洞察新出现的昆虫致人类病原体光照蝇,揭示免疫细胞向性的地域差异

IF 4 2区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY Frontiers in Microbiology Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2024.1425909
Max Addison, Alexia Hapeshi, Zi Xin Wong, John E. Connolly, Nicholas Robin Waterfield
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景Photorhabdus asymbiotica 是昆虫病原体 Photorhabdus 属中的一个物种,已被分离为人类感染的病原体。从那时起,世界各地发现了多个分离株;但迄今为止,仅在北美、澳大利亚和尼泊尔发现了实际的临床感染病例。以前对临床分离株的研究表明,这些菌株在感染培养的人体细胞时表现各异。结果在此,我们展示了澳大利亚(Kingscliff)和北美(ATCC43949)的临床分离物,以及泰国(PB68)和北欧(HIT 和 JUN)的非临床土壤传播线虫分离物的研究结果。我们还首次展示了一种新的临床分离株 P. luminescens(德克萨斯州)的研究结果,这是首个引起人类感染的非共生菌物种,证实了其感染人类免疫细胞并在其中存活的能力。我们还表明,菌株的滋养能力因其分离自的地理位置而异,只有欧洲 HIT 菌株和 JUN 菌株缺乏在组织培养的哺乳动物细胞内存活的能力。
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Insight into the emerging insect to human pathogen Photorhabdus revealing geographic differences in immune cell tropism
BackgroundPhotorhabdus asymbiotica is a species of the insect pathogenic Photorhabdus genus that has been isolated as an etiological agent in human infections. Since then, multiple isolates have been identified worldwide; however, actual clinical infections have so far only been identified in North America, Australia, and Nepal. Previous research on the clinical isolates had shown that the strains differed in their behaviour when infecting cultured human cells.MethodsIn this study, we investigate the differences between the pathogenic activities of P. asymbiotica isolates from different geographic locations. Pathogenicity was analysed using infection assays with both cultured cell lines (THP-1, CHO, and HEK cells) and primary immune cells, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from human blood.ResultsHere, we present the findings from the Australian (Kingscliff) and North American (ATCC43949) clinical isolates, and non-clinical soilborne nematode isolates from Thailand (PB68) and Northern Europe (HIT and JUN) of P. asymbiotica. We also show the first findings from a new clinical isolate of P. luminescens (Texas), the first non-asymbiotica species to cause a human infection, confirming its ability to infect and survive inside human immune cells.ConclusionHere for the first time, we show how P. asymbiotica selectively infects certain immune cells while avoiding others and that infectivity varies depending on growth temperature. We also show that the tropism varies depending on the geographic location a strain is isolated from, with only the European HIT and JUN strains lack the ability to survive within mammalian cells in tissue culture.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
9.60%
发文量
4837
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Microbiology is a leading journal in its field, publishing rigorously peer-reviewed research across the entire spectrum of microbiology. Field Chief Editor Martin G. Klotz at Washington State University is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide.
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