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Infection and Immunity, August 2007, p. 3802-3811, Vol. 75, No. 8
0019-9567/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.00419-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Christoph A. Jacobi,
Sandra Freund,
Katy Niedung,
Alexandra Bach,
Jürgen Heesemann, and
Konrad Trülzsch*
Max von Pettenkofer Institute for Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Ludwig Maximillians University, D-80336 Munich, Germany
Received 21 March 2007/ Returned for modification 7 May 2007/ Accepted 25 May 2007
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The invasion of PPs is made possible by the expression of several nonfimbrial adhesins, such as invasin (Inv) and possibly Yersinia adhesin A (YadA), that can potentially interact with ß1 integrins and may mediate adherence to and the invasion of M cells (reviewed in references 15 and 17). Inv directly interacts with ß1 integrins of host cells (18, 22), whereas YadA interacts with extracellular matrix proteins such as collagen and fibronectin as well as host cell integrins by extracellular matrix bridging (9, 16). M cells but not enterocytes express ß1 integrins on their apical surfaces (5). Therefore, the invasion of PPs is believed to occur via M cells overlying the follicle-associated epithelium. In vivo, Inv is the predominant invasion factor of Yersinia and has been shown to be essential for the early invasion of PPs in the mouse oral infection model (23, 27). Inv of Y. pseudotuberculosis is composed of five globular domains (D1 to D5) that protrude 18 nm from the bacterial surface (11). Inv of Y. enterocolitica is missing the D2 self-association domain. The two C-terminal surface-exposed domains of Inv form an adhesion unit that is responsible for high-affinity interaction with ß1 integrins.
The supposed preferential invasion of M cells by Y. pseudotuberculosis is supported by detailed microscopic evidence (6). M cells were frequently found to carry multiple adherent and invading yersiniae in the mouse ligated gut loop model, suggesting the translocation of many bacteria to the submucosal tissue (5). After translocation across the mucosal barrier by M cells, yersiniae disseminate from PPs to mesenteric lymph nodes (10, 13, 32). Further dissemination to the spleen and liver probably does not occur via PPs and lymph nodes. It was recently shown that organized intestinal lymphoid tissue is dispensable for the dissemination of Y. enterocolitica to internal organs (12), and Y. pseudotuberculosis colonization of the spleen and liver was shown to be derived from the gut lumen but not mesenteric lymph nodes (2). The precise mechanism of dissemination from the gut lumen to the liver and spleen is, however, obscure at present. Initially, microabscesses formed by Y. enterocolitica in livers and spleens of mice consist primarily of neutrophils (1, 4). During later stages of mouse infection, lesions are populated by mononuclear cells and exhibit a granulomatous character (1). In the present work, we have studied abscess formation in the mouse oral infection model by using yersiniae that express either red fluorescent protein (RFP) or green fluorescent protein (GFP). We were able to show that Y. enterocolitica infection of mice leads to monoclonal microcolony formation in PPs, spleens, and livers. Furthermore, we present evidence for the clonal invasion of PPs from the gut lumen and demonstrate that both Yersinia and the host contribute to this phenomenon.
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Oral infection of mice.
Six- to 8-week-old female BALB/c mice (Harlan Winkelmann) or oxidative-burst-deficient p47phox–/– mice (19) were kept under specific-pathogen-free conditions (in a positive-pressure cabinet) and were provided with food and water ad libitum. Mice were infected orally with yersiniae from frozen stock suspensions. These suspensions were prepared by growing bacteria to stationary phase in LB medium at 27°C and freezing the bacteria in 15% glycerol at –80°C. After appropriate dilutions, bacteria were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline and mice were fed 15 µl by using a microliter pipette. Mice were subjected to fasting for 16 h prior to the oral infection. The actual administered dose was determined by plating serial dilutions onto Mueller-Hinton agar for 36 h at 27°C. Mice were sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation, and SIs, PPs, spleens, and livers were aseptically removed. The levels of colonization of mouse organs and small intestinal lumina were determined as described previously (33). All mouse experiments were approved by government authorities (Regierung von Oberbayern). The statistical significance of data was evaluated with an unpaired two-tailed Student t test for quantitative data on microcolonies. A two-tailed Mann-Whitney test was used for colonization (CFU) data. P of
0.05 was considered significant.
