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Infection and Immunity, August 2003, p. 4795-4803, Vol. 71, No. 8
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.8.4795-4803.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Secreted Effector Proteins of Salmonella enterica Serotype Typhimurium Elicit Host-Specific Chemokine Profiles in Animal Models of Typhoid Fever and Enterocolitis
Shuping Zhang,1,
L. Garry Adams,1 Jairo Nunes,1 Sangeeta Khare,1 Renée M. Tsolis,2 and Andreas J. Bäumler2*
Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-4467,1
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, College of Medicine, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, College Station, Texas 77843-11142
Received 7 March 2003/
Returned for modification 28 March 2003/
Accepted 5 May 2003

ABSTRACT
Infection of bovine ligated loops with the
Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium wild type but not a
sipA sopABDE2 mutant
resulted in fluid accumulation, polymorphonuclear cell infiltration,
and expression of CXC chemokines, particularly GRO

. None of
these
sipA sopABDE2-dependent responses was observed in murine-ligated
loops. The majority of GRO

transcripts localized to bovine intestinal
epithelium. Thus, different disease outcomes between mice (i.e.,
no diarrhea) and calves (i.e., diarrhea) may be due to differences
in
sipA sopABDE2-dependent CXC chemokine gene expression in
epithelial cells.

TEXT
Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium causes enterocolitis
in humans, a localized infection characterized by diarrhea and
by pathological changes that are most severe in the intestine
and mesenteric lymph nodes (
24,
25). In contrast,
S. enterica serotype Typhi causes typhoid fever, a systemic infection characterized
by fever, while diarrhea is considered to be an insignificant
symptom developing in only one-third of patients (
28). A striking
difference between the host responses elicited during infections
with serotype Typhimurium and serotype Typhi in humans is the
type of inflammation observed in the intestine. Analysis of
biopsy samples reveals that inflammation in the intestines of
patients infected with serotype Typhimurium is characterized
by an infiltrate that is composed primarily of polymorphonuclear
(PMN) cells (
6,
27), while inflammation in typhoid fever patients
is caused predominantly by infiltration with monocytes (
21,
39). Similarly, the predominant cell type (representing 95%
of fecal leucocytes) in stools from typhoid fever patients is
mononuclear, whereas PMN cells predominate (representing 75%
of fecal leucocytes) in stool samples from enterocolitis patients
(
13).
Serotype Typhimurium induces fluid accumulation and PMN cell influx in bovine, but not murine ligated ileal loops.
Experimental infections of calves or mice with serotype Typhimurium are commonly used as animal models to study the pathogenesis of typhoid fever or enterocolitis, respectively. Serotype Typhimurium causes a typhoid fever-like disease without diarrhea in mice, while infection of calves results in a localized infection characterized by diarrhea (49). We compared the host responses to infection with serotype Typhimurium in mice and calves using the ligated-ileal-loop model. Bovine ligated-ileal-loop surgeries were carried out as described previously (34, 50). In mice, anesthesia was induced and maintained with Propofol (Abbot Laboratories, Chicago, Ill.), an approximately 2-cm incision was made in the abdomen, an ileal loop of 5 to 8 cm was ligated and injected with 0.15 ml of sterile Luria-Bertani (LB) broth or 1 x 108 CFU. To prevent dehydration, mice were given two doses of 0.5 ml of sterile saline subcutaneously. Fluid accumulation and inflammatory changes elicited by the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) (41) were compared to those elicited by a sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) (50) and sterile LB broth. The sipA (sspA), sopA, sopB (sigD), sopD, and sopE2 genes encode effector proteins of the invasion-associated type III secretion system (TTSS-1) that are required for eliciting PMN cell influx and fluid accumulation in bovine ligated ileal loops (11, 18, 34, 47, 50). Fluid accumulation in bovine ligated ileal loops inoculated with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) was significantly higher (P > 0.05) than that elicited by inoculation with LB broth or the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) at 4 and 8 h postinfection (Fig. 1A). In contrast, inoculation of murine-ligated ileal loops with either the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715), the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21), or sterile LB broth did not result in significant differences in fluid accumulation at any of the time points collected (Fig. 1B). The serotype Typhimurium wild type was recovered at approximately 10-fold-higher numbers (P > 0.05) from bovine and murine Peyer's patches than the sipA sopABDE2 mutant at early times (1 h) but not at later times (8 h) postinfection (data not shown). Reduced recovery of the sipA sopABDE2 mutant from tissue collected at early times after infection may be explained by the requirement of SopB, SopE2, and SipA for invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by serotype Typhimurium in vitro (17, 29, 51, 52).
Hematoxylin-and-eosin-stained sections of bovine and murine
ileal Peyer's patches were examined by light microscopy. The
degree of inflammatory cell infiltration and the severity of
intestinal epithelial detachment were scored by two pathologists
