathways
(
12). Such changes elicited by respiratory pathogens through
toxins and adhesins can help to overcome mucociliary defense
and establish infection (
16).
Bordetella bronchiseptica is a
gram-negative bacterium that colonizes the airways of a variety
of animals. Similar to other bordetellae,
B. bronchiseptica responds to environmental conditions and switches between virulent
and avirulent phases via a two-component signal transduction
system termed BvgAS (
1,
2,
4,
11). In animal studies the Bvg
+ phase is necessary to establish infection, whereas mutants locked
in a Bvg
- state (e.g., RB57) are unable to establish infection
(
6,
7). It is accepted that establishment of infection involves
factors under BvgAS control that allow for adherence of
B. bronchiseptica to cilia in the upper airway (
3,
5,
7,
10).
To investigate initial Bordetella-host cell interactions, we monitored B. bronchiseptica and explant cultures of rabbit tracheal epithelial cells (RTEC) with video and digital imaging microscopy. RTEC were grown at 37°C in 5% CO2 on collagen-coated glass coverslips in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum as described previously (8). Cultures were washed extensively with Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) and covered with 250 µl of HBSS for microscopic observation (Fig. 1A). Wild-type B. bronchiseptica (RB50) or a Bvg- avirulent strain (RB57) was grown to log phase under constant shaking at 37°C in supplemented stainer Scholte broth (14). Bacterial cultures were resuspended in HBSS to 108 to 109 CFU/ml. Binding assays were performed in an open cell chamber by video microscopy on an Olympus IX70 inverted microscope with a x100 phase contrast or a x60 differential interference contrast objective and time lapse video capability. RTEC cultures were washed with HBSS and imaged with a DAGE 300T charge-coupled-device camera (Fig. 1B). To initiate interactions, RTEC cultures were initially exposed to bacteria by replacing the HBSS with four consecutive additions of 250-µl bacterial suspensions. Cultures were subsequently washed with 1 ml of HBSS at 3 min and 5 min to remove nonadherent bacteria. Single images were collected every 3 s for a total of 5 min and later analyzed frame by frame to determine the numbers of bacteria attached to ciliated and aciliated RTEC at 75 s, 90 s, and every 30 s thereafter. Host intracellular Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]i) were determined by using published equations (9) after digital imaging of RTEC loaded with fura-2 by fura-2AM incubation. Fura-2 fluorescence was observed with an Olympus IX70 microscope after alternating excitation at 340 and 380 nm by a 75-W Xenon lamp linked to a Delta Ram illuminator (Photon Technologies Incorporated [PTI], Monmouth Junction, N.J.) and a fiber optic line. Images of emitted fluorescence above 510 nm were recorded by an ICCD camera (PTI) and simultaneously displayed on a 21-inch Vivitron color monitor. The imaging system was under software control (ImageMaster; PTI) on an IBM clone computer. Comparisons of samples were done by Student paired t tests; differences were considered significant for P values of <0.05.
Wild-type
B. bronchiseptica (RB50) preferentially bound to ciliated
RTEC within seconds of coincubation, and binding increased over
the 5-min incubation period (6.35 ± 0.55 bacteria/cell).
Coincubation of RTEC with an avirulent Bvg
- strain (RB57) resulted
in limited adherence to ciliated cells (peak value of 1.5 ±
0.35 bacteria/cell at 5 min) and no adherence to aciliated cells
(Fig.
2). Within 2 min of coincubation, adherence of RB50 to
ciliated cells (2.24 ± 0.36 bacteria/cell) was significantly
greater than adherence of RB57 to ciliated cells (1.35 ±
0.27 bacteria/cell). At the 2-min time point, neither bacterial
strain displayed adherence to aciliated cells. This suggested
a BvgAS
- and ciliated host cell-specific binding in initial
Bordetella-host cell interactions. This preferential binding
is in agreement with adhesion studies of
B. bronchiseptica and
swine nasal ciliated epithelial cells (
5); however, our ability
to quantify early attachments in live cells via microscopy resulted
in a consistently higher number of bacteria attachments at earlier
time points (i.e., 2 min versus 15 min). We considered that
our assay might be limited by objective focal depth (e.g., not
all bacterial binding could be simultaneously recorded at the
tip and the base of the cilia). However, electron microscopy
studies of bordetellae and ciliated cells of the rabbit airway
have shown that the pathogen preferentially binds to the upper
third of the cilia (
10). Additionally, we repeated the coincubations
with a Bvg
+, green fluorescent protein-expressing strain of
B. bronchiseptica under confocal microscopy in "Z" scan mode
and found that initial interactions of bacteria and host cells
were at the top third of the cilia and within the focal plane
(data not shown).
