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Infection and Immunity, April 2005, p. 1971-1977, Vol. 73, No. 4
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.4.1971-1977.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Inflammation Program, and Molecular, Biology Program,1 Department of Medicine, University of Iowa,2 Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Iowa City, Iowa3
Received 29 September 2004/ Returned for modification 10 November 2004/ Accepted 20 December 2004
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PMN are professional phagocytes that migrate to sites of infection, where they ingest microorganisms by phagocytosis (11, 13, 20). PMN kill microorganisms by the combined activity of antimicrobial proteins and reactive oxygen species (ROS). The NADPH oxidase is a multicomponent enzyme responsible for agonist-dependent generation of ROS by PMN (2, 8, 33). The oxidase complex reduces molecular oxygen to form superoxide anion (O2), which is converted into hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is then generated through the activity of myeloperoxidase (MPO) (33). PMN ROS generation, referred to as the respiratory burst, is a primary killing component of PMN antimicrobial activity and represents an important element in innate host defense against microorganisms. The contribution of ROS to PMN antimicrobial action is illustrated by the clinical complications in chronic granulomatous disease, a genetic disorder that results in lack of NADPH oxidase activity (33). Although PMN from chronic granulomatous disease patients exhibit normal migration, phagocytosis, and degranulation, they fail to produce oxidants and thus exhibit ineffective killing of a variety of microorganisms. PMN also possess nonoxidative mechanisms of killing that include an array of antimicrobial proteins and enzymes contained within a variety of cytoplasmic granules that are released into the phagosome upon ingestion (11). The combination of both oxidative and nonoxidative mechanisms allows the PMN to effectively kill a broad range of microorganisms.
The fate of N. gonorrhoeae within PMN has been a topic of debate for years. Differences in strains and experimental systems may account for the discrepancies in conclusions regarding the relative importance of oxidants and the fate of N. gonorrhoeae within PMN. In the following study, the interactions of N. gonorrhoeae with adherent PMN were investigated using a synchronized phagocytosis system to allow control of bacterial association and uptake by PMN. Using this system, we found that a subpopulation of gonococci survived and replicated within PMN over time, results that mirror the clinical aspects of gonococcal disease.
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Bacterial cultures. N. gonorrhoeae strains 1291, 1291gfp, FA1090, F62, and PID2 and Escherichia coli K-12 (M. A. Apicella personal culture collection) were stored as 20% glycerol stocks at 80°C. N. gonorrhoeae strains were pili and opa positive as determined by colony morphology as previously described (17, 39). Strains were passed onto gonococcus (GC) or Luria-Bertani agar plates overnight prior to the experiment and were suspended in GC broth (Difco) and grown to mid-logarithmic phase. Bacterial concentration was determined based on the optical density at 600 nm. Cultures were diluted in HBSS+ containing 1% autologous normal human serum (HBSS+S) prior to the experiment.
Synchronized phagocytosis experiments. Glass coverslips coated with bovine tendon collagen were added to 24-well tissue culture plates and incubated in autologous normal human serum (NHS) for 30 min at 37°C prior to adherence of PMN. Approximately 2 x 106 PMN were added to each well of the 24-well tissue culture plate, centrifuged at 350 x g, and allowed to adhere for 30 min at 37°C. Monolayers were washed with 0.9% NaCl to remove nonadherent PMN. Medium was replaced with HBSS+S, and cells were kept at 10°C. To quantify numbers of adherent PMN, cells were released by trypsin-EDTA treatment and counted using a hemacytometer. Bacteria were added to PMN at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1:1 or 10:1 and centrifuged at 800 x g, 10°C, to allow the bacteria to bind to PMN but not be ingested. Supernatants were removed and replaced with HBSS+S warmed to 37°C to initiate phagocytosis. This procedure was used for all the experiments outlined below.