as described previously (
34). A higher degree of monocyte infiltration
was observed in sections collected from both bovine and murine
ileal Peyer's patches infected with the serotype Typhimurium
wild type (IR715) than in those collected from loops infected
with the
sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) or sterile LB broth (Table
1). The host response observed in ligated ileal loops of mice
differed from that in calves mainly by the degree of PMN cell
infiltration. Infection with the serotype Typhimurium wild type
(IR715) resulted in perivascular PMN cell infiltration in the
bovine lamina propria by 1 h postinfection, and this inflammatory
response progressed to severe diffuse PMN cell infiltration
in the bovine ileal mucosa and submucosa by 8 h postinfection
(Table
1). The
sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) caused only a mild
PMN cell infiltration in the bovine ileal mucosa with minimal
lesions. In contrast, the serotype Typhimurium wild type and
the
sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) elicited only a mild PMN cell
infiltration in the murine ileal mucosa.
View this table:
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TABLE 1. Development of inflammatory infiltrates and tissue injury in the bovine and murine ileal mucosa following inoculation with the serotype Typhimurium wild type, the sipA sopABDE2 mutant, or sterile LB broth
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The exposure of the ileal mucosa to a large bacterial inoculum
for the duration of the experiment represents a physiological
limitation of the ligated-ileal-loop assay. This limitation
may be responsible for the severe detachment of surface epithelia
observed within only 8 h after inoculation of murine ligated
ileal loops with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (Table
1),
while little or no inflammatory changes are observed in the
intestinal mucosa at 1 day after oral infection of mice (
20,
36). In calves, on the other hand, lesions developed with kinetics
similar to those observed during an oral infection (
34,
43).
Intravascular PMN cells were seen in the microvasculature of
the murine ileal serosa in all treatment groups (data not shown),
suggesting that the response in the mouse was due to surgical
manipulations rather than to infection.
TTSS-1 effector genes are required for induction of CXC chemokine gene expression in bovinebut not murinePeyer's patches.
The major difference detected between the inflammatory infiltrates in calves and mice was the presence or absence of a large amount of PMN cells in the ileal mucosa (Table 1). Since trafficking of leukocytes is largely controlled by chemokines (23), we investigated whether the different compositions of inflammatory infiltrates observed in mice and calves in response to serovar Typhimurium infection may be reflected by the expression in infected tissue of different subsets of these chemoattractants. According to the number and arrangement of N-terminal cysteine residues, chemokines are divided into four subfamilies, including CX3C (three amino acid residues between the first two cysteine residues), CXC (one amino acid between the first two cysteine residues), CC (the first two cysteine residues being adjacent), and XC (lacking the first cysteine residue) (53). Different subsets of chemokines direct the migration of specific subsets of leukocytes (23). For instance, monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1), MCP-2, macrophage inflammatory protein 1
(MIP-1
), and RANTES (i.e., regulated upon activation, normal T-cell expressed and secreted) act mainly on monocytes and belong to a subgroup of human CC chemokines, which are encoded by genes clustered on human chromosome 17q11.2 (53). In contrast, interleukin 8 (IL-8), growth-related oncogene
(GRO
), GRO
, and granulocyte chemotactic protein 2 (GCP-2) are encoded by genes clustered on human chromosome 4q12-q13 and belong to a subgroup of human CXC chemokines controlling migration of PMN cells (53). While counterparts of the human genes encoding MCP-1, MCP-2, MIP-1
, RANTES, IL-8, GCP-2, GRO
, and GRO
are also present in the bovine host (1, 30-32, 44, 45), mice exhibit a number of genetic differences. That is, mice do not possess the CC chemokine MCP-1 but instead express a functional analogue, the monocyte chemoattractant JE (3). Furthermore, mice do not possess IL-8, GRO
, or GRO
, but instead produce the CXC chemokines keratinocyte-derived chemokine (KC) and macrophage inflammatory protein 2 (MIP-2) (4, 33, 42, 46). Murine KC and MIP-2 share sequence homology with human and bovine GRO proteins (31) and are involved in controlling PMN cell trafficking (38). Unlike other cytokines, CXC and CC chemokines are generally not stored within cells; rather, their production is induced at the transcriptional level upon appropriate stimulation (2, 10). We therefore investigated the expression of chemokines in bovine and murine tissues by detecting transcripts at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 8 h postinfection by using semiquantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) as described previously (35) and by using primers specific to bovine MCP-1, MCP-2, MIP-1
, RANTES, IL-8, GCP-2, GRO
, and GRO
as well as primers specific to murine JE, MCP-2, MIP-1
, RANTES, KC, GCP-2, and MIP-2 (Table 2).
Infection with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) caused
a significant (
P < 0.05) elevation in the expression of two
bovine CC chemokines (MCP-1 and MCP-2) and two bovine CXC chemokines
(GRO

