Guest guest Posted December 13, 2002 Report Share Posted December 13, 2002 Results P. aeruginosa is intraluminally located in CF airways. Analyses of CF lungs revealed evidence for growth of P. aeruginosa predominantly as spherical intraluminal colonies (Figure 1) (14). We have elected to refer to these spherical colonies as " macrocolonies, " because many are visible (>100 µm in diameter) to the naked eye. We used three separate techniques to test whether macrocolonies were localized to intraluminal mucus/mucopurulent material versus epithelial cell surfaces in CF lungs. First, immunolocalization in thin sections from nine different CF lungs revealed most bacteria (94.5%) were localized within the airway lumen 5–17 µm distant from the epithelial cell surface and the remainder in the zone 2–5 µm from the epithelial surface (Figure 1c). None were identified in contact with epithelial cells. Second, no P. aeruginosa bacteria were observed attached to airway epithelia in TEMs of bronchi from nine CF patients, containing a total length of 300 mm of bronchial surfaces. Third, scanning electron microscopy detected no bacteria on bronchial epithelia from two patients (total surface area examined: 116.1 mm2).  Figure 1. P. aeruginosa is localized in intraluminal material of freshly excised CF airways and binds to mucus. (a) Thin section of an obstructed CF bronchus, stained with hematoxalin/eosin. Note the absence of P. aeruginosa on epithelial surface (black arrow) and presence of P. aeruginosa macrocolonies within intraluminal material (white arrows). Blue gap is an artifact due to fixation. ( P. aeruginosa within macrocolonies in a lung section, stained with rabbit Ab’s against P. aeruginosa. Bars: a, 100 µm; b, 10 µm. © Percentage of bacteria detected at a distance of 2-5 µm or 5-17 µm from the epithelial surface of lungs from nine CF patients. Shrinkage artifacts were subtracted from calculated distances. (d) Scanning electron micrograph of mucus-coated spheroid derived from CF respiratory epithelium. P. aeruginosa (white arrow) were enmeshed in mucus (black arrows) following a 2-hour incubation. (e) Immunofluorescent staining of mucins (anti-mucin Ab) bound to P. aeruginosa strain PAO1 in vitro. (f) Spheroid with adherent mucus removed by prewash, then incubated with P. aeruginosa for 2 hours. Note the absence of bacteria on ciliated epithelial cell surfaces. Bars: d, 0.6 µm; e, 4 µm; f, 2.5 µm. Quantitative comparisons of PAO1 binding revealed higher binding to mucus-coated NESfrom normal subjects (21.3 ± 10.6 bacteria/NES) versus non-mucus-coated (washed) NES (7.1 ± 0.1 bacteria/NES) (n = 6; 3 normal subjects; P < 0.05). Importantly, these values were not different for CF NESs (26.4 ± 4.1 bacteria/NES for mucus-coated NESs; 7.7 ± 3.9 bacteria/NES for washed NESs). P. aeruginosa binding to mucus versus airway epithelial cell membranes in vitro. We also tested the hypothesis that P. aeruginosa binds to mucus rather than airway epithelial cells in vitro. Nasal epithelial spheroids (NESs) spontaneously produce mucin, a fraction of which adheres to ciliated cells (9). Incubation of P. aeruginosa PAO1 with NESs revealed that the bacteria were enveloped by the mucus attached to NESs (Figure 1d). Mucin binding was also demonstrated by incubating P. aeruginosa with mucins secreted by NESs (Figure 1e). In contrast, washing NESs to remove adherent mucins greatly reduced P. aeruginosa binding (Figure 1f). O2 is depleted within Pseudomonas-infected intraluminal mucopurulent masses in vivo. The pO2 in CF mucopurulent masses in vivo was measured by inserting an O2 electrode directly into the right upper lobar bronchi of chronically infected CF patients (Figure 2a). When the probe was in the bronchial lumen, the pO2 reached approximately 180 mmHg, a value consistent with the supplemental O2 administered during bronchoscopy. Upon probe insertion into the mucopurulent material obstructing the lobar bronchus, the pO2 declined rapidly to a mean value of 2.5 mmHg (Figure 2b).  