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Infection and Immunity, May 2007, p. 2325-2332, Vol. 75, No. 5
0019-9567/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.01404-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

School of Optometry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720,1 Vision Science Program, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720,2 Graduate Groups in Microbiology and Infectious Disease, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720,3 College of Pharmacy, Touro University-California, Vallejo, California 945924
Received 31 August 2006/ Returned for modification 9 November 2006/ Accepted 12 February 2007
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We have shown previously that corneal epithelial cells in vitro are vulnerable to invasion by P. aeruginosa and to the type III secretion-dependent cytotoxicity of P. aeruginosa, irrespective of whether they are in cell culture or on the surface of whole eyeballs (5, 7, 10). Thus, we have been working toward understanding differences between in vivo and in vitro environments that determine resistance in the former environment and susceptibility in the latter environment. Through these efforts we found that human tear fluid could protect cells in vitro against both invasion by P. aeruginosa and cytotoxicity of P. aeruginosa in vitro and that the mechanism was independent of tear bacteriostatic activity (6). While these findings suggested that tear fluid is a critical in vivo defense against ocular surface infection, in vivo studies to show this directly have not been done previously.
To study the role of tear fluid in vivo, we examined whether human tear fluid could protect against P. aeruginosa corneal infection in mice. Two in vivo models were used; in the murine scarification model the epithelial surface is scratched to allow bacteria direct access into the underlying stromal tissue (21), and in the 6-h-healing model scratch-injured corneas are allowed to re-epithelialize for 6 h before inoculation with bacteria (13). To better understand the results obtained with the 6-h-healing model, in which bacteria must penetrate through the epithelium to cause disease, we used an in vitro model system to determine tear fluid effects on the epithelial barrier function and on the efficiency with which bacteria translocate across the corneal epithelium.
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Bacterial strains and preparation of inocula.
Experiments were performed with two corneal isolates of P. aeruginosa; strain 6206 (serogroup O11) expresses the toxin ExoU and is thus acutely cytotoxic for mammalian cells (5, 10), and strain 6294 (serogroup O6) efficiently invades mammalian cells (5, 10). The other strains used included strain 19660 (serogroup O2) and strain PAK (serogroup O1), which are cytotoxic and invasive, respectively (10). Bacterial inocula were stored in 20% glycerol stocks at 80°C. Bacteria were inoculated onto Trypticase soy agar plates and incubated overnight at 37°C. Cultures were then suspended in Eagle's minimal essential medium with Hanks salts and L-glutamine (Sigma, St Louis, MO) buffered with 1 M HEPES-NaOH (pH 7.6), 0.35 g of NaHCO3 per liter, and 6 g of bovine serum albumin (Sigma) per liter (MEM). Bacteria were initially prepared at a concentration of
1 x 108 CFU/ml MEM as determined by spectrophotometry (optical density at 650 nm, 0.1). Bacterial suspensions were then diluted with MEM or human tear fluid to obtain the concentrations required. Bacterial numbers were confirmed by viable counting. For translocation assays, Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) was used instead of MEM.
Murine corneal infection models and bacterial colonization.
The scarification (12, 21) and 6-h-healing (13) murine models of infection described previously were used. Briefly, C57BL/6 female mice (5 to 7 weeks old) were anesthetized by intraperitoneal inoculation of an anesthetic cocktail (21 mg/ml ketamine, 2.4 mg/ml xylazine, 0.3 mg/ml acepromazine). The eyes were checked for corneal clarity using a stereomicroscope prior to initiation of the experiments. Three parallel scratches (length,
1 mm) were made on the left cornea of each animal using a sterile 25 5/8-gauge needle. One group of mice was inoculated immediately after the corneas were scratched, while another group was inoculated after the corneas were allowed to heal for 6 h. Scratched eyes or eyes that had healed for 6 h were topically inoculated with bacterial suspensions containing 103, 104, 105, or 106 CFU either in 5 µl of MEM (control) or in 5 µl of whole human tear fluid diluted 1:2 with MEM. Five mice were assigned to each treatment group. The animals were observed daily, and the severity of disease was graded in a masked fashion by the same observer after 24 and 48 h or in some instances after 4 and 7 days, using the following grading system (3): 0, eye macroscopically identical to the uninfected contralateral control eye; 1, faint opacity partially covering the pupil; 2, dense opacity covering the pupil; 3, dense opacity covering the entire anterior segment; and 4, perforation of cornea and/or phthisis bulbi (shrinkage of the eyeball following inflammatory disease). In some instances, the disease was assessed as being halfway between defined grades and therefore was assigned a "half-grade" (e.g., 2.5). To assess bacterial colonization, mice were euthanized, and infected eyes then immediately enucleated and homogenized in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (1 ml). Viable counts were the determined for the homogenates. In other experiments, mice were sacrificed 1 or 4 h after infection to determine the effect of tear fluid on early bacterial colonization. In this case, the corneas were not graded. All procedures were conducted in accordance with the policies established by the Association for the Research in Vision and Ophthalmology and were approved by the University of California, Berkeley Animal Care and Use Committee.