Viable counts of intracellular bacteria. PMN were challenged using the synchronized phagocytosis protocol described above. Supernatants were removed and replaced with HBSS+S warmed to 37°C for 2 min to initiate phagocytosis. Monolayers were then washed three times with 0.9% NaCl to remove extracellular bacteria. PMN were placed in HBSS+S and incubated in a 37°C water bath for the indicated time points. This point in the assay was designated as zero time (T0). Monolayers were treated with 1% saponin for 10 min at 37°C and scraped to lyse the cells. Clumping of gonococci was occasionally seen by microscopy, especially during early time points in the assay. To disperse the clumps and obtain accurate CFU counts, lysates were vortexed for 30 to 60 s in glass tubes. Lysates were then serially diluted and plated to enumerate CFU. Data are expressed as CFU at respective time points relative to the CFU at T0.
Chemiluminescence. Opsonized zymosan (OPZ) stimulates a robust respiratory burst in PMN and was used a positive control for the chemiluminescence experiments. Zymosan A (ICN) was opsonized with 10% NHS for 30 min at 37°C. PMN were adhered to collagen-coated coverslips and stimulated with OPZ or N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291 in the presence of 100 µM lucigenin, 1 µM luminol, or 50 µM isoluminol (Sigma). Phagocytosis was synchronized by centrifugation at 800 x g, 10°C. Horseradish peroxidase (8 U/ml) was added to wells tested for isoluminol chemiluminescence. Chemiluminescence was measured using a Wallac Victor2 luminometer (Perkin-Elmer) with readings taken every 2 min for 1 h. The different chemiluminescence substrates were chosen to determine the type of ROS products generated and the location of their release. Lucigenin and luminol detect both intracellular and extracellular ROS production, but they differ in the substrates with which they react. Lucigenin reacts with superoxide (products of the NADPH oxidase complex) (14), whereas luminol chemiluminescence depends on the activity of MPO and reacts with hydroxyl radical and HOCl (7, 38). Isoluminol reacts with the same products as luminol but lacks the ability to penetrate the cell membrane and thus measures extracellular ROS production (21).
Microscopy. (i) LSCM. PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291gfp by using the synchronized phagocytosis protocol, incubated for the indicated times, washed to remove unbound gonococci, and fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde at the desired time points. Coverslips were mounted onto glass slides and viewed using a Zeiss 510 confocal microscope. PMN were visualized using differential interference contrast (DIC) light microscopy. Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled bacteria were viewed using the fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) fluorescence channel. Images were taken as optical sections from apical to basolateral cell surfaces at approximately 0.5-µm intervals. Zeiss LSM software was used to compile optical sections into a single image. Cell association was determined by merging FITC and DIC channels. The numbers of GFP-positive gonococci associated with PMN were determined by visual counts of confocal images. PMN were challenged with gonococci at an MOI of 10:1, and phagocytosis was synchronized as described above. At each respective time point, the PMN monolayers were washed to remove nonassociated gonococci and coverslips were processed for laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) analysis. Approximately 100 PMN were counted at each time point and grouped in the following categories: PMN with 0, 1 to 9, or 10 or more gonococci/cell. This method was used to assess the kinetics of phagocytosis and to understand the dynamics of the gonococcal population within PMN over time.
(ii) SEM. PMN were challenged using the synchronized phagocytosis protocol and fixed with 2.5% glutaraldehyde at the desired time points. Coverslips were processed for scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis by osmium fixation followed by ethanol dehydration and were mounted onto aluminum stubs. Samples were examined using a Hitachi S-4000 scanning electron microscope.
(iii) TEM. PMN were challenged using the synchronized phagocytosis protocol for the desired time points and released with trypsin-EDTA. PMN were pelleted by centrifugation at 1,000 x g and fixed with 4% glutaraldehyde. Samples were processed for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) by osmium fixation followed by staining with 2.5% uranyl acetate and ethanol dehydration. Cell pellets were embedded in eponate 12 (Ted Pella, Redding, Calif.), and thin sections were cut using a Reichert Ultracut E ultramicrotome (Vienna, Austria). Sections were placed onto formvar grids and examined using a Hitachi H-7000 transmission electron microscope.
