Inflammatory Effects of Edwardsiella ictaluri Lipopolysaccharide Modifications in Catfish Gut
Fecha
2014Autor
Kilbourne, Jacquelyn [Arizona State University]
Park, Jie-Yeun [Estados Unidos. Arizona State University]
Martin, Taylor [Estados Unidos. Arizona State University]
Loh, Amanda [Estados Unidos. Arizona State University]
Diaz, Ignacia [Estados Unidos. Arizona State University]
Rojas, Robert [Chile. Universidad Mayor]
Ubicación geográfica
Notas
HERRAMIENTAS
Resumen
Bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are structural components of the outer membranes of Gram-negative bacteria and also are potent inducers of inflammation in mammals. Higher vertebrates are extremely sensitive to LPS but lower vertebrates, like fish, are resistant to their systemic toxic effects. However, LPS effects on the fish intestinal mucosa remain unknown. Edwardsiella ictaluri is a primitive member of the Enterobacteriaceae family that causes enteric septicemia in channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus). E. ictaluri infects and colonizes deep lymphoid tissues upon oral or immersion infection. Both gut and olfactory organs are the primary sites of invasion. At the systemic level E. ictaluri pathogenesis is relatively well characterized, but our knowledge about E. ictaluri intestinal interaction is limited. Recently, we observed that E. ictaluri oligo-polysaccharide (O-PS) LPS mutants have differential effects on the intestinal epithelia of orally inoculated catfish. Here we evaluate the effects of E. ictaluri O-PS LPS mutants using a novel catfish intestinal loop model and compared it to the rabbit ileal loop model inoculated with Salmonella Typhimurium LPS. We found evident differences in rabbit ileal loop and catfish ileal loop responses to E. ictaluri and S. Typhimurim LPS. We determined that catfish respond to E. ictaluri LPS, but not to S. Typhimurium LPS. We also determined that E. ictaluri inhibits cytokine production and induces disruption of the intestinal fish epithelia in an O-PS dependent fashion. E. ictaluri wild type and ΔwibT LPS mutant caused intestinal tissue damage and inhibited pro-inflammatory cytokine synthesis in contrast to E. ictaluri Δgne and Δugd LPS mutants. We concluded that the E. ictaluri O-PS subunits play a major role during pathogenesis, since that they influence the recognition of the LPS by the intestinal mucosal immune system of the catfish. The LPS structure of E. ictaluri mutants is need to understand the mechanism of interaction.
URI
https://iai.asm.org/content/early/2014/05/20/IAI.01697-14.full.pdfhttps://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.01697-14
http://repositorio.umayor.cl/xmlui/handle/sibum/2710
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