and GRO

) in tissue from bovine Peyer's patches compared
to infection with the
sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) (Table
3).
Induction of GRO

gene expression was most pronounced, being
significantly (
P < 0.05) elevated at all time points and
reaching a peak at 1 h postinfection of bovine loops. In contrast,
only the expression of two murine CC chemokines (i.e., JE and
RANTES) was significantly (
P < 0.05) higher in murine Peyer's
patches infected with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715)
than in those infected with the
sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21)
(Table
3). These data showed that the TTSS-1 effector genes
sipA,
sopA,
sopB,
sopD, and
sopE2 were only required in the
calf for eliciting elevated expression of PMN cell chemoattractants
(i.e., GRO

and GRO

).
To quantify the differences in CXC chemokine gene expression
observed between the treatment groups, real-time PCR analyses
were performed with RNA samples collected at 1 and 8 h postinoculation.
Real-time PCR was performed by using the SYBR Green method according
to instructions provided by the manufacturer of the PCR kit
(Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). Primers for murine
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) were purchased
(Biosource International, Camarillo, Calif.), and the remaining
primers are listed in Table
2. Reverse transcription of total
RNA (2 µg) in a mixture containing 100 µl of 5.5
mM MgCl
2, 500 µM dNTP, 2.5 µM random hexamers, and
1.25 U of MultiScribe reverse transcriptase per µl was
performed at 48°C for 30 min. Real-time PCR was performed
for each cDNA sample (4 µl/reaction) in duplicate by using
gene-specific primers (300 nM) and an ABI Prism 7700 thermocycler
(95°C for 10 min followed by 40 cycles of 95°C for 15
s and 60°C for 1 min). This experiment was performed twice
for each total RNA sample. The threshold cycle (C
T) value was
determined for each sample, and the mRNA concentration for each
target gene was quantified by using a comparative C
T method
(Applied Biosystems). Real-time PCR amplification of GAPDH transcripts
was used to normalize the cDNA concentrations of different samples
(which was carried out with the assumption that expression of
GAPDH does not change during infection). The normalized amount
of transcripts relative to the amount of transcripts present
in samples from an uninfected control loop was given as

, where S is the standard deviation.
Both the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) and the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) elicited similar increases (4.8-fold or less) of murine CXC chemokine (KC, MIP-2, and GCP-2) gene expression compared to transcript levels in loops inoculated with sterile LB broth at both 1 and 8 h postinfection (Fig. 1D and F). In sharp contrast, the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) elicited substantially higher CXC chemokine gene activation in the calf than the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21). These differences were most pronounced for expression of the bovine GRO
and GRO
genes at 1 h after infection (Fig. 1C). In addition, expression of IL-8 and GCP-2 was consistently elevated at 1 h postinfection of bovine ligated ileal loops with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715) compared to that due to infection with the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21). The fact that differences between the wild type and the sipA sopABDE2 mutant in their ability to induce expression of IL-8 and GCP-2 at 1 h postinfection were detected by real-time PCR but not by RT-PCR analysis is likely due to the higher sensitivity and accuracy of the former method. Collectively, these data further supported the idea that the TTSS-1 effector genes sipA, sopA, sopB, sopD, and sopE2 were required for elevated expression of CXC chemokine genes in bovine but not murine intestinal tissue.
Localization of GRO
transcripts in bovine ileal Peyer's patches by in situ hybridization.
The most dramatic changes in the host response observed during this study were a TTSS-1-dependent induction of CXC chemokine gene expression, particularly GRO
, in the bovine ileal mucosa (Fig. 1). Previous in vitro studies have shown that infection of human epithelial cell lines with Salmonella serotypes can elicit the production of various CXC chemokines (8, 19, 26, 48), thereby suggesting that epithelial cells may be a source of these PMN cell chemoattractants in vivo. However, expression of CXC chemokines can be induced in vitro upon appropriate stimulation in nearly every type of cell that has been examined (2, 10), thereby illustrating the need to experimentally test the assumption that epithelial cells are a significant source of GRO
production in vivo. To this end, we localized bovine GRO
transcripts in bovine tissue by using in situ hybridization in tissue collected 1 h after inoculation. The bovine GRO
gene was PCR amplified from a bovine cDNA library by using the primers listed in Table 2 (b-GRO
) and labeled with psoralen-biotin according to instructions provided by the manufacturer (Ambion). This probe was used for in situ hybridization by using 5-µm sections of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue samples. Deparaffinized sections were treated with a target retrieval solution at 95°C for 40 min (Dako) and with proteinase K (DAKO) at room temperature for 5 min. Endogenous peroxidase activity was quenched by incubating the sections in a solution of 0.3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol for 20 min. After denaturation of RNA for 5 min at 65°C, hybridization was carried out at 37°C for 1 h in a humidified chamber. Specificity of the labeling was confirmed in two control experiments in which the GRO
probe was either omitted or replaced by biotinylated bacterial plasmid DNA. Hybridization of probes was detected by subsequent incubation with a primary streptavidin-peroxidase concentrate followed by one cycle of signal amplification with biotinyl tyramide solution and a secondary streptavidin-peroxidase concentrate. Sections were incubated with a diaminobenzidine solution, counterstained with Meyer's hematoxylin, dehydrated, and mounted.
In samples from loops infected with the serotype Typhimurium wild type (IR715), bovine GRO
transcripts were detected primarily in enterocytes lining the intestinal crypts, in the base of absorptive villi, and in the follicle-associated epithelium of lymphoid nodules in Peyer's patches (Fig. 2A). Positive signals were observed less frequently in epithelial cells located at the tips of absorptive villi and occasionally in mononuclear leukocytes in the lamina propria. However, PMN cells were negative for the production of GRO
transcripts. The amount of GRO
transcripts detected in sections collected from loops inoculated with the sipA sopABDE2 mutant (ZA21) or LB broth was strongly reduced (Fig. 2B) compared to that in sections from wild-type-infected loops. These data demonstrate that intestinal epithelial cells represent the principal cell type producing GRO
in the initial (1 h postinoculation) response to serotype Typhimurium infection.
The precise mechanism for the
sipA sopABDE-dependent induction
of GRO

