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1.
Emerg Infect Dis ; 27(11): 2966-2968, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34463239

ABSTRACT

Although Bordetella hinzii coccobacilli is most commonly identified in respiratory tracts of birds and rodents, this organism has occasionally been isolated in human infections. We describe a case of B. hinzii spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in Missouri, USA. Whole-genome sequencing of blood and peritoneal fluid isolates confirmed B. hinzii infection.


Subject(s)
Bordetella Infections , Bordetella , Peritonitis , Bordetella/genetics , Bordetella Infections/diagnosis , Humans , Missouri , Peritonitis/diagnosis
2.
PLoS Pathog ; 17(1): e1009314, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33513212

ABSTRACT

Type 1 pili have long been considered the major virulence factor enabling colonization of the urinary bladder by uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC). The molecular pathogenesis of pyelonephritis is less well characterized, due to previous limitations in preclinical modeling of kidney infection. Here, we demonstrate in a recently developed mouse model that beyond bladder infection, type 1 pili also are critical for establishment of ascending pyelonephritis. Bacterial mutants lacking the type 1 pilus adhesin (FimH) were unable to establish kidney infection in male C3H/HeN mice. We developed an in vitro model of FimH-dependent UPEC binding to renal collecting duct cells, and performed a CRISPR screen in these cells, identifying desmoglein-2 as a primary renal epithelial receptor for FimH. The mannosylated extracellular domain of human DSG2 bound directly to the lectin domain of FimH in vitro, and introduction of a mutation in the FimH mannose-binding pocket abolished binding to DSG2. In infected C3H/HeN mice, type 1-piliated UPEC and Dsg2 were co-localized within collecting ducts, and administration of mannoside FIM1033, a potent small-molecule inhibitor of FimH, significantly attenuated bacterial loads in pyelonephritis. Our results broaden the biological importance of FimH, specify the first renal FimH receptor, and indicate that FimH-targeted therapeutics will also have application in pyelonephritis.


Subject(s)
Adhesins, Escherichia coli/metabolism , Desmoglein 2/metabolism , Escherichia coli Infections/microbiology , Escherichia coli/pathogenicity , Fimbriae Proteins/metabolism , Pyelonephritis/microbiology , Adhesins, Escherichia coli/genetics , Animals , Desmoglein 2/genetics , Epithelium/microbiology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Female , Fimbriae Proteins/genetics , Fimbriae, Bacterial/genetics , Fimbriae, Bacterial/metabolism , Humans , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C3H , Urinary Bladder/microbiology , Virulence
4.
Kidney Int ; 94(3): 502-513, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30041870

ABSTRACT

Females across their lifespan and certain male populations are susceptible to urinary tract infections (UTI). The influence of female vs. male sex on UTI is incompletely understood, in part because preclinical modeling has been performed almost exclusively in female mice. Here, we employed established and new mouse models of UTI with uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) to investigate androgen influence on UTI pathogenesis. Susceptibility to UPEC UTI in both male and female hosts was potentiated with 5α-dihydrotestosterone, while males with androgen receptor deficiency and androgenized females treated with the androgen receptor antagonist enzalutamide were protected from severe pyelonephritis. In androgenized females and in males, UPEC formed dense intratubular, biofilm-like communities, some of which were sheltered from infiltrating leukocytes by the tubular epithelium and by peritubular fibrosis. Abscesses were nucleated by small intratubular collections of UPEC first visualized at five days postinfection and briskly expanded over the subsequent 24 hours. Male mice deficient in Toll-like receptor 4, which fail to contain UPEC within abscesses, were susceptible to lethal dissemination. Thus, androgen receptor activation imparts susceptibility to severe upper-tract UTI in both female and male murine hosts. Visualization of intratubular UPEC communities illuminates early renal abscess pathogenesis and the role of abscess formation in preventing dissemination of infection. Additionally, our study suggests that androgen modulation may represent a novel therapeutic route to combat recalcitrant or recurrent UTI in a range of patient populations.


