Mycobacterium tuberculosisUptake by Recipient Host Macrophages Is Influenced by Environmental Conditions in the Granuloma of the Infectious Individual and Is Associated with Impaired Production of Interleukin-12 and Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha
- 1 November 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 70 (11) , 6223-30
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.70.11.6223-6230.2002
Abstract
Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from one individual to another usually is associated with episodes of coughing. The bacteria leave the environment of the lung cavity of the infected person and travel in droplets to reach the recipient's respiratory tract. Therefore, at the time that the bacteria encounter alveolar cells (macrophages and epithelial cells) in the new host, they express virulence determinants that are regulated by the environmental conditions in the infected person. To determine if those environmental conditions encountered in the lung cavity (hyperosmolarity, acidic pH, and low oxygen tension, among others) would influence the uptake of M. tuberculosis by the recipient's alveolar macrophages, M. tuberculosis H37Rv was incubated under several conditions for different periods of time, washed at 4 degrees C, and used to infect human monocyte-derived macrophages. While increased osmolarity had no effect on M. tuberculosis uptake compared to the uptake of bacteria grown on 7H10 Middlebrook medium, both acidic pH and anaerobiosis increased the uptake of the H37Rv strain four- to sixfold. Using anti-CD11b receptor blocking antibodies or mannoside to inhibit the uptake of M. tuberculosis by macrophages, we determined that while uptake of M. tuberculosis cultured on 7H10 medium was inhibited 77% +/- 6% in the presence of anti-CD11b antibody, the antibody had no effect on the uptake of M. tuberculosis incubated at pH 6.0 and was associated with 27% inhibition of M. tuberculosis previously exposed to anaerobic conditions. The mannose receptor was also not involved with invasion after exposure to acidic conditions, and mannoside resulted in only 32% inhibition of uptake by macrophages of M. tuberculosis exposed to anaerobiosis. Uptake by macrophages also resulted in the secretion of significantly lower amounts of interleukin-12 and tumor necrosis factor alpha than that by macrophages infected with a strain cultured under laboratory conditions. M. tuberculosis cultured under the pH and oxygen concentration found in the granuloma expresses a large number of proteins that are different from the proteins expressed by bacteria grown under laboratory conditions. The results suggest that M. tuberculosis in vivo may be adapted to gain access to the intracellular environment in a very efficient fashion and may do so by using different receptors from the complement and mannose receptors.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pathogenesis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis: an Interplay of Tissue-Damaging and Macrophage-Activating Immune Responses-Dual Mechanisms That Control Bacillary MultiplicationPublished by American Society for Microbiology ,2014
- Characterization and expression ofsecAinMycobacterium aviumFEMS Microbiology Letters, 2001
- Lipid A Acylation and Bacterial Resistance against Vertebrate Antimicrobial PeptidesCell, 1998
- Interleukin 12 (IL-12) Is Crucial to the Development of Protective Immunity in Mice Intravenously Infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosisThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- Peptidoglycan structure of Salmonella typhimurium growing within cultured mammalian cellsMolecular Microbiology, 1997
- Applications for green fluorescent protein (GFP) in the study of hostpathogen interactionsGene, 1996
- Identification of macrophage and stress-induced proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Exposure to Ethanol Up-Regulates the Expression of Mycobacterium avium Complex Proteins Associated with Bacterial VirulenceThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993
- Immunopathogenesis of Pulmonary TuberculosisHospital Practice, 1993
- The ability of Salmonella to enter mammalian cells is affected by bacterial growth state.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990