Unveiling and Characterizing Early Bilateral Interactions between Biofilm and the Mouse Innate Immune System.

Front Microbiol

CNRS UMR 6023, Laboratoire Microorganismes: Génome et Environnement, Université Clermont-Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, France.

Published: November 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Significant progress has been made in understanding how invasive bacteria cause diseases, especially the transition from their free-floating (planktonic) forms to biofilm states in the body.
  • Biofilm bacteria can avoid immune responses and lead to chronic infections that standard treatments struggle to address, highlighting a need for new experimental methods.
  • A new experimental model involving the micro-injection of planktonic or biofilm bacteria into the skin of genetically modified mice is proposed to visually study early immune cell interactions and identify immune response differences between the two bacterial lifestyles.

Article Abstract

A very substantial progress has been made in our understanding of infectious diseases caused by invasive bacteria. Under their planktonic forms, bacteria transiently reside in the otherwise sterile mammal body tissues, as the physiological inflammation insures both their clearance and repair of any tissue damage. Yet, the bacteria prone to experience planktonic to biofilm developmental transition still need to be studied. Of note, sessile bacteria not only persist but also concur preventing the effectors and regulators of the physiological inflammation to operate. Thus, it is urgent to design biologically sound experimental approaches aimed to extract, at the earliest stage, immune signatures of mono-bacteria planktonic to biofilm developmental transition and . Indeed, the transition is often the first event to which succeeds the "chronicization" process whereby classical bacteria-targeting therapies are no more efficacious. An model of micro-injection of planktonic or biofilm cells in the ear pinna dermis of laboratory transgenic mice with fluorescent immune cells is proposed. It allows visualizing, in real time, the range of the early interactions between the and myeloid cell subsets- the resident macrophages and dendritic cells, the recruited neutrophil granulocytes/polymorphonuclear neutrophils, monocytes otherwise known to differentiate as macrophages or dendritic cells. One main objective is to extract contrasting immune signatures of the modulation of the physiological inflammation with respect to the two bacterial lifestyles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5702342PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02309DOI Listing

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