Subject(s)
Abscess/pathology , Androgen Receptor Antagonists/pharmacology , Androgens/pharmacology , Kidney Tubules/pathology , Pyelonephritis/pathology , Receptors, Androgen/metabolism , Abscess/microbiology , Androgen Receptor Antagonists/therapeutic use , Animals , Benzamides , Dihydrotestosterone/pharmacology , Disease Models, Animal , Disease Susceptibility/microbiology , Disease Susceptibility/pathology , Escherichia coli Infections/drug therapy , Escherichia coli Infections/microbiology , Escherichia coli Infections/pathology , Female , Humans , Kidney Tubules/drug effects , Kidney Tubules/microbiology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Nitriles , Phenylthiohydantoin/analogs & derivatives , Phenylthiohydantoin/pharmacology , Phenylthiohydantoin/therapeutic use , Pyelonephritis/drug therapy , Pyelonephritis/microbiology , Sex Factors , Toll-Like Receptor 4/genetics , Toll-Like Receptor 4/metabolism , Treatment Outcome , Urinary Tract Infections/drug therapy , Urinary Tract Infections/microbiology , Urinary Tract Infections/pathology , Uropathogenic Escherichia coli/pathogenicity
5.
Dis Model Mech ; 10(11): 1371-1379, 2017 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28882930

ABSTRACT

We present a new preclinical model to study treatment, resolution and sequelae of severe ascending pyelonephritis. Urinary tract infection (UTI), primarily caused by uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), is a common disease in children. Severe pyelonephritis is the primary cause of acquired renal scarring in childhood, which may eventually lead to hypertension and chronic kidney disease in a small but important fraction of patients. Preclinical modeling of UTI utilizes almost exclusively females, which (in most mouse strains) exhibit inherent resistance to severe ascending kidney infection; consequently, no existing preclinical model has assessed the consequences of recovery from pyelonephritis following antibiotic treatment. We recently published a novel mini-surgical bladder inoculation technique, with which male C3H/HeN mice develop robust ascending pyelonephritis, highly prevalent renal abscesses and evidence of fibrosis. Here, we devised and optimized an antibiotic treatment strategy within this male model to more closely reflect the clinical course of pyelonephritis. A 5-day ceftriaxone regimen initiated at the onset of abscess development achieved resolution of bladder and kidney infection. A minority of treated mice displayed persistent histological abscess at the end of treatment, despite microbiological cure of pyelonephritis; a matching fraction of mice 1 month later exhibited renal scars featuring fibrosis and ongoing inflammatory infiltrates. Successful antibiotic treatment preserved renal function in almost all infected mice, as assessed by biochemical markers 1 and 5 months post-treatment; hydronephrosis was observed as a late effect of treated pyelonephritis. An occasional mouse developed chronic kidney disease, generally reflecting the incidence of this late sequela in humans. In total, this model offers a platform to study the molecular pathogenesis of pyelonephritis, response to antibiotic therapy and emergence of sequelae, including fibrosis and renal scarring. Future studies in this system may inform adjunctive therapies that may reduce the long-term complications of this very common bacterial infection.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Cicatrix/drug therapy , Kidney Function Tests , Kidney/pathology , Kidney/physiopathology , Pyelonephritis/drug therapy , Abscess/complications , Abscess/drug therapy , Abscess/pathology , Animals , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Ceftriaxone/pharmacology , Ceftriaxone/therapeutic use , Cicatrix/complications , Cicatrix/pathology , Cicatrix/physiopathology , Humans , Hydronephrosis/complications , Hydronephrosis/drug therapy , Inflammation/complications , Inflammation/drug therapy , Inflammation/pathology , Kidney/drug effects , Male , Mice, Inbred C3H , Pyelonephritis/complications , Pyelonephritis/microbiology , Pyelonephritis/pathology , Treatment Outcome
6.
Pathogens ; 5(1)2016 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26742078

