Guest guest Posted December 13, 2002 Report Share Posted December 13, 2002 Clin Invest, February 2002, Volume 109, Number 3, 317-325 Copyright ©2002 by the American Society for Clinical Investigation Effects of reduced mucus oxygen concentration in airway Pseudomonas infections of cystic fibrosis patients The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA. Phone: ; Fax: ; E-mail: rboucher@... for publication July 31, 2001, and accepted in revised form December 19, 2001. Current theories of CF pathogenesis predict different predisposing " local environmental " conditions and sites of bacterial infection within CF airways. Here we show that, in CF patients with established lung disease, Psuedomonas aeruginosa was located within hypoxic mucopurulent masses in airway lumens. In vitro studies revealed that CF-specific increases in epithelial O2 consumption, linked to increased airway surface liquid (ASL) volume absorption and mucus stasis, generated steep hypoxic gradients within thickened mucus on CF epithelial surfaces prior to infection. Motile P. aeruginosa deposited on CF airway surfaces penetrated into hypoxic mucus zones and responded to this environment with increased alginate production. With P. aeruginosa growth in oxygen restricted environments, local hypoxia was exacerbated and frank anaerobiosis, as detected in vivo, resulted. These studies indicate that novel therapies for CF include removal of hypoxic mucus plaques and antibiotics effective against P. aeruginosa adapted to anaerobic environments.   Introduction Lung infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa constitute the predominant disease phenotype in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients (1). Despite a vigorous and rapid influx of functional peripheral blood neutrophils into infected CF airways (2) accompanied by the production of high titers of specific Ab’s, P. aeruginosa infections become chronic (3), airways are destroyed, and lung function declines. Several hypotheses have been offered to explain the failure of mucosal defense and the high prevalence of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung. Most hypotheses have focused on bacterial infection of CF airway epithelia, mediated by an increased binding of P. aeruginosa to the surfaces of CF airway epithelial cells (4, 5) impaired internalization and killing of P. aeruginosa by CF airway epithelia due to the absence of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) at the apical surface (6), or " high-salt " –mediated defensin inactivation (7). In contrast, the reduced airway surface liquid (ASL) volume (impaired mucus clearance) hypothesis predicts infection by P. aeruginosa and other pathogens of stationary mucus adherent to airway surfaces. As an approach to distinguish among these hypotheses, we sought to identify the site of P. aeruginosa infection in freshly excised CF airways, differentiating between the intraluminal (mucus) and epithelial surface compartments. Based on our observations that P. aeruginosa resided in the intraluminal contents, we asked what conditions confronted P. aeruginosa in this microenvironment in vivo in CF patients, focusing on O2 availability. We extended these studies to investigate in vitro whether airway mucus hypoxia (O2 gradients) was present in thickened CF mucus before infection and whether steep O2 gradients within mucus were unique to the CF genotype. Finally, we explored the hypotheses that (a) bacteria deposited on airway surfaces penetrate into hypoxic mucus, and ( P. aeruginosa responses to hypoxia, e.g., increased alginate production, may favor its persistence in the CF lung.   Methods Study subjects: normal, CF, and disease controls. Lungs from seven CF patients chronically infected with P. aeruginosa were obtained for morphometric analyses after lung transplantation (five males and two females, mean age 29.5 years; Cystic Fibrosis/Pulmonary Research and Treatment Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA) or after lobectomy (two females, mean age 8 years; Service de Pédiatrie, Centre Hospitalier Lyon-Sud, Pierre-Bénite, France). Nasal polyps from four CF patients (mean age 14.3 years; Ear, Nose and Throat Clinic, Klinikum Ludwigshafen, Germany), and from four non-CF individuals (mean age 46.5 years; Ear, Nose and Throat Clinic, University of Tübingen, Germany) were used for spheroid cell cultures. Cells for planar cell cultures were obtained from seven normal lung transplant donors (four