Cantonal Hospital St. Gallen
Division of Infectious Diseases
Werner Albrich is an internist and infectious diseases consultant at the Division of Infectious Diseases/Hospital Epidemiology, Cantonal Hospital St.Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland. He trained in Internal Medicine at the Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany and the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA. After a clinical fellowship in Infectious Diseases at Emory University, Atlanta, USA, he was a postdoc with Prof. Keith Klugman and Prof. Shabir Madhi at the Respiratory and Meningeal Pathogens Research Unit, Johannesburg, South Africa. His main research interests are the epidemiology, diagnostics, treatment and prevention of respiratory tract infections with a focus on pneumococcal infections. He is studying mechanisms of colonisation and invasion of the pneumococcus using an in vitro human epithelial airway model. Lately he has also been active in studying epidemiology and prognostic markers of Covid-19.

Presenter of 1 Presentation

O042 - THE QUORUM SENSING COM SYSTEM REGULATES PNEUMOCOCCAL COLONISATION AND INVASIVE DISEASE IN A PSEUDO-STRATIFIED AIRWAY TISSUE MODEL (ID 379)

Session Type
Parallel Session
Date
Tue, 21.06.2022
Session Time
14:50 - 16:20
Room
Grand Ballroom West
Lecture Time
15:55 - 16:05

Abstract

Background

Streptococcus pneumoniae (Spn) colonises respiratory epithelia but can also invade lung cells causing pneumonia.

Methods

We developed an ex vivo model with human airway epithelial (HAE) cells harvested from lung biopsies to study Spn colonisation and translocation. Flow-cytometry, confocal imaging and electron microscopy studies identified the epithelial lineage with signs of differentiation (beating cilia, mucus, and tight junctions). HAE cells were challenged with Spn wild-type TIGR4 (wtSpn) or its isogenic ΔcomC quorum sensing-deficient mutant.

Results

ΔcomC mutant colonised significantly less than wtSpn at 6 h post-inoculation but at significantly higher levels at 19 h and 30 h. Translocation correlated inversely with colonisation density. Transepithelial electric resistance (TEER) decreased after pneumococcal infection and correlated with increased translocation for both strains.

Confocal imaging illustrated colocalisation of intracellular Spn with both cilia and zonulin-1 and prominent microcolony formation with wtSpn but disintegration of microcolony structures over time with ΔcomC mutant. ΔcomC caused a more pronounced release of both zonulin-1 and lactate dehydrogenase into the supernatant at later time points than wtSpn, suggesting that cytotoxicity is likely not the mechanism leading to translocation. There was a density- and time-dependent increase of inflammatory cytokines from human HAE cells infected with ΔcomC compared with wtSpn, including increased levels of the NLRP3 inflammasome-related IL-18.

Conclusions

In conclusion, our experiments indicate that ComC system allows a higher organisational level of population structure resulting in microcolony formation, increased early colonisation and subsequent translocation. We propose that ComC inactivation unleashes a very different and possibly more virulent phenotype that merits further investigation.

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