ABSTRACT

Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) cause the majority of community-onset urinary tract infections (UTI) and represent a major etiologic agent of healthcare-associated UTI. Introduction of UPEC into the mammalian urinary tract evokes a well-described inflammatory response, comprising pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines as well as cellular elements (neutrophils and macrophages). In human UTI, this inflammatory response contributes to symptomatology and provides means for diagnosis by standard clinical testing. Early in acute cystitis, as demonstrated in murine models, UPEC gains access to an intracellular niche that protects a population of replicating bacteria from arriving phagocytes. To ensure the establishment of this protected niche, UPEC employ multiple strategies to attenuate and delay the initiation of host inflammatory components, including epithelial secretion of chemoattractants. Recent work has also revealed novel mechanisms by which UPEC blunts neutrophil migration across infected uroepithelium. Taken together, these attributes distinguish UPEC from commensal and nonpathogenic E. coli strains. This review highlights the unique immune evasion and suppression strategies of this bacterial pathogen and offers directions for further study; molecular understanding of these mechanisms will inform the development of adjunctive, anti-virulence therapeutics for UTI.

7.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 27(6): 1625-34, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26449605

ABSTRACT

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) occur predominantly in females but also affect substantial male patient populations; indeed, morbidity in complicated UTI is higher in males. Because of technical obstacles, preclinical modeling of UTI in male mice has been limited. We devised a minimally invasive surgical bladder inoculation technique that yields reproducible upper and lower UTI in both male and female mice, enabling studies of sex differences in these infections. Acute uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) cystitis in C57BL/6 and C3H/HeN males recapitulated the intracellular bacterial community pathway previously shown in females. However, surgically infected females of these strains exhibited more robust bladder cytokine responses and more efficient UPEC control than males. Compared with females, C3H/HeN males displayed a striking predilection for chronic cystitis, manifesting as persistent bacteriuria, high-titer bladder bacterial burdens, and chronic inflammation. Furthermore, males developed more severe pyelonephritis and 100% penetrant renal abscess (a complication that is rare in female mice). These phenotypes were sharply abrogated after castration but restored with exogenous testosterone, suggesting that male susceptibility to UTI is strongly influenced by androgen exposure. These data substantiate the long-standing presumption that anatomic differences in urogenital anatomy confer protection from UTI in males; however, as clinically observed, male sex associated with more severe UTI once these traditional anatomic barriers were bypassed. This study introduces a highly tractable preclinical model for interrogating sex differences in UTI susceptibility and pathogenesis, and illuminates an interplay between host sex and UTI that is more complex than previously appreciated.


Subject(s)
Androgens/physiology , Cystitis/etiology , Escherichia coli Infections/etiology , Urinary Tract Infections/etiology , Uropathogenic Escherichia coli , Animals , Cystitis/microbiology , Disease Models, Animal , Disease Susceptibility , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C3H , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors
8.
PLoS Pathog ; 7(2): e1001287, 2011 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21347352