Depletion of granulocytes. To deplete mice of granulocytes, 0.25 mg of monoclonal antibody (MAb) RB6-8C5 (BD Pharmingen) was injected intraperitoneally 1 day before oral Yersinia infection as described previously (7). Control mice were injected with normal rat immunoglobulin G (Sigma). The depletion of granulocytes was verified by determining the total leukocyte count in tail vein blood and by determining differential leukocyte counts in smears of whole blood stained according to the method of Pappenheim (16a). To verify the depletion of granulocytes in PPs, RB6-8C5-treated and control mice were infected with 109 yersiniae. Three days after oral infection, cryosections of PPs were immunostained with rat anti-mouse Ly6C/G antibody (Caltag Laboratories) and observed under a fluorescence microscope.
Cryosection preparation, immunohistochemical staining, and fluorescence microscopy. All visible PPs and the liver and spleen from each mouse were embedded in Tissue-Tek (Sakura Finetek) and shock frozen in liquid nitrogen. Cryosections of 10 µm in thickness were prepared using a Leica cryomicrotome CM3050. These sections were mounted on SuperFrostPlus slides (Menzel) and covered with Fluoprep (Biomerieux) and a coverslip. Some cryosections were stained with 1 µg/ml DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole; Sigma-Aldrich) or immunostained with rat anti-mouse Ly6C/G antibody (Caltag Laboratories). Immunostaining was performed as described previously (25). For the detection of yersiniae by immunofluorescence, cryosections were fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde and incubated for 30 min in 2% bovine serum albumin to block nonspecific binding. Bacteria were stained with a primary monoclonal YadA antibody and a fluorescein isothiocyanate- or tetramethyl rhodamine isocyanate-labeled secondary antibody as previously described (20). Composite images of PPs, livers, and spleens were automatically assembled using a motorized Olympus BX61 fluorescence microscope with analysis software (Olympus Soft Imaging System). For the quantitative analysis of microcolonies in PPs, all visible PPs were harvested and completely sectioned. Every 50 µm, a 10-µm section was saved for analysis. A microcolony was defined as a clustered community of bacteria growing in tissue. Clusters of yersiniae fluorescing the same color, along with smaller satellite clusters of the same color, were assessed as a single microcolony.
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Yersiniae form monoclonal microcolonies in mice. To determine if Yersinia microabscesses in mouse organs originate from a single bacterium (monoclonal) or if microabscess formation requires many yersiniae, we infected female BALB/c mice (6 to 8 weeks old; Harlan Winkelmann) orally with a mixture of equal amounts of Y. enterocolitica expressing GFP and Y. enterocolitica expressing RFP. Mice received a dose of 109 red- and green-fluorescing bacteria and were sacrificed 1, 2, and 5 days p.i. Subsequently, 10-µm cryosections of all PPs, livers, and spleens were prepared (each PP and the organs were completely sectioned), stained with DAPI, and examined under a fluorescence microscope. A microabscess is an area of localized suppurative inflammation produced by the seeding of pyogenic bacteria into tissue. Since we are considering fluorescing bacteria, it is probably more correct to talk about microcolonies than microabscesses, at least for the very early stage of infection. A microcolony would be defined as a clustered community of bacteria growing in tissue. As can be seen in Fig. 1, 2, and 3, microcolonies in PPs, livers, and spleens fluoresced either green or red, indicating clonal origin. Mixed red- and green-fluorescing microcolony populations were not observed in any organ or tissue studied. At 6 and 12 h p.i., we were not able to detect yersiniae or microcolonies in PPs by fluorescence microscopy. At 1 day p.i., microcolonies in PPs were tiny and located close to the dome region (Fig. 1A and B). Over the course of 5 days, microcolonies increased in size and spread over the entire PP, with different monoclonal microcolonies touching but not mixing (Fig. 1A to K). On day 5, microcolonies ulcerating into the gut lumen were seen (Fig. 1I and J). Microcolonies in the PP-free region of the SI were not observed. Interestingly, the numbers of microcolonies seen in each PP were very small (one to four), whereas hundreds of monoclonal microcolonies per 10-µm cross section of the spleen (Fig. 2) and liver (Fig. 3) were seen. These microcolonies were distributed homogeneously throughout the organs, without a preferential location. In addition, we observed approximately the same numbers of red and green microcolonies in each organ, indicating that the reporter proteins did not differentially affect the pathogenesis of yersiniae. Infecting mice via the intraperitoneal or intravenous route with green- and red-fluorescing Yersinia resulted in the same pattern of clonal microcolonies in spleens and livers as that observed after oral infection (data not shown).