males, three females, mean age 42 ± 6 years), eight CF lung transplant recipients (four males, three females, mean age 34 ± 3 years), and two primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) lung transplant recipients (one male, one female, ages 15 and 50 years, respectively). For in vivo oxygen partial pressure (pO2) measurements, six CF patients (two males, four females, mean age 23.8 years; mean forced expiratory volume in one second, 55.7% predicted) were studied. Data were successfully obtained from three patients. Informed consent was obtained from all patients and/or parents, and all parts of the study were approved by the local ethical committees. Bacterial strains. PAO1 (8) bacteria were grown for adhesion experiments in vitro overnight at 37°C in 5 ml Trypticase soy broth (TSB; Oxoid Ltd., Basingstoke, United Kingdom). A bacterial suspension (10–50 µl) of the overnight culture (OD600nm 0.05) was inoculated into 5 ml fresh TSB medium and the bacteria cultured until the OD600nm of 1.5 was reached. For confocal microscopy studies, the P. aeruginosa strain ATCC 27853 was used. For alginate measurements, 15 genetically different non-CF (environmental) strains of P. aeruginosa as well as PAO1 were analyzed, and for growth in ASL, PAO1 and P. aeruginosa ATCC 700829 were tested. PAO1 grown in TSB was used for O2 measurements. Microscopy of lung sections. Immediately after resection, lung tissues were cut into 0.5-cm3 cubes and fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde, 10% formaldehyde, or shock-frozen in liquid nitrogen. For immunofluorescence, thin sections (5–10 µm) were prepared from shock-frozen lung tissues and P. aeruginosa identified in bronchi/bronchioli with polyclonal rabbit IgG specific for whole P. aeruginosa cells; then incubation occurred with indocarbocyanin-conjugated (Cy3-conjugated) goat anti-rabbit IgG (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany), diluted 1:500. Eight sections from each of nine separate CF lung samples (72 sections total) were analyzed for P. aeruginosa location, using the KS300 Imaging System (Kontron Electronic GmbH, Eching, Germany). For transmission electron microscopy (TEM), segmental bronchi (6.5-mm sections) from nine CF lungs were postfixed in OSO4, thin sections cut, and uracyl acetate/lead citrate stained. For scanning electron micrographs, specimens were processed as described previously (9). Squares (406) from 14 bronchi from two CF lungs were analyzed for binding of P. aeruginosa to the epithelium. Adhesion of P. aeruginosa to mucus adherent to primary nasal epithelial spheroids. The spheroid cell culture system was used as described previously (9). To collect secreted mucus, spheroids were incubated in DMEM/Ham’s F12 medium (Life Technologies Inc., Heidelberg, Germany) depleted of antibiotics and antimycotics for 5 days, supernatant collected by centrifugation (225 g), and stored at –20°C until use. Spheroids (8 weeks; four CF and four normal [NL]), suspended in DMEM/Ham’s F12 medium, were incubated with P. aeruginosa at a cell/bacteria ratio of 1:100 for 2 hours/37°C/5% CO2. In some experiments, mucus was removed from spheroids by prewashing with PBS. After incubation with P. aeruginosa, spheroids were washed using a cell strainer (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany). Twenty to 30 spheroids per individual were analyzed for adherence of P. aeruginosa by scanning electron microscopy (9). P. aeruginosa was incubated with spheroid supernatants containing mucus for 2 hours at 37°C/5% CO2. After washing, bacteria were fixed on coverslips, incubated with a mAb to human mucins, washed, incubated with a Cy3-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (DAKO Corp., Hamburg, Germany) for 40 minutes at 23°C, washed with water, and embedded in Permafluor (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Missouri, USA). Fiberoptic bronchoscopy. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy was performed as described previously (2) with minor modifications. For in vivo pO2 measurements, a computerized type oxygen probe (length: 65 cm; outer diameter: 2 mm; inner diameter: 0.4 mm; Licox pO2; GMS, Kiel, Germany) was fixed to the tip of the bronchoscope and guided under video control into right upper lobes obstructed with mucopurulent material. Planar, primary bronchial culture system. Human airway epithelial cells were obtained from freshly excised bronchi by protease digestion (10), seeded directly on 12-mm Transwell Col membranes (Corning-Costar Corp., Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA) in modified bronchial epithelial growth medium under air-liquid interface conditions and studied when fully differentiated (2–5 weeks; transepithelial resistance of 350 cm2). Measurement of ASL pO2–planar bronchial cultures. O2 microelectrodes were purchased from Diamond General Development Corp. (Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA). The O2 microelectrode and 3 M KCl reference electrode were advanced into ASL with micromanipulators as described previously (11). Confocal microscopy measurements of ASL/P. aeruginosa. PBS (30 µl) containing 2 mg/ml Texas Red-dextran (10 kDa; Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, Oregon, USA) was added to CF cultures 2–48 hours before the addition of bacteria or fluorescent beads (1 µm; Molecular Probes Inc.) as described previously (12). For all studies, perfluorocarbon (FC-77, 3M Co., St. , Minnesota, USA) was added to the mucus surface to prevent ASL evaporation. P. aeruginosa bacteria were suspended in 3 ml PBS (OD470 of 0.15 [107 CFU/ml]) and incubated with 5 µM SYTO 13 (Molecular Probes Inc.) for 1 hour at 37°C. The bacterial suspension was washed once in PBS, centrifuged, and the pellet resuspended in PBS (100 µl). Bacterial growth and production of alginate by P. aeruginosa in aerobic and anaerobic culture conditions. To determine whether P. aeruginosa is able to grow in freshly harvested ASL from CF and NL well-differentiated cultures (11) under aerobic and anaerobic (anaerobic chamber from Coy Laboratory Products, Gross Lake, Michigan, USA) conditions, a small number of bacteria (100–200 CFU/0.5 µl) of PAO1 or the environmental P. aeruginosa strain (ATCC 700829) was added to 30 µl of ASL in parallel in two titer plates. For these experiments, the bacteria were grown on sheep blood agar overnight, suspended in PBS, with this suspension adjusted to an OD470nm of 0.15, diluted 1:100 in PBS, and starved for 2 hours before addition to ASL. Titer plates were incubated aerobically and anaerobically for 72 hours at 37°C. To determine the number of bacteria in ASL, samples were serially diluted and plated onto agar. We next measured the alginate mass/bacterial protein mass under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, using anaerobic jars and Anaerocult A (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany), with strain PAO1 and 15 environmental P. aeruginosa strains grown on Pseudomonas isolation agar (PIA). After 4 days of growth, the bacteria were rinsed with water from the plates and the alginate was measured by the carbazole assay (13). Uronic acids were quantified using a standard curve of alginate purified from Macrocystis pyrifera (Sigma Chemical Co.), followed by the BCA protein assay to estimate bacterial protein mass (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Illinois, USA). In parallel, we visualized P. aeruginosa alginate by immunostaining PAO1, grown on Columbia sheep blood agar and fixed on slides, with rabbit antiserum specific for P. aeruginosa alginate followed by Cy3-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG (Dianova). Finally, we examined the role of nitrate as a terminal electron acceptor in alginate production under aerobic versus anaerobic conditions. PAO1 was grown on PIA agar plates (63 µM nitrate without added nitrate) to which a range of KNO3 was added (10 µM–100 mM), and after 4 days of growth, alginate and bacterial protein was quantitated as above. Measurements of ASL total nitrate concentration. Total nitrate (nitrite/nitrate) concentrations in CF and NL ASL (each CF/NL sample was obtained from pooled ASL collections from cultures derived from ten or more different subjects) were measured in 10 µl aliquots using a Nitric Oxide Analyzer (Sievers Model 280b, Ionics Instrument Business Group, Boulder, Colorado, USA). Bacteria and in vitro measurements of pO2. Using the Licox oxygen probe, pO2 was measured at 37°C in suspensions of PAO1 grown aerobically in TSB (Oxoid Ltd.). The pO2 was also measured in heat-inactivated washed bacterial cultures at 108 CFU/ml. Statistics. Unless otherwise stated, all data are presented as mean ± SEM. ANOVA (followed by the Tukey test) was used as appropriate. In the case of nonhomogeneity of variance, ANOVA followed by either Dunn’s multiple comparison test, the Mann-Whitney U test, or the Wilcoxon signed rank test were used. 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