Bacterial translocation assay. Rabbit corneal epithelial cells were cultured on Transwell filter membranes (pore size, 3 µm; diameter, 12 mm; Corning Life Sciences, Acton, MA) as previously described (5). Confluence of epithelial monolayers was confirmed by measuring the transepithelial resistance (TER) using an epithelial voltohmmeter (EVOM; World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL). Prior to infection, cells were washed once with HBSS (1 ml in the upper and lower chambers). One well was treated with EGTA (5 mM) for 15 min prior to washing as a negative control for TER. Cells were infected on the apical surface (upper chamber) with 0.5 ml of a bacterial suspension containing 106 CFU/ml in HBSS or whole tear fluid. Sterile HBSS (2 ml) was added to the lower chamber, and the preparation was incubated at 37°C for 6 h. Each hour, the TER was measured, and viable counts were determined for the upper and lower chambers.
Bacterial association assay.
Rabbit corneal epithelial cells were cultured on filters as described above for the translocation assay. After washing with PBS (0.5 ml), the apical surface of cells was inoculated with 200 µl of a bacterial suspension containing
106 CFU bacteria/ml of MEM or whole tear fluid. MEM (1 ml) was added to the lower (basal) chamber and incubated at 37°C for 30 min to 3 h depending on the strain. The filters were then washed three times with PBS before careful excision with sterile scissors. The filters were then homogenized in PBS (1 ml) containing Triton X-100 (0.25%, vol/vol), and the numbers of viable (associated) bacteria were determined by viable counting.
Statistical analysis. Data were expressed as means and standard deviations, and the statistical significance of differences between groups was determined by using Student's t test and analysis of variance (ANOVA). Differences in disease severity scores or other nonparametric data were compared using the Mann-Whitney test. P values of <0.05 were considered significant.
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TABLE 1. Ocular disease severity scores for the scarification and 6-h-healing murine models of P. aeruginosa keratitis after inoculation with 1 x 103 CFU strain 6206 in 5 µl of MEM (control) or human tear fluid (diluted 1:2 in MEM)a
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FIG. 1. P. aeruginosa keratitis at 48 h postinoculation with cytotoxic strain 6206 using the 6-h-healing murine model of infection. (A and C) Controls. Bacteria were added in MEM. (B and D) Effect of human tear fluid. Bacteria were added in tears (diluted 1:2 in MEM). (A and B) Inoculum, 1 x 103 CFU in 5 µl. (C and D) Inoculum, 1 x 104 CFU in 5 µl.
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FIG. 2. Effect of human tear fluid on 48-h corneal colonization rates (means and standard deviations). The scarification infection model and the 6-h-healing infection model were both used, and cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strain 6206 was added to the cornea at a concentration of 1 x 103 CFU in 5 µl of MEM (control) or human tear fluid (diluted 1:2 in MEM).
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Tear fluid was also found to protect corneas against invasive P. aeruginosa. Table 2 shows the results of an experiment in which we used the healing model with invasive strain 6294 and inocula containing 103 and 104 CFU in 5 µl MEM. Similar to the protection seen with the cytotoxic clinical isolate, protection against the invasive clinical isolate was accompanied by significant reductions in bacterial colonization. For example, with an inoculum of 104 CFU, the median level of colonization of control eyes at 48 h was 42,500 CFU (lower quartile, 590 CFU; upper quartile, 440,000 CFU), compared to tear fluid-treated eyes, for which four of five mice showed no colonization (one mouse cornea yielded 10 CFU) (P = 0.007, as determined by the Mann-Whitney test).