Statistical analysis. Data are the mean of at least three replicates and are presented as standard error of the mean values. Means were compared using paired t tests with a confidence interval at P < 0.05. Statistically significant values are indicated. Statistical analysis was performed using the GraphPad Prism 4 software package.
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FIG. 1. Chemiluminescence. Adherent PMN were stimulated in the presence of lucigenin (A), luminol (B), or isoluminol (C) with 1:1 OPZ ( ) or the following dose ranges of N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291: 1:1 ( ), 10:1 ( ), 20:1 (x), 50:1 ( ), 100:1 (+). Unstimulated, resting cells ( ) were used as a negative control. For isoluminol chemiluminescence, 5:1 OPZ ( ) was used to stimulate a larger response. Chemiluminescence readings were taken every 2 min for 1 h. Data are the result of a single representative experiment, with each value presented as the mean of three replicates.
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FIG. 2. N. gonorrhoeae associated with PMN. (A and B) PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291gfp at an MOI of 10:1 for 15 min and examined by LSCM (A) and SEM (B). The LSCM image was viewed at 630x magnification, with GFP-containing bacteria seen using the FITC fluorescence channel and PMN viewed by DIC. SEM images were viewed at 1,000x magnification. (C) PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291gfp at an MOI of 10:1 for the indicated times, washed, fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde, and examined by LSCM. Cell-associated gonococci were counted, and PMN were grouped according to the numbers of associated gonococci: 0 gonococci/PMN (blue), 1 to 9 gonococci/PMN (white), or 10 gonococci/PMN (black). Values are the percentages of total PMN counted at each time point.
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FIG. 3. N. gonorrhoeae was internalized by PMN. PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291 at an MOI of 10:1 and processed for TEM. PMN were challenged for 1 h (A; 8,000x), 2 h (B; 12,000x), 4 h (C; 8,000x), or 6 h (D; 7,000x). Gonococci appear within PMN phagosomes.
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FIG. 4. N. gonorrhoeae survived killing and replicated within PMN. (A) PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291 ( ) or E. coli ( ) for 2 h at an MOI of 1:1. PMN were lysed at 30-min intervals, serial diluted, and plated for CFU counts. Results are shown as the percentage of viable bacteria present at T0. Data are the result of a single representative experiment, and values are presented as the mean of three replicates with the standard error of the mean. (B) PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae 1291 at an MOI of 1:1 for 1 and 6 h and lysed to quantify CFU. Results are shown as the percentage of viable bacteria at T0. Data are the result of a single representative experiment, with values presented as the mean of three replicates and the standard error of the mean. Differences were statistically significant (P = 0.0196).
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FIG. 5. N. gonorrhoeae strain comparison. PMN were challenged with N. gonorrhoeae strains 1291 (A), FA1090 (B), F62 (C), or PID2 (D) for 1 and 2 h at an MOI of 1:1. PMN were lysed to quantify CFU. Results are shown as the percentage of viable bacteria at T0. Each data point is the mean of three replicates performed on individual days.
