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Transcript
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“Understanding dissemination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the lungs
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during primary infection”
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Running title: M. tb dissemination from the alveolus
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Michelle B. Ryndaka, Dinesh Chandraa,c, Suman Laalb,a, *
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a
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York, 10016 United States of America
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b
Department of Pathology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New
Veterans Affairs New York Harbor Healthcare System, New York, New York, 10010
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United States of America
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c Present
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College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, 10461 United States of America
address: Dinesh Chandra, Department of Microbiology, Albert Einstein
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*Corresponding Author: Suman Laal
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Email: [email protected]; Phone: 212-263-4164
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Key words: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; in vitro model; alveolar barrier; ESAT-6;
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HBHA; adhesins; toxins; dissemination; primary infection
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Subject category: Pathogenicity and Virulence
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Word count: Abstract (197 words); Manuscript (3707 words)
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ABSTRACT
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Understanding how inhaled M. tuberculosis achieve dramatic replication and cross the
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alveolar barrier to establish systemic latent infection before adaptive immunity is elicited
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in humans is limited by the small inoculum and the inability to identify time of infection.
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M. tuberculosis is believed to disseminate via infected macrophages; however, like
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other Gram-positive bacteria, M. tuberculosis could also cross the barrier directly using
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adhesins and toxins. An in vitro alveolar-barrier mimicking gas-exchange regions of the
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alveolus was devised comprising monolayers of human alveolar epithelial and
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endothelial cells cultured on opposing sides of a basement membrane. Migration of
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dissemination-competent strains of M. tuberculosis, and dissemination-attenuated