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FIG. 1. Typical cryosections (10 µm) of PPs from BALB/c mice infected orally with a mixture of 109 CFU of red- and green-fluorescing Y. enterocolitica. Panel A shows one red-fluorescing monoclonal microcolony (arrow) on day 1 p.i. Panel B shows a magnification of the microcolony seen in panel A. Panels C, E, and G show three consecutive cryosections of a PP on day 2 p.i. Two monoclonal microcolonies in this PP can be seen. Panels D, F, and H show magnifications of the microcolonies seen in panels C, E, and G, respectively. Panel I shows yersiniae supprating into (arrow) the gut lumen on day 5 p.i. Panel J is a magnification of the green-fluorescing microcolony seen in panel I. Panel K shows two large monoclonal microcolonies that are touching but not mixing (arrow) on day 5 p.i. Panel L shows a closeup view of a single green-fluorescing bacterium (arrow) in a typical green-fluorescing monoclonal microcolony.
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FIG. 2. Typical cryosection (10 µm) of the spleen from a BALB/c mouse infected orally with a mixture of 109 CFU of red- and green-fluorescing Y. enterocolitica for 5 days. (A) Hundreds of red- and green-fluorescing monoclonal microcolonies throughout the spleen can be seen. The inset shows a cryosection of an uninfected spleen. A magnification of a typical microcolony is shown in panel B. Bottom panels C and D show single fluorescing bacteria from typical red- and green-fluorescing microcolonies, respectively.
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FIG. 3. Typical cryosection (10 µm) of the liver from a BALB/c mouse infected orally with a mixture of 109 CFU of red- and green-fluorescing Y. enterocolitica for 5 days. (A) Hundreds of red- and green-fluorescing monoclonal microcolonies throughout the liver can be seen. The inset shows a cryosection of an uninfected liver. A magnification of typical microcolonies is shown in panel B. Panel C shows single red-fluorescing bacteria from the red-fluorescing microcolony.
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0.01). These results suggest that a very high initial inoculum is necessary for yersiniae to reach and interact with the M cells overlying PPs in the mouse model and that the invasion of PPs by yersiniae in vivo is a rare event. Furthermore, it was evident that as the infection dose was increased logarithmically from 106 to 109 CFU, the number of monoclonal microcolonies per PP increased only linearly (Fig. 4E). The mean number of monoclonal microcolonies ± the standard deviation per infected PP increased only slightly, from 1.3 ± 0.5 (after infection with 106 CFU) to 2.6 ± 1 (after infection with 109 CFU) microcolonies per infected PP. Even at the high infection dose of 109 CFU, most PPs revealed only between two and four microcolonies. Of course, many yersiniae may have invaded these PPs, with only a few surviving the initial encounter with the innate immune system. If this was the case, we would, however, expect a logarithmic increase in the number of microcolonies per PP with a logarithmically increasing infection dose.
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FIG. 4. Numbers of red ( ) and green () monoclonal microcolonies in PPs of BALB/c mice orally infected with a 1:1 mixture of green- and red-fluorescing yersiniae. Mice were infected with 106 (A), 107 (B), 108 (C), or 109 (D) CFU and were sacrificed 4 days p.i. indicates that no microcolonies were observed in that PP. Data for PPs in sequential order from the stomach (1) to the cecum (10) are shown. The numbers of microcolonies per PP ± the standard deviations, the percentages of colonized PPs per mouse ± the standard deviations, and the numbers of yersiniae colonizing the SI ± the standard deviations after the oral infection of BALB/c mice are shown in panels E, F, and G, respectively. Significantly more microcolonies per PP were observed for mice infected with 108 versus 107 CFU (P < 0.01) and 109 versus 108 CFU (P < 0.01) but not for mice infected with 107 versus 106 CFU (P = 0.21). The increase in percentages of infected PPs per mouse is significant only when comparing infections with 108 versus 107 CFU (P < 0.01) and 109 versus 108 CFU (P < 0.05) but not 107 versus 106 CFU (P = 0.21). Differences in the numbers of colonizing yersiniae in the SI after infection with 107 versus 108 CFU (P < 0.01) and 108 versus 109 CFU (P < 0.01) are significant, but the difference in these numbers after infection with 106 and 107 CFU (P = 0.75) is not.