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) and rTNF-ß, but when plated onto surfaces coated with serum, extracellular matrix proteins, or human umbilical vein endothelial cells adherent PMN respond to rTNFs with a robust respiratory burst (23). PMN also exhibit increased phagocytosis after transmigration across cell monolayers (16). These findings demonstrate that PMN adherent to biological surfaces are more responsive than nonadherent PMN. Despite the large volume of work addressing PMN-gonococcus interactions, the fate of N. gonorrhoeae within PMN remains unclear. Most of the studies addressing the interactions of gonococci with PMN have used experimental systems with nonadherent PMN. Several studies have concluded that PMN effectively kill gonococci (12, 18, 19, 30-32, 40, 45), but a number of reports have demonstrated that N. gonorrhoeae survives killing and may replicate within PMN (4-6, 26-29, 43, 44, 46, 47). We developed a system to examine the interactions of N. gonorrhoeae with adherent PMN, reasoning that these PMN more faithfully mimic the PMN recruited into the infected urethra. Isolated PMN were adhered to glass coverslips coated with collagen, a major extracellular matrix protein, and autologous NHS to mimic in vivo conditions. In chemiluminescence studies unstimulated, resting PMN did not produce a respiratory burst, whereas PMN stimulated with OPZ particles produced a respiratory burst as expected (Fig. 1). These findings demonstrate that the adherent PMN responded as expected when challenged with a known stimulus. The lack of chemiluminescence from resting PMN suggests that the experimental conditions did not artificially activate the cells. When exposed to a dose range of N. gonorrhoeae, PMN produced a respiratory burst in the presence of both lucigenin and luminol in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1A and B). This suggested that products of both NADPH oxidase (O2) and MPO (hydroxyl radical, HOCl) were released in response to gonococci. The kinetics of the respiratory burst elicited by gonococci at all doses were delayed compared to the response to OPZ, suggesting that the mechanisms of activation may differ for the two agonists. Chemiluminescence studies using isoluminol as the substrate were performed to determine the amount of extracellular ROS released (Fig. 1C). Isoluminol chemiluminescence was produced from PMN stimulated with OPZ particles, but only a small amount of isoluminol chemiluminescence was detected in response to gonococci. Comparison of chemiluminescence experiments with the three different substrates suggests that PMN produced primarily intracellular ROS in response to N. gonorrhoeae, with only a small amount of ROS released into the extracellular environment. These results are consistent with previous findings that have demonstrated gonococci produce a luminol-dependent respiratory burst in PMN that is predominantly intracellular (12, 22, 31, 45).
Examination of PMN in this system by microscopy showed that the monolayers were not confluent, with variable amounts of space between cells. Increased numbers of PMN added to the system did not result in increased adherence or confluency. With large amounts of space between cells, the concerns of eliminating extracellular bacteria were enhanced. Treatment of cell monolayers with antibiotics to remove nonassociated bacteria was not possible because the antibiotic penetrated the PMN membrane and killed intracellular organisms, a phenomenon previously reported in other phagocytosis systems (9, 15). To remove nonassociated bacteria we employed systematic washes. LSCM and SEM analyses showed that the washes effectively removed nonassociated bacteria (Fig. 2A and B). Some nonassociated bacteria were occasionally seen, but these were relatively few in comparison to intracellular organisms and gonococci were incapable of replicating in the experimental media. To examine the kinetics of phagocytosis and to monitor the gonococcal population, the numbers of PMN-associated gonococci were determined using LSCM to count GFP-positive gonococci. These experiments showed 75.6% of PMN had no associated gonococci at 0 min. At this time point monolayers were immediately washed after centrifugation, removing most gonococci before they could tightly associate with PMN. However, after 5 min 61.8% of PMN had 10 or more gonococci, indicating rapid association. These data suggest that phagocytosis in this system was synchronous and directed by the experimental methods. PMN with 10 or more gonococci decreased from 61.8% at 5 min to 8.7% at 60 min, while those with 0 associated gonococci increased from 0.8% at 5 min to 17.4% at 60 min. After 60 min the population remained stable until 6 h. PMN challenged with gonococci remained viable over the course of the experiment, and the monolayers remained unchanged over the course of the experiment (data not shown). Since the PMN did not lift off from the coverslips during the experiment, these findings suggest that gonococci were cleared during the first hour after phagocytosis but a subpopulation remained persistent. The presence of serum had no effect on the association of gonococci with PMN (data not shown). Similar studies performed with GFP-expressing E. coli demonstrated rapid loss of GFP-positive organisms within minutes after phagocytosis (data not shown). TEM of PMN challenged with N. gonorrhoeae showed that cell-associated gonococci were internalized and contained within large phagosomes (Fig. 3). TEM of PMN from our system resembled previously published TEM of PMN from urethral exudates taken from men with gonorrhea (1, 10, 24, 25). Phagosomes often contained several gonococci, some intact and undamaged and others that were damaged and lacked a distinct cytoplasm. The undamaged gonococci persisted throughout the 6-h experiment. These images along with counts of cell-associated gonococci by LSCM (Fig. 2C) add further support to the hypothesis that although some gonococci were initially killed and cleared, a subpopulation remained persistent over time.