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Ocular disease severity scores for the 6-h-healing murine model of P. aeruginosa keratitis after inoculation with 1 x 103 or 1 x 104 CFU of strain 6294 in 5 µl of MEM (control) or human tear fluid (diluted 1:2 in MEM)a
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10-fold compared to the colonization of control untreated corneas. By 4 h, there were even fewer viable bacteria colonizing treated eyes. In contrast, the colonization had increased substantially (
2-fold) in control untreated eyes by 4 h (P < 0.05, as determined by ANOVA).
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FIG. 3. Effect of human tear fluid on 1- and 4-h corneal colonization rates (means and standard deviations). The 6-h-healing infection model was used, and cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strain 6206 was added at a concentration of 7 x 104 CFU in 5 µl in either MEM (control) or human tear fluid (diluted 1:2 in MEM). There was a significant difference between the groups (P = 0.0001, as determined by ANOVA). The asterisks indicate that Fisher PLSD and Scheffe F-test posthoc analysis showed that there was a significant difference between tear fluid-treated eyes and controls at each time (P < 0.05).
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Tear fluid was found to reduce adherence of P. aeruginosa to cultured corneal epithelial cells in vitro. Since cytotoxic strains kill cells and since P. aeruginosa is known to adhere avidly to cells that are already dead or dying, we expected that tear fluid would inhibit adhesion at later times because it protects against cytotoxic activity. Accordingly, a shorter 30-min assay was used to study tear effects on the adhesion of cytotoxic strain 6206. Even at this very early time, the adhesion of cytotoxic strain 6206 was reduced by tear fluid from 2,400 ± 819 CFU (control) to 983 ± 115 CFU (tear fluid) (P = 0.046, as determined by a t test).
At 1 h, tear fluid had no significant effect on the adhesion of invasive strain 6294 (association control value, 43,700 ± 9,460 CFU; value with tear fluid, 36,000 ± 19,500 CFU; P = 0.558, as determined by a t test). However, by 3 h the level of adhesion was reduced from 632,000 ± 112,000 CFU to 57,300 ± 21,800 CFU (P = 0.0009, as determined by a t test).
The mechanism for reduced adherence of the strains to corneal epithelial cells is not directly related to the bacteriostatic activity of tears; invasive strain 6294 is not susceptible (6), and although the susceptibility of cytotoxic strain 6206 to tear fluid bacteriostatic activity is evident at 3 h (6), it is not observed after 2 h of exposure. For example, in the present study, the viable counts for strain 6206 from the upper chamber (above the cells) after 2 h in a translocation assay were not significantly different (mean ± standard deviation) for control samples (1.19 x 106 ± 2.55 x 105 CFU/ml) and tear fluid-treated samples (8.38 x 105 ± 5.30 x 104 CFU/ml) (P = 0.198, as determined by a t test). After 3 h, however, there was a significant difference (bacteriostatic activity) between control samples (3.45 x 106 ± 1.41 x 105 CFU/ml) and tear fluid-treated samples (7.7 x 105 ± 1.56 x 105 CFU/ml) (P = 0.003, as determined by a t test).
Tear fluid reduces P. aeruginosa translocation across corneal epithelia in vitro.
Our previous research showed that the 6-h-healing model allows re-epithelialization after scratching. One possible explanation for why better protection was observed in the healing infection model than in the scratch infection model is that tears inhibited the ability of bacteria to penetrate the corneal epithelium. To examine this possibility, an assay system was used to study tear effects on bacterial translocation across the corneal epithelium in vitro. P. aeruginosa strain 6206 was found to readily translocate across corneal epithelial cells in this assay over a 6-h period when it was added without tear fluid in MEM. With tear fluid, the bacterial translocation rates were significantly reduced. By 2 h
45-fold fewer bacteria had translocated across epithelial cells when they were added with tear fluid, and the protective effect increased to
650-fold by 5 and 6 h (Fig. 4A).