In previous coincubation experiments with
B. bronchiseptica and a canine explant model, ciliary beat was altered by virulent
(but not avirulent) strains within 5 min, with complete ciliostasis
as early as 30 min (
3). In the canine explant model studies,
heat-killed virulent strains bound to cilia but did not cause
ciliostasis, indicating that bacterial effects on ciliated cells
extended beyond physical attachment. Ciliostasis did not occur
within the time frame of our experiments. However, ciliary dyskinesia
was observed in the RB50 coincubation experiments following
bacterial attachment, and ciliostasis followed within hours
of coincubation. Similar changes were absent from the RB57 coincubation
experiments.
Because ion transport, ciliary beat frequency, and mucin release, all key components of mucociliary clearance, can be activated via Ca2+ and protein kinase C-dependent mechanisms (13, 15), we examined host cell [Ca2+]i during coincubation with B. bronchiseptica. Ciliated RTEC displayed at least one transient increase in [Ca2+]i in 30% ± 5% of cells between 2 and 8 min of coincubation with RB50 (Fig. 3). In contrast, transient increases in [Ca2+]i for aciliated cells during RB50 coincubation (9.5% ± 6.8%) or RTEC coincubated with RB57 (4.8% ± 2.0% for ciliated and 5.0% ± 1.4% for aciliated cells) were not significantly different from that observed in RTEC washed with HBSS alone (7.5% ± 6.3%). To determine if a lack of initial binding of RB57 to host cells prevented transient increases in [Ca2+]i in host cells, RB57 mutants were centrifuged onto RTEC to force host cell binding, and digital imaging was repeated. Under these conditions, host cells were associated with 15 to 40 bacteria but did not display transient increases in Ca2+, further suggesting a role for BvgAS-dependent gene products in host cell signaling.
Here we assess initial interactions between the respiratory
pathogen
B. bronchiseptica and its complementary host, ciliated
airway epithelial cells, using a ciliated cell culture model.
In agreement with previous studies, we found that virulent
B. bronchiseptica preferentially bound to ciliated host cells,
and this interaction can occur within minutes (
3,
5). Moreover,
we demonstrated that significant differences in ciliary attachment
between virulent and avirulent bacteria occurred within 2 min.
B. bronchiseptica strains with an active BvgAS virulence control
system additionally induced host cell Ca
2+ responses in ciliated
cells as part of the initial pathogen-host interaction. We have
not determined whether the observed [Ca
2+]
i changes are beneficial
to host defense mechanisms (e.g., to temporarily increase ciliary
beat frequency and dislodge bacterium) or to bacterial cell
pathogenesis (e.g., to alter local mucin concentration to reduce
the effectiveness of mucociliary defense). However, this experimental
system can be used in conjunction with bacterial genetics to
assess the role(s) for bacterial gene loci or individual gene
products that contribute to initial pathogen-host interactions
that influence host defense mechanisms by altering host cell
signaling pathways.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
B. bronchiseptica strains were kind gifts from Jeffery F. Miller
and Peggy A. Cotter. We thank Jessica Edwards, Steven S. Stoddard,
Anders Omsland, and Brant E. Isakson for their technical expertise
and help with the experimental design.
This work was supported by NIH grants HL64636, HL64039 (S.B.), and RR15553 (S.B. and R.A.H.). N.G.G. is an L. Floyd Clarke scholar.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Arizona Health Sciences Center, University of Arizona, Room 2338, AHSC, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., Tucson, AZ 85724-5030. Phone: (520) 626-2105. Fax: (520) 626-6970. E-mail:
sboitano{at}email.arizona.edu.

Editor: D. L. Burns

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Infection and Immunity, December 2003, p. 7208-7210, Vol. 71, No. 12
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.12.7208-7210.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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