Figure 2. Oxygen partial pressure (pO2) CF airways in vivo and in thick films of ASL on human airway epithelial cultures. (a) pO2 in CF airways. First 30 minutes represents measurement in a nonobstructed region of the airway lumen. The arrow indicates insertion of oxygen probe into a mucopurulent mass. The pO2 returned to basal values after probe retraction from the adherent mass into the nonobstructed airway region. ( pO2 in nonobstructed CF airway lumens (L) and CF mucopurulent masses (M) in vivo. n = 3 CF subjects; *P = 0.001. © Plots of pO2 gradients under thick film conditions at 37°C in NL (squares; eight cultures/five subjects) and CF cultures (circles; six cultures/four subjects). (d) pO2 gradients under thick film conditions measured at 4°C in NL (squares; five cultures/three subjects) and CF cultures (circles; five cultures/three subjects). (e) pO2 gradients in CF mucus that had accumulated for 48 hours on CF culture surfaces and had become stationary due to volume hyperabsorption (inverted triangles). Mucus transport was restored in these cultures by addition of 30 µl PBS, and pO2 gradients remeasured 1–2 hours later (triangles; six cultures; three subjects each). (f) Comparison of pO2 gradients in NL (squares; nine cultures/six subjects) and PCD (diamonds; five cultures/two subjects) cultures under thick film conditions. Data are shown as mean ± SEM. *Significantly different (P < 0.05) from pO2 at the air-liquid interface (0 µm). Significant difference (P < 0.05) between NL and CF. In vitro analyses of the genesis of O2 gradients in uninfected ASLs. The diffusion of O2 through liquids is slow compared with air (15) so that the hypoxia measured within the mucopurulent luminal masses could reflect, in part, restricted O2 diffusion through thickened intraluminal liquids. Although bacteria or neutrophils likely consume O2 and contribute to the low pO2 measured in mucopurulent lumenal masses in vivo (see below), it is possible that the O2 consumption of the underlying CF epithelium uniquely contributes to mucus O2 gradients before infection. To test the hypothesis that airway epithelial O2 consumption generates O2 gradients in liquid films that mimic in height mucus accumulated on CF airway surfaces (16), we measured O2 gradients in NL and CF airway epithelia covered by an approximately 800-µm thick ASL (PBS). NL airway epithelia generated measurable O2 gradients at 37°C in this layer (Figure 2c). However, the pO2 gradient was significantly steeper in CF cultures (Figure 2c). Both NL and CF ASL O2 gradients were abolished at 4°C, suggesting that the gradients indeed reflected epithelial O2 consumption (Figure 2d). Next, we asked whether the presence of mucins within ASL and mucus transport were important determinants of O2 gradients under these thick film conditions. No differences in O2 gradients were observed in CF cultures with or without rotational mucus transport (Figure 2e). Thus, we conclude that neither the presence of mucus, nor mixing, which occurs as a consequence of mucus transport in situ (17), are important contributors to O2 gradients measured within ASL. Rather, the gradient reflects ASL depth and rate of epithelial O2 consumption. Do CF airway epithelia generate disease-specific steeper O2 gradients within ASL? We measured the O2 gradients in cultures derived from patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a genetic disease of ciliary motility characterized by chronic airways infection (18). The pO2 gradients in PCD ASL resembled that of normal cultures and were shallower than CF ASL gradients (compare Figure 2, f and c). Thus, it appears that the ability to generate steep O2 gradients within ASL reflected a unique feature of CF airway epithelia. Will bacteria deposited on mucus surfaces penetrate to hypoxic zones in mucus layers? If bacteria contained within inhaled droplet aerosols deposit and remain on the surface of the mucus layer, then bacteria would be persistently exposed to normoxic environments. Conversely, if inhaled bacteria move ( " swim " ) into the mucus layer, they may face low pO2. Two sets of experiments were designed to distinguish between these possibilities. First, we examined the behavior of bacteria contained in small volumes (25 nl), designed to mimic aerosol droplets, deposited on the surface of CF airway epithelial cultures that exhibited rotational mucus transport. At the earliest time point measurable (3 minutes), motile P. aeruginosa penetrated into the mucus layer (Figure 3a). We next asked whether bacterial penetration into mucus reflected bacterial motility or mucus mixing in the vertical axis during rotational surface (horizontal) mucus transport (17). Fluorescently labeled beads deposited on the airway surface exhibited similar kinetics of penetration into the mucus layer, suggesting turbulent flow within the mucus layer accounted for penetration to hypoxic zones (Figure 3b).  