Detalle Publicación

ARTÍCULO

In vitro modeling of polyclonal infection dynamics within the human airways by Haemophilus influenzae differential fluorescent labeling

Autores: Rapún-Araiz, B.; Sorzabal Bellido, Ioritz; Asensio-López, J.; Lázaro-Díez, M.; Ariz Galilea, Mikel; de la Merced, C. S.; Euba, B.; Fernández-Calvet, A.; Cortes Domínguez, Iván; Burgui, S.; Toledo-Arana, A.; Ortiz de Solórzano Aurusa, Carlos; Garmendia, J. (Autor de correspondencia)
Título de la revista: MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
ISSN: 2165-0497
Volumen: 15
Páginas: e0099323
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Resumen:
Standardized clinical procedures for antibiotic administration rely on pathogen identification and antibiotic susceptibility testing, often performed on single-colony bacterial isolates. For respiratory pathogens, this could be questionable, as chronic patients may be persistently colonized by multiple clones or lineages from the same bacterial pathogen species. Indeed, multiple strains of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae, with different antibiotic susceptibility profiles, can be co-isolated from cystic fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease sputum specimens. Despite this clinical evidence, we lack information about the dynamics of H. influenzae polyclonal infections, which limits the optimization of therapeutics. Here, we present the engineering and validation of a plasmid toolkit (pTBH, toolbox for Haemophilus), with standardized modules consisting of six reporter genes for fluorescent or bioluminescent labeling of H. influenzae. This plasmid set was independently introduced in a panel of genomically and phenotypically different H. influenzae strains, and two of them were used as a proof of principle to analyze mixed biofilm growth architecture and antibiotic efficacy, and to visualize the dynamics of alveolar epithelial co-infection. The mixed biofilms showed a bilayer architecture, and antibiotic efficacy correlated with the antibiotic susceptibility of the respective single-species strains. Furthermore, differential kinetics of bacterial intracellular location within subcellular acidic compartments were quantified upon co-infection of cultured airway epithelial cells. Overall, we present a panel of novel plasmid tools and quantitative image analysis methods with the potential to be used in a whole range of bacterial host species, assay types, and/or conditions and generate meaningful information for clinically relevant settings.
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