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FIG. 5. Colonization of the small intestinal lumen by Y. enterocolitica over the course of 5 days. Groups of five BALB/c mice were orally infected with either 109 (A) or 107 (B) yersiniae. The bacterial load in the SI was determined by plating serial dilutions of intestinal lavage specimens and is depicted as the log number of CFU ± the standard deviation. The level of colonization of the SI after infection with 109 CFU was significantly higher than that after infection with 107 CFU on all days tested (P 0.01).
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Yersinia infection in oxidative-burst-deficient p47phox–/– mice. To further support our hypothesis, three oxidative-burst-deficient p47phox–/– mice (19) were orally infected with a mixture of 109 CFU of red- and green-fluorescing yersiniae in equal amounts. Four days postinfection, mice were sacrificed and microcolonies in PPs were analyzed as described above. This experiment revealed a situation similar to that for wild-type mice. A total of 21 PPs were harvested from the three mice. Seventeen PPs showed abscesses and revealed on average 2.12 ± 0.93 monoclonal microcolonies per PP. Three C57BL/6 mice used as controls revealed 2.33 ± 0.76 abscesses per PP (P = 0.77). This result shows that the potential early killing of yersiniae by phagocyte oxidative burst cannot explain the phenomenon of clonal abscess formation in PPs.
Invasin levels in yersiniae recovered from the small intestinal lumen. In vitro, yersiniae are known to express Inv at ambient temperatures but to down-regulate Inv expression at the host temperature of 37°C (26). One obvious bacterial mechanism leading to clonal invasion may therefore be a lack of Inv expression in the small intestinal lumen. If this were the case, the early (Inv-dependent) invasion of PPs by Yersinia would be limited to a short time frame after infection (during which invasin is still present on the bacterial surface). To determine if Inv is expressed in vivo in the SI, 10 mice were infected with 109 yersiniae and 5 mice each were sacrificed on days 2 and 5 p.i. Small intestinal lavage specimens from five mice were pooled and filtered with 5-µm-pore-size Durapore filters (Millipore) to remove particles. Serial dilutions were plated onto CIN selective agar to determine the concentration of yersiniae in the intestinal lavage fluid. In order to detect Inv, Western blotting with 3 x 106 bacteria from frozen stock suspensions was performed using a polyclonal rabbit anti-Inv antibody. As can be seen in Fig. 6, Inv is strongly expressed by stationary-phase yersiniae grown at 27°C in LB medium (those used to infect mice orally) [Fig. 6, lane labeled "WA-C(pYV-kan)"] but is not detectable by Western blotting in bacteria washed from the small intestinal lumina of mice on day 2 [Fig. 6, lane labeled "WA-C(pYV-kan) 2 days p.i."] or day 5 [Fig. 6, lane labeled "WA-C(pYV-kan) 5 days p.i."]. An equivalent amount of intestinal lavage fluid from uninfected mice and an isogenic inv-deficient Y. enterocolitica mutant (30) grown at 27°C were loaded as controls into lanes labeled "SI lavage not infected" and "WA-C(pYV)inv–," respectively. To demonstrate the loading of equal amounts of bacteria, Western blotting with a polyclonal anti-Hsp60 antibody was also performed (21). Hsp60 was chosen since it is expressed by Y. enterocolitica in similar amounts at 27 and 37°C. Therefore, the down-regulation of Inv in the small intestinal lumen may be an important factor contributing to the clonal invasion of PPs.
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FIG. 6. Levels of Y. enterocolitica invasin are strongly reduced in the small intestinal lumen. Western blotting was performed with 3 x 106 CFU of WA-C(pYV) either grown at 27°C in LB medium [WA-C(pYV-kan)] or washed from the SIs of mice 2 days [WA-C(pYV-kan) 2 days p.i.] or 5 days [WA-C(pYV) 5 days p.i.] after oral infection. As a control, an isogenic inv mutant grown at 27°C in LB medium was loaded into one lane [WA-C(pYV-kan)inv–], and a corresponding amount of intestinal lavage fluid from uninfected mice was loaded into another lane (SI lavage not infected). Blotting was performed with rabbit anti-Inv ( Inv) and anti-Hsp60 ( Hsp60) polyclonal antibodies.