Intracellular gonococci were recovered from lysed PMN to determine if intracellular GC seen in microscopy experiments were viable (Fig. 4). Intracellular numbers of N. gonorrhoeae strain 1291 decreased to 58.3% in the first 30 min after phagocytosis, indicating that a subpopulation was killed. However, the remaining subpopulation persisted for up to 2 h. E. coli was tested as a control over the same time period and under the same conditions, and 99% were rapidly killed by PMN in this system, demonstrating that the adherent PMN possessed effective bactericidal mechanisms. However, gonococci resisted killing and persisted inside PMN. The presence of serum in the experimental medium had no effect on the phagocytosis or intracellular viability of N. gonorrhoeae but was important for efficient killing of E. coli. The percentages of viable gonococci were calculated relative to CFU at T0. Accurate quantification of phagocytosis was a limitation of the experimental system. LSCM studies demonstrated that >99% of PMN contained associated GC after 5 min, indicating efficient uptake. However, only 3.27% of the input CFU were recovered at T0 (data not shown). This likely results from the combination of large numbers of nonassociated GC that did not associate with PMN and were washed away during the assay, as well as rapid killing in the short time periods after phagocytosis. Therefore, the CFU recovered at T0 were likely an underestimate of actual phagocytosis, but calculation of percent viability relative to T0 was determined to be a more accurate assessment of viability than calculations relative to the initial inoculum. The important point to consider is not the actual percentages but that a subpopulation resisted killing and remained persistent. Viable counts were performed on PMN challenged with gonococci over 6 h, with an increase of approximately sixfold from 1 to 6 h (Fig. 4B). Analysis of TEM samples at 6 h showed that PMN remained intact and were undamaged despite the increasing numbers of intracellular gonococci. These results suggest that the subpopulation of gonococci that resisted killing were able to replicate within PMN over time. We tested three different strains of N. gonorrhoeae (FA1090, F62, and PID2) for comparison to strain 1291 (Fig. 5). Each of these strains resisted killing and persisted during the 2-h experiment. Taken together, these results suggest that although killing of N. gonorrhoeae occurred, a subpopulation remained persistent and replicated within PMN over time.
The fate of N. gonorrhoeae within PMN has been a focus of study for many years. The work presented in this study demonstrates that N. gonorrhoeae resists killing of adherent PMN and replicates in the intracellular environment. These results also suggest that the oxidative killing mechanisms are ineffective against gonococci, since gonococci survived in the presence of intracellular release of ROS. This is consistent with previous reports that oxidative mechanisms are ineffective against N. gonorrhoeae (4, 31). Several studies have demonstrated that gonococci possess an array of factors important for resistance to ROS (34-37, 41, 42). The ability of gonococci to resist killing by adherent PMN is important, because PMN are most responsive when adherent to surfaces (23) and exhibit increased phagocytosis after transmigration (16). Since the PMN present in urethral exudates have migrated from the blood during the inflammatory process, our findings suggest that N. gonorrhoeae is able to resist PMN killing within the host. Several studies have suggested N. gonorrhoeae survives within PMN (5, 6, 26-29, 43, 44, 46, 47). Our results also agree with previous findings examining the interactions of gonococci with PMN monolayers (4). The ability of N. gonorrhoeae to resist killing and replicate within PMN is important in the pathogenesis of gonorrhea. Large numbers of PMN are present during gonococcal urethritis, and many of these PMN contain several ingested gonococci. The work presented here suggests that these ingested gonococci remain viable and replicate in PMN phagosomes with time. This helps to explain why gonorrhea can persist for weeks to months despite the large numbers of PMN present at the infection site. The concept of ingested N. gonorrhoeae replicating within PMN also presents an attractive model for how gonococcal infection may propagate and be transmitted between sexual partners. Future work needs to address how N. gonorrhoeae virulence factors modulate PMN functions to resist killing as well as the effects of intracellular replication on PMN viability.
We thank Jian Shao for his contribution to the TEM component of these studies.
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