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Infect. Immun., Jun 1995, 2317-2322, Vol 63, No. 6
FD Quinn, RS Weyant, MJ Worley, EH White, EA Utt and EA Ades
Brazilian purpuric fever (BPF) is a fulminant pediatric disease
characterized by fever, with rapid progression to purpura, hypotensive
shock, and death. All known BPF cases have been caused by three clones of
Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius and have occurred in either
Brazil or Australia. Using an immortalized line of human vascular
endothelial cells, we developed an in vitro assay that identifies all known
BPF-causing H. influenzae biogroup aegyptius strains (R. S. Weyant, F. D.
Quinn, E. A. Utt, M. Worley, V. G. George, F. J. Candal, and E. W. Ades, J.
Infect. Dis. 169:430-433, 1994). With multiplicities of infection (MOIs) as
low as one bacterium per 1,000 tissue culture cells, BPF-associated strains
produce a unique cytotoxic effect in which the tissue culture cells detach
and aggregate in large floating masses after 48 h of incubation. In this
study, using a BPF- associated strain and a non-BPF-associated control, we
demonstrated that strains which produce the cytotoxic phenotype were able
to replicate intracellularly whereas non-BPF-associated strains, with MOIs
of > or = 1,000 did not replicate and did not produce the phenotype. We
also showed that this phenotype is not caused by the activity of an
endotoxin or the release of some other compound from the bacterial cell,
since neither gamma irradiation-killed whole BPF clone bacteria nor
bacterial cell fractions at MOIs of > 1,000 produced the cytotoxic
effect. Furthermore, bacteria in numbers equal to MOIs of > 1,000
treated with chloramphenicol did not produce the cytotoxic phenotype,
suggesting a requirement for bacterial protein synthesis. In addition,
viable bacteria separated from the tissue culture monolayer by a 0.2-
micron-pore-size membrane also failed to produce the phenotype. The ability
of the bacterium to invade, replicate, and produce the phenotype appears to
be primarily parasite directed since phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and
eukaryotic protein synthesis inhibitors, including cycloheximide,
cytochalasin D, and methylamine, had no effect on the ability of the
bacterium to invade and cause a cytotoxic response. Understanding the basic
mechanisms involved in this tissue-destructive process should enhance our
knowledge of the general pathogenesis of BPF.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Human microvascular endothelial tissue culture cell model for studying pathogenesis of Brazilian purpuric fever
Emerging Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, USA.
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