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FIG. 4. Translocation of P. aeruginosa strains 6206 (A) and 6294 (B) across cultured rabbit corneal epithelial cells grown in vitro on Transwell filter membranes. The viable bacterial counts (means ± standard deviations) in the lower (basal) compartment were determined each hour after bacteria were added to the apical surface in HBSS (control) or with undiluted human tear fluid. The asterisks indicate that for strain 6206 significantly less translocation was observed with tear-treated samples than with controls at 5 h (P = 0.027, as determined by a t test) and at 6 h (P = 0.0006, as determined by a t test) and that similar results were obtained for strain 6294 at 5 h (P = 0.049, as determined by a t test) and at 6 h (P = 0.0009, as determined by a t test).
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Tear fluid increases TER with and without bacterial exposure. Our previous studies showed than tear fluid inhibited epithelial cell invasion by bacteria, and this could contribute to the mechanism by which tears prevent invasive strain translocation across corneal epithelial cells. To determine whether effects on the epithelial barrier function also contributed, we examined the effects of tear fluid on the TER of corneal epithelial cells in the translocation assay system.
Tear fluid increased the TER of both infected and uninfected cells (Fig. 5A). This increase in barrier function upon addition of tears was observed at early times and throughout the 6-h assay. When invasive strain 6294 was used to infect cells, the TER was even greater than the TER observed when tear fluid alone was added, showing that there was synergy between the effects of tears and the effects of bacteria on TER. Interestingly, the same bacteria added alone (i.e., without tears) did not increase the TER above baseline level for uninfected cells. In the presence of 6294, the tear fluid resulted in a significant increase in the TER compared to the TER for cells infected with bacteria in HBSS (Fig. 5A).
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FIG. 5. TER (means ± standard deviations) across cultured rabbit corneal epithelial cells in vitro in the presence of the invasive P. aeruginosa strain 6294 (A) or the cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strains 6206 (B) and 19660 (C) with and without undiluted human tear fluid. The asterisk indicates that in cells infected with 6294, tear fluid significantly increased the TER compared to the TER observed with cells infected with bacteria in HBSS alone (P = 0.0006 at inoculation and P = 0.0001 at each time from 1 to 6 h, as determined by a t test).
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The greater protection against P. aeruginosa keratitis by tear fluid in the 6-h-healing model than in the scarification model may be related to the presence of a regenerating corneal epithelium in the 6-h-healing model and its potential to prevent bacterial access to the underlying stroma (13). This hypothesis is supported by in vitro data obtained in the present study showing that tear fluid could inhibit both invasive and cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strains from crossing a corneal epithelial layer.
Several mechanisms could contribute to tear fluid inhibition of bacterial epithelial translocation in vitro. First, the ability of tear fluid to reduce P. aeruginosa invasion and cytotoxicity in vitro (6) reduces translocation via intracellular pathways and due to epithelial breakdown, respectively (2, 11). Second, inhibition of translocation by tear fluid was accompanied by an increase in TER, suggesting that increased barrier function is part of the mechanism for protection. Since TER reflects, in part, the integrity of the epithelial tight junctions, tear fluid-mediated increases in TER could reduce bacterial access to epithelial basolateral surfaces, thereby reducing translocation via a paracellular route. Reduced access to basolateral surfaces may also contribute to tear-mediated reductions in P. aeruginosa invasion and cytotoxicity that we have reported previously (5). Third, tear fluid-mediated loss of swimming motility and/or bacterial chain formation, which we also reported previously (6), might affect the epithelial translocation of P. aeruginosa irrespective of whether intracellular or paracellular pathways are taken by the bacteria. Fourth, tear fluid-mediated reductions in bacterial association (adherence) with cells may also contribute to reductions in translocation.