Figure 3. Localization of P. aeruginosa and beads in transported and stationary ASL (mucus) produced by planar CF cultures. Representative confocal images of ASL (red) fluorescent P. aeruginosa (green) or green fluorescent beads. P. aeruginosa or beads were added to the air-liquid interface in 25-nl aliquots by a microsyringe mounted in a hydraulic micromanipulator. (a) X-Z confocal image of P. aeruginosa 3 minutes after addition to the surface of ASL (mucus) exhibiting rotational transport. ( X-Z confocal image of beads 3 minutes after addition to the surface of mucus exhibiting rotational transport. Note that due to the rapid " tumbling " movement of the mucus it was not possible to obtain early time-point images of P. aeruginosa or beads at the air-liquid interface. P. aeruginosa 3 minutes © and 15 minutes (d) after addition to stationary mucus. Beads at 3 minutes (e) and 15 minutes later (f) after addition to stationary mucus. Scale bars, 100 µm. Second, we tested whether motile P. aeruginosa could penetrate mucus masses adherent to CF airway surfaces. Within 15 minutes, P. aeruginosa had penetrated deep into the mucus (compare Figure 3, c with d). In contrast, fluorescent beads remained on the surface of the mucus plaque (compare Figure 3, e with f), suggesting that bacterial motility was required for P. aeruginosa penetration into hypoxic zones within stationary mucus masses. Response of P. aeruginosa to a hypoxic environment. P. aeruginosa is an aerobic bacterium that will grow under anaerobic conditions if sufficient terminal electron acceptors are provided (19-21). Because it is not yet known what bacterial culture media best mimics human ASL (mucus), we tested for Pseudomonas growth under aerobic versus anaerobic conditions, using ASL harvested from CF and NL cultures. P. aeruginosa grew equally well in aerobic and anaerobic conditions (Figure 4a).  Figure 4. Growth and alginate production of P. aeruginosa under aerobic versus anaerobic conditions. (a) Growth of P. aeruginosa in NL or CF ASL under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. Two strains, PAO1 (black bars) and ATCC 700829 (gray bars), were inoculated (100–200 bacteria, dashed line) in 30 µl NL or CF ASL and number of bacteria quantitated 72 hours later. The results presented are from a single representative experiment of three performed. The differences in the CFU/ml in the three experiments were less than 0.3 log 10. ( Immunofluorescence detection of alginate production by PAO1 after aerobic (8 hours; left) or anaerobic (12 hours; right) conditions (magnification, x1,000; bars, 10 µm). © Alginate production of PAO1 by the carbazole assay after growth under anaerobic (black bar) or aerobic (white bar) conditions for 4 days without added nitrate. *P < 0.05. (d) Alginate production per microgram bacterial protein mass of PAO1 as a function of the added NO3– to PIA under aerobic (white bars) and anaerobic (black bars) conditions. (e) pO2 (filled squares) in an aerobically growing suspension of P. aeruginosa (open triangles) as a function of time (hours). (f) Mathematical analysis of depths from air-mucus interface at which pO2 becomes zero for simulated mucus masses/plaques containing different concentrations of P. aeruginosa bacteria (colony-forming units per milliliter). To test whether growth of Pseudomonas under anaerobic conditions in ASL was supported by NO3– as a terminal electron acceptor, total nitrate concentration was measured and found to be not different in uninfected ASL from NL (20 µM) and CF (26 µM) cultures. These ASL total nitrate concentration values are substantially lower than those reported for airway secretions collected in vivo. For example, tracheal secretions from control subjects have been reported to contain 144–421 µM total nitrate (22, 23). The higher levels from tracheal secretions could reflect the fact that upper airways produce more NO than the lower airway regions (24, 25) that are representative in our cultures (third to sixth generation bronchi). Importantly, as we found in