ABSTRACT

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is estimated to cause more U.S. deaths annually than HIV/AIDS. The emergence of hypervirulent and multidrug-resistant strains has further amplified public health concern and accentuated the need for new classes of antibiotics. RNA degradation is a required cellular process that could be exploited for novel antimicrobial drug development. However, such discovery efforts have been hindered because components of the Gram-positive RNA turnover machinery are incompletely defined. In the current study we found that the essential S. aureus protein, RnpA, catalyzes rRNA and mRNA digestion in vitro. Exploiting this activity, high through-put and secondary screening assays identified a small molecule inhibitor of RnpA-mediated in vitro RNA degradation. This agent was shown to limit cellular mRNA degradation and exhibited antimicrobial activity against predominant methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) lineages circulating throughout the U.S., vancomycin intermediate susceptible S. aureus (VISA), vancomycin resistant S. aureus (VRSA) and other Gram-positive bacterial pathogens with high RnpA amino acid conservation. We also found that this RnpA-inhibitor ameliorates disease in a systemic mouse infection model and has antimicrobial activity against biofilm-associated S. aureus. Taken together, these findings indicate that RnpA, either alone, as a component of the RNase P holoenzyme, and/or as a member of a more elaborate complex, may play a role in S. aureus RNA degradation and provide proof of principle for RNA catabolism-based antimicrobial therapy.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents/pharmacology , RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional/drug effects , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Ribonuclease P/antagonists & inhibitors , Staphylococcal Infections/prevention & control , Staphylococcus aureus , Animals , Anti-Infective Agents/therapeutic use , Female , Hep G2 Cells , Humans , Mice , Models, Biological , Ribonuclease P/physiology , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology , Small Molecule Libraries/therapeutic use , Staphylococcal Infections/genetics , Staphylococcal Infections/pathology , Staphylococcus aureus/drug effects , Staphylococcus aureus/genetics , Staphylococcus aureus/metabolism , Staphylococcus aureus/pathogenicity , Vancomycin/pharmacology , Vancomycin/therapeutic use , Virulence/drug effects , Virulence/genetics
9.
Infect Immun ; 78(5): 1952-62, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20194595

ABSTRACT

Acinetobacter baumannii is an emerging bacterial pathogen of considerable health care concern. Nonetheless, relatively little is known about the organism's virulence factors or their regulatory networks. Septicemia and ventilator-associated pneumonia are two of the more severe forms of A. baumannii disease. To identify virulence factors that may contribute to these disease processes, genetically diverse A. baumannii clinical isolates were evaluated for the ability to proliferate in human serum. A transposon mutant library was created in a strain background that propagated well in serum and screened for members with decreased serum growth. The results revealed that disruption of A. baumannii phospholipase D (PLD) caused a reduction in the organism's ability to thrive in serum, a deficiency in epithelial cell invasion, and diminished pathogenesis in a murine model of pneumonia. Collectively, these results suggest that PLD is an A. baumannii virulence factor.


Subject(s)
Acinetobacter Infections/pathology , Acinetobacter baumannii/pathogenicity , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Phospholipase D/deficiency , Virulence Factors/deficiency , Acinetobacter Infections/microbiology , Acinetobacter baumannii/growth & development , Amino Acid Sequence , Animal Structures/microbiology , Animals , Colony Count, Microbial , DNA Transposable Elements , Epithelial Cells/microbiology , Histocytochemistry , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Microscopy , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Pneumonia, Bacterial/microbiology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/pathology , Serum/microbiology , Virulence
10.
J Bacteriol ; 188(19): 6739-56, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16980476

ABSTRACT

Despite its being a leading cause of nosocomal and community-acquired infections, surprisingly little is known about Staphylococcus aureus stress responses. In the current study, Affymetrix S. aureus GeneChips were used to define transcriptome changes in response to cold shock, heat shock, stringent, and SOS response-inducing conditions. Additionally, the RNA turnover properties of each response were measured. Each stress response induced distinct biological processes, subsets of virulence factors, and antibiotic determinants. The results were validated by real-time PCR and stress-mediated changes in antimicrobial agent susceptibility. Collectively, many S. aureus stress-responsive functions are conserved across bacteria, whereas others are unique to the organism. Sets of small stable RNA molecules with no open reading frames were also components of each response. Induction of the stringent, cold shock, and heat shock responses dramatically stabilized most mRNA species. Correlations between mRNA turnover properties and transcript titers suggest that S. aureus stress response-dependent alterations in transcript abundances can, in part, be attributed to alterations in RNA stability. This phenomenon was not observed within SOS-responsive cells.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Cold Temperature , Hot Temperature , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , SOS Response, Genetics , Staphylococcus aureus/physiology , Colony Count, Microbial , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , RNA Stability , RNA, Bacterial/metabolism , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Staphylococcus aureus/genetics
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