gene expression in bovine epithelial cells is presently
unclear. Serotype Typhimurium induces the expression of IL-1ß
mRNA in bovine intestinal tissue (
35), but it is not known whether
this cytokine is proteolytically activated and subsequently
contributes to the induction of CXC chemokine gene expression
in epithelial cells. The production of GRO

by human intestinal
epithelial cell lines in response to
S. enterica serotype Dublin
infection suggests a direct interaction between bacteria and
enterocytes as an alternate mechanism for the
sipA sopABDE-dependent
production of this CXC chemokine (
48). Whether the TTSS-1 is
required for inducing GRO

production in human epithelial cells
has not previously been studied. However, the serotype Typhimurium
TTSS-1 is required for eliciting the production of human IL-8
in cultured epithelial cells (
14) and was essential for inducing
bovine IL-8 production in vivo (Fig.
1). It is presently a matter
of debate whether TTSS-1-mediated invasion is required for IL-8
production (
7,
12). TTSS-1-mediated invasion of epithelial cells
may facilitate recognition by Nods or Toll-like receptors (
16,
37), thereby triggering proinflammatory signaling events leading
to CXC chemokine gene expression (
15). An alternative mechanism
by which TTSS-1 effector proteins may elicit CXC chemokine gene
expression in epithelial cells is by directly engaging components
of proinflammatory intracellular signaling cascades (
5,
9,
22,
40). Regardless of whether CXC chemokine expression is induced
through Toll-like receptors or by direct interaction of TTSS-1
effector proteins with intracellular targets, a correlate of
the hypothesis that CXC chemokine expression results from a
direct interaction between bacteria and enterocytes is that
the relevant proinflammatory signaling cascades must differ
between murine and bovine intestinal epithelium, since the wild
type and the
sipA sopABDE mutant elicited similar CXC chemokine
profiles in the mouse (Fig.
1D and F).
In summary, our data provide convincing evidence that induction of CXC chemokine expression accompanied by PMN cell infiltration is a key event that distinguishes the host response in calves from that elicited in mice during serotype Typhimurium infection. Furthermore, our study suggests that future studies should focus on GRO
as the main CXC chemokine, the expression of which is induced by the TTSS-1 of serotype Typhimurium during enterocolitis in calves.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Josely Figueiredo for technical assistance in bovine
ligated-ileal-loop surgeries, Ellen Kasari for advice on murine
ligated- ileal-loop surgeries, John Roths for technical assistance
with photomicrography, and Alan Patranella and the staff members
of Laboratory Animal Resources and Research Facilities, Texas
A&M University, for providing animal care.
This project was supported by the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station project 8409 and Public Health Service grant AI44170. Work in A.J.B.'s and L.G.A.'s laboratories was further supported by Public Health Service grant AI40124 and USDA/NRICGP grant numbers 2002-35204-11624 and 2002-02140. J.N. is supported by CAPES, Brasília, Brazil.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, College of Medicine, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, 407 Reynolds Medical Building, 1114 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-1114. Phone: (979) 862-7756. Fax: (979) 845-3479. E-mail:
abaumler{at}tamu.edu.

Editor: F. C. Fang
Present address: Mississippi Veterinary Diagnostic and Research Laboratory, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology/Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Mississippi State University, Jackson, MS 39296. 

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Infection and Immunity, August 2003, p. 4795-4803, Vol. 71, No. 8
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.8.4795-4803.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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