Guest guest Posted December 13, 2002 Report Share Posted December 13, 2002 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 key extension of the in vivo characterization of CF airways infection is that P. aeruginosa occupies an intraluminal niche that is markedly hypoxic (Figure 2, a–. If the CF airways disease reflects infection of mucus, how is this process initiated and perpetuated? A sequence consistent with several aspects of the " low volume/reduced mucus clearance " hypothesis (10, 33) for CF pathogenesis is outlined in Figure 5. First, as compared with NL airway epithelial function (compare Figure 5a), data have been reported that CF airway epithelia excessively absorb Na+ and Cl– (and water) from the lumen, deplete the periciliary liquid layer (PCL), and slow/abolish mucus clearance (Figure 5b) (10, 34, 35). Accelerated Na+ absorption, which reflects the absence of CFTR’s normal inhibitory activity on ENaC (36), is fueled by an increased turnover rate of ATP-consuming Na+-K+-ATPase pumps (37, 38) leading to two- to threefold increases in CF airway epithelial O2 consumption (39). View larger version (29K): [in this window] [in a new window]  Figure 5. Schematic model of the pathogenic events hypothesized to lead to chronic P. aeruginosa infection in airways of CF patients. (a) On normal airway epithelia, a thin mucus layer (light green) resides atop the PCL (clear). The presence of the low-viscosity PCL facilitates efficient mucociliary clearance (denoted by vector). A normal rate of epithelial O2 consumption (QO2; left) produces no O2 gradients within this thin ASL (denoted by red bar). (b–f) CF airway epithelia. ( Excessive CF volume depletion (denoted by vertical arrows) removes the PCL, mucus becomes adherent to epithelial surfaces, and mucus transport slows/stops (bidirectional vector). The raised O2 consumption (left) associated with accelerated CF ion transport does not generate gradients in thin films of ASL. © Persistent mucus hypersecretion (denoted as mucus secretory gland/goblet cell units; dark green) with time increases the height of luminal mucus masses/plugs. The raised CF epithelial QO2 generates steep hypoxic gradients (blue color in bar) in thickened mucus masses. (d) P. aeruginosa bacteria deposited on mucus surfaces penetrate actively and/or passively (due to mucus turbulence) into hypoxic zones within the mucus masses. (e) P. aeruginosa adapts to hypoxic niches within mucus masses with increased alginate formation and the creation of macrocolonies. (f) Macrocolonies resist secondary defenses, including neutrophils, setting the stage for chronic infection. The presence of increased macrocolony density and, to a lesser extent neutrophils, render the now mucopurulent mass hypoxic (blue bar). Second, persistent mucin secretion into stationary mucus generates plaques/plugs (16) (Figure 5c). The combination of thickened mucus and raised O2 consumption by CF epithelia generated steep O2 gradients within adherent mucus (Figure 2c). Importantly, the steep pO2 gradient in ASL/mucus was specific for CF epithelia because it was not reproduced in cultures from another genetic airways disease with an infectious phenotype, PCD (Figure 2f). Third, bacteria deposited on thickened mucus can penetrate into hypoxic zones (Figure 5d). When the normal rotational mucus transport ceased due to excessive volume absorption, the vertical " currents " within transported mucus were abolished, but motile P. aeruginosa still penetrated thickened mucus (Figure 3, c and d). Note that environmental P. aeruginosa strains such as those that characterize early infection are motile and would likely penetrate mucus readily. Fourth, P. aeruginosa can grow in hypoxic/anaerobic CF mucus (Figure 4a). In part, growth under anaerobic conditions may be supported by the terminal electron acceptor, nitrate (20 µM), contained in ASL. Furthermore, we show that increased alginate production was a characteristic feature of PAO1 strains in response to hypoxia, particularly with growth in low concentrations of nitrate that mimic ASL (Figure 4, b–d), and this characteristic is also a feature of environmental P. aeruginosa strains. We speculate that the increased alginate formation may represent a stress response to hypoxia that is part of the process that forms biofilmlike macrocolonies, the predominant phenotype of P. aeruginosa in CF airways (3). Interestingly, Staphylococcus aureus also responds to the hypoxic environment of CF mucus with a switch from nonmucoid to a mucoid phenotype (40, 41). Finally, the capacity of P. aeruginosa to proliferate in hypoxic mucus will generate fully hypoxic (anaerobic) conditions in patients with persistent CF airways infection (Figure 1, Figure 4, e and f, and Figure 5e). Hassett et al. reported that P. aeruginosa alginate production was maintained by anaerobic conditions (21). The reduced O2 tension in the mucopurulent intraluminal contents of CF airways may, therefore, be one variable contributing to the persistence of P. aeruginosa macrocolonies in CF airways. The consequences of the macrocolony growth state have been explored in detail and include resistance to antibiotics (42) and host phagocyte killing (Figure 5f) and (42, 43), all of which contribute to the persistence of P. aeruginosa infection and the chronic destructive airways disease characteristics of CF. In summary, our data demonstrate that the P. aeruginosa infection of CF airways occurs within the luminal (mucus) rather than the epithelial cell surface compartment. Thus, we speculate that mucus clearance is a key feature of innate lung defense (44), and a fundamental defect leading to chronic CF lung infections is the failure to effectively clear mucus that contains bound bacteria from the lung (10). Hypoxic gradients exist within poorly cleared/adherent mucus, consequent to CF-specific increases in epithelial O2 consumption, and inhaled P. aeruginosa respond to hypoxic mucus with alginate production and macrocolony formation, which allows them to evade host defenses and produce a chronic destructive lung disease. These data lead us to conclude that therapeutic strategies to treat CF lung disease should include novel drugs designed to clear the lung of retained mucus plaques/plugs, which initiate and perpetuate CF lung disease, and antibiotics that effectively treat P. aeruginosa growing under hypoxic/anaerobic conditions. 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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