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FIG. 7. Numbers of red and green monoclonal microcolonies in PPs of BALB/c mice infected sequentially with green ()- and red ( )-fluorescing Y. enterocolitica. Mice were orally infected with 109 CFU (B) or 107 CFU (E) of green-fluorescing yersiniae followed by infection with 109 red-fluorescing yersiniae 2 days later. Mice were sacrificed on day 4 p.i. Data for PPs in sequential order from the stomach (1) to the cecum (10) are shown. indicates that no microcolonies were observed in that PP. Panels A and D illustrate the infection procedure. Panels C and F show the numbers of red (white bars)- and green (black bars)-fluorescing yersiniae in the lumen of the SI on day 4 after sequential infection and control infection with just red-fluorescing bacteria (no preinfection with green-fluorescing yersiniae). The difference between the numbers of colonizing red bacteria after consecutive infection versus a single infection with just red yersiniae as shown in panel C is significant (P < 0.01), and that shown in panel F is marginally significant (P < 0.05).
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TABLE 1. Microcolonies observed in PPs of mice after primary infection with GFP-expressing yersiniae followed 2 days later by infection with RFP-expressing yersiniae
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TABLE 2. Comparison of levels of PP colonization by Yersinia 2 and 5 days after oral infection of mice
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The main conclusion of this study is that Y. enterocolitica microcolonies in PPs, the liver, and the spleen are monoclonal as evidenced by the fact that individual microcolonies are exclusively single colored after oral infection with a mixture of red- and green-fluorescing bacteria. Two scenarios are conceivable when multiple yersiniae invade a PP or disseminate to the liver and spleen: either multiple bacteria need to associate prior to forming an abscess (Fig. 8A) or single bacteria may be sufficient to initiate abscess formation (Fig. 8B). Here, we demonstrate monoclonal microcolony formation according to the latter scenario (Fig. 8B). Only very few monoclonal microcolonies in any given PP were observed, whereas hundreds of monoclonal microcolonies in cross sections of liver and spleen tissue after 5 days of infection were seen. These results suggest that bacterial dissemination from the gut lumen to the liver and spleen may be much more efficient than the dissemination of bacteria from the gut lumen to PPs. Monoclonal microcolony formation in the liver and spleen may be due to single yersiniae disseminating from the gut lumen to these organs. Single yersiniae may be trapped in the capillary vessels of the liver and spleen, which may subsequently be plugged by the proliferating yersiniae, leading to monoclonal abscess formation. However, it is possible that only very few yersiniae reach the spleen and liver but that these bacteria replicate and disseminate efficiently within the respective organ, as has been suggested for Y. pseudotuberculosis (2). It was demonstrated previously that Y. pseudotuberculosis cells colonizing the spleen and liver are derived from a replicating pool of bacteria in the intestine rather than disseminating via PPs and lymph nodes (2). The number of clones present in the spleen and liver is very small and remains unchanged over time, suggesting the efficient dissemination of Y. pseudotuberculosis within the spleen and liver (2). For Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, it was recently shown that foci of infection in the livers of mice result from the clonal expansion of individual bacteria. Unlike yersiniae, however, salmonellae are located intracellularly. Each focus of infection reaches a critical threshold beyond which bacteria redistribute to uninfected cells, forming new foci (31).
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FIG. 8. Schematic illustration of abscess formation and invasion of PPs. When more than one bacterium invades a PP, either microcolonies can be polyclonal (A) or several monoclonal abscesses can form (B). Here, we showed that monoclonal microcolonies develop according to the diagram in panel B. Furthermore, we showed that the host inhibits the sequential infection of PPs. This inhibition may be due to a local signal induced by Yersinia that shuts off antigen sampling and Yersinia uptake by M cells (C). Invading yersiniae may be eliminated by the activated PP (D). Alternatively, interepithelial dendritic cells may transport yersiniae to the subepithelium (E). Black symbols indicate green-fluorescing bacteria, and white symbols indicate red-fluorescing bacteria. +, no inhibition; –, inhibition.
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Clonal invasion implies that signature-tagged mutagenesis is not a suitable tool to identify attenuated yersiniae in mouse PPs. In fact, a study of the dissemination of signature-tagged Y. pseudotuberculosis mutants in the mouse model previously noted that barriers that limit the number of bacteria that are able to reach the mesenteric lymph nodes and the spleen must exist. Such barriers were considered to be responsible for the failure of signature-tagged mutagenesis to identify attenuated mutants of Y. pseudotuberculosis in mesenteric lymph nodes and the spleen (24). The dissemination of signature-tagged mutants to PPs was, however, not studied.