The data obtained in this study and in our previous studies show that the efficiency with which tear fluid protects against disease in vivo and against adherence, invasion, cytotoxicity, and translocation in vitro does not correlate with the level of bacteriostatic activity against specific strains when in vitro tests are performed. However, antimicrobial activity could still contribute to tear fluid protection against P. aeruginosa keratitis in vivo; i.e., both tear fluid-derived antimicrobial factors and endogenous antimicrobial factors triggered or activated by exposure to exogenous tear fluid could contribute to protection against bacterium-induced pathology by tears. The factors known to be in tears and/or known to be made by the ocular surface that have been shown to modify the behavior of P. aeruginosa include immunoglobulin A, defensins, mucins, and surfactant protein D (16-18, 20).
Why would tears prevent infection in mice that can make their own tear fluid? In previous in vitro studies we showed that tear fluid protection against bacterially induced invasion or cytotoxicity is highly susceptible to inactivation upon dilution of the tear fluid (6). Indeed, when there is threefold dilution, the protective activity of human tear fluid is completely abolished. In mouse corneal infection models, a large drop of medium relative to the volume of endogenous tears is added to the ocular surface during inoculation. It is quite possible that the mouse corneal infection models used by us and other workers to study P. aeruginosa require dilution of mouse tear fluid and not just corneal scarification to create susceptibility. When we use human tear fluid for suspending the inoculum, we might restore critical defenses that are otherwise diluted away during inoculation.
Larger inocula were found to overwhelm the protective activity of tear fluid. Our previous in vitro studies showed that when tears were exposed to bacteria for extended periods, protective activity was lost (6). Crossover studies of spent bacteria and spent tear fluid showed that changes in the tear fluid and not in the bacteria had occurred. P. aeruginosa produces a large array of virulence factors, including proteases and phospholipases, with the potential to break down molecular factors found in tear fluid. Whether endogenous tear fluid is overwhelmed by a large inoculum in the same way that tears mixed with bacteria prior to addition to the eye are overwhelmed has not been determined.
Our interest in exploring tear fluid as a defense was originally ignited when we found that cytotoxic P. aeruginosa could damage intact corneas on eyeballs that had been removed from the in vivo environment (7). Data obtained in this study support our hypothesis that tear fluid plays a critical role in defense against infection and that tear interactions with the epithelium are involved. Dilution of tear fluid or long-term exposure of tear fluid to bacteria reduces its ability to protect cells in vitro against bacteria, and in vivo we observed less protection with larger inocula of bacteria. These data suggest mechanisms by which contact lens wear, the most common predisposing factor for P. aeruginosa infection of the cornea, might compromise tear fluid defense mechanisms. These mechanisms include microenvironmentally induced changes in tear biochemistry under the lens as a result of compromising tear flow or exchange, alterations in the production or postproduction modification of ocular surface-derived tear components in that microenvironment, growth of bacterial biofilms on or under a lens, and the dilution of tears by addition of contact lens care packaging and care solutions to the eye.
It is interesting that tear fluid is more effective in protecting the cornea against disease if the epithelium is given time to cover the exposed stroma after scratching (6-h-healing model) (13). Together with the results of in vitro experiments described here and elsewhere (6), this suggests that the mechanism for in vivo protection by tear fluid involves the epithelium. This might be related to why corneal injury can predispose eyes to infection in the absence of factors with the potential to alter ocular surface biochemistry (e.g., contact lens wear or dry eye).
In addition to clarifying our understanding of factors that predispose eyes to infection, research in this area might provide new strategies for preventing infection. These strategies could include modifications to lens materials, designs, or modes of wear aimed at reducing disruption of critical tear factors that have been identified, or they could involve restoring the factors found to be compromised.
The corneal surface is arguably the human mucosal surface that is most exposed to a daily barrage of potential pathogens and other types of insult. It is also the least able to tolerate infection, since even a small scar at the center of the cornea can cause loss of vision. Yet the cornea lacks various features used by other tissues to defend against infection because it must be transparent; e.g., it lacks blood vessels and is immune privileged. The mechanism(s) by which its exquisite resistance is maintained in the face of these limitations is not well understood. The results of this study and previous data showing that
50% of P. aeruginosa isolates can grow effectively in human tear fluid (6) suggest that there is much more to this story than tear bacteriostatic activity, but that it does involve tear fluid. Research in this area has the potential to lead to new biocompatible approaches for preventing infection of the eye and of other sites.
Published ahead of print on 26 February 2007. ![]()
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