ASL from NL and CF cultures, no differences in tracheal secretion total nitrate concentrations were found between " stable " CF patients (range 387–421 µM) and controls (22, 23). We next asked whether the stress of anaerobic environments could induce P. aeruginosa to acquire phenotypic features that allows it to evade host defenses. Therefore, we measured P. aeruginosa production of alginate, an exopolysaccharide involved in P. aeruginosa biofilm formation, under anaerobic versus aerobic conditions on agar plates (Columbia sheep blood agar, 37 µM total nitrate concentration, and PIA, 63 µM total nitrate concentration) that contained total nitrates in concentrations similar to that in ASL. Both immunofluorescence detection of alginate associated with the bacterial surface (Figure 4b; note thicker alginate coat in right panel) and quantitative measurement of alginate/bacterial protein mass (Figure 4c) demonstrated increased alginate production when PAO1 was grown under anaerobic conditions. A thicker alginate coat (50%) was also observed for PAO1 grown in ASL under anaerobic versus aerobic conditions. To test whether the behavior of PAO1 mimicked that of environmental strains that may infect CF mucus early in the course of the disease, alginate production by 15 nonmucoid P. aeruginosa environmental strains, genetically different by pulsed field gel electrophoretic analysis, was compared during growth in aerobic versus anaerobic environments. These strains routinely produced more alginate under anaerobic (0.191 ± 0.037 µg alginate per microgram of bacterial protein) versus aerobic (0.022 ± 0.004 µg alginate per microgram of bacterial protein) growth conditions. We next tested whether alginate production could, in part, reflect " stress " of an anaerobic environment with limiting concentrations of [NO3–] as a terminal electron acceptor. As shown in Figure 4d, the ratio of alginate to bacterial protein mass was highest at lower nitrate concentrations, including the 63 µM nitrate value of PIA (no added nitrate) that is most similar to values in ASL. Finally, we asked whether the introduction of bacteria as O2-consuming elements into mucus contributed to the magnitude of the O2 gradients observed in vivo (Figure 2). O2 tensions were reduced when P. aeruginosa growing in an open glass tube reached densities of approximately 5 x 106 to 5 x 107 CFU/ml (Figure 4e). At approximately 3 x 107 CFU/ml, virtually all O2 was consumed. Modeling of bacterial O2 consumption (Figure 4f) showed that anaerobic conditions are generated at very shallow depths (3 µm) in infected mucus masses when bacterial counts exceed 106 CFU/ml. Thus, the cell-specific O2 gradients within uninfected mucus accumulating on the CF airway epithelial surfaces will be exacerbated by the introduction of P. aeruginosa into mucus.   Discussion Our studies initially focused on the pathogenesis of established CF airways infection and, taking clues from these studies, explored whether these variables could uniquely contribute to the early pathogenesis of P. aeruginosa infection in CF airways. Morphometric analyses of freshly excised lungs by three techniques demonstrated that P. aeruginosa grows as macrocolonies in the airway intraluminal rather than the epithelial surface compartment (Figure 1, a–c). These findings contradict recent hypotheses emanating from in vitro model systems that focus on high-salt/defensin inactivation (26) or luminal epithelial cell binding (4), which predict bacterial infection of CF airway epithelial cells themselves (5, 6). However, our data are consistent with those from animal models that have demonstrated the adherence of P. aeruginosa to respiratory mucus (27-29), and three previous qualitative studies of CF postmortem lungs that identified P. aeruginosa in airway lumens rather than on airway epithelial cells (30-32). Furthermore, they are also consistent with our studies of NSEs that revealed P. aeruginosa preferentially bound to mucus rather than epithelial cell surfaces (Figure 1, d–f). A k Becki YOUR FAVORITE LilGooberGirl YOUNGLUNG EMAIL SUPPORT LIST www.topica.com/lists/younglung Pediatric Interstitial Lung Disease Society http://groups.yahoo.com/group/InterstitialLung_Kids/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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