The clonal invasion of PPs by Y. enterocolitica may reflect a Yersinia-specific characteristic, the host response to Yersinia infection, or a combination of both. Among Yersinia-specific factors, the simplest explanation for clonal invasion would be limited contact between Y. enterocolitica and M cells in the mouse model. Inv is the most important factor for the invasion of PPs (27) and is known to bind ß integrins of M cells (5). From previous in vitro studies, it is known that Inv expression is high at ambient temperatures and down-regulated at the host temperature of 37°C (26). We therefore wondered whether yersiniae also down-regulate Inv in the gut lumen after oral infection. Here, we demonstrated by Western blotting that this is the case. The lack of Inv on the surface of Y. enterocolitica in the SI obviously restricts early (Inv-dependent) bacterial invasion to a short time period after oral uptake (when Inv is still present on the bacterial surface). Inv expression by Y. enterocolitica in only the PPs of mice was previously demonstrated, but the SI lumen was not studied at this time (29). Another explanation for clonal invasion may be that Yersinia actively prevents the invasion of PPs by injecting type III secretion system-dependent Yops into M cells, thereby paralyzing these cells and preventing Yersinia uptake. To gain some insight into this possibility, we performed coinfection experiments with RFP- and GFP-harboring YopH, YopO, YopP, YopE, YopM, YopT, and YopQ mutants (33). These experiments revealed numbers of monoclonal microcolonies per PP similar to those seen with wild-type yersiniae (our unpublished results). Besides several conceivable Yersinia-specific factors, the host response to infection may limit Yersinia invasion of PPs. To look into this possibility and to determine if Y. enterocolitica was able to invade and form microcolonies in previously infected PPs, we performed sequential infection experiments by orally inoculating mice with green-fluorescing yersiniae followed by red-fluorescing yersiniae 2 days later. These experiments revealed that yersiniae orally inoculated into mice 2 days after a primary Yersinia infection preferentially invaded those PPs that did not initially develop abscesses. The freshly inoculated yersiniae of the successive infection were invasion competent since they invaded and replicated in naïve PPs, but they showed a severely reduced ability to establish microcolonies in previously infected PPs. This finding indicates that the host severely limits the sequential infection of PPs and is obviously one important reason why only very few monoclonal microcolonies are seen in a certain PP after infection with a high bacterial dose (Fig. 8C and D). Granulocytes were not responsible for limiting the sequential infection of PPs. Presumably, PPs are permissive of invasion by multiple yersiniae only if they are invaded concomitantly. This hypothesis is supported by the results of the experiment demonstrating that at logarithmically increasing infection doses the number of microcolonies per PP increases only linearly. Possibly, a signal generated locally in a certain PP shuts off antigen sampling and Yersinia uptake by M cells of that PP only (Fig. 8C). Alternatively, it is possible that further yersiniae invade PPs but are rapidly eliminated by the "activated" PP (Fig. 8D). Very rarely were PPs in which abscesses had previously been established invaded and subjected to abscess formation by a subsequent Yersinia infection. Possibly only the invasin-/ß integrin-mediated invasion process is inhibited by the host, with residual invasion taking place by alternate mechanisms such as YadA, Ail (28), or the transport of yersiniae to the subepithelium by interepithelial dendritic cells (Fig. 8E), which has been demonstrated previously for Salmonella (34). Finally, we showed that most PPs develop abscesses early during infection and that further invasion and microcolony formation by yersiniae replicating in the gut lumen are rare events. Furthermore, the number of microcolonies per PP remains constant over time, supporting the finding that the host limits the invasion of previously infected PPs. In summary, we demonstrate monoclonal microcolony formation by Y. enterocolitica in the mouse oral infection model and show that the clonal invasion of PPs is due probably to the host's severe limitation of the sequential infection of PPs and to reduced levels of invasin observed in Y. enterocolitica bacteria recovered from the SI.
We are grateful to Andre Gessner for providing p47phox–/– mice and to Ingo B. Autenrieth for providing invasin antibody.
Published ahead of print on 11 June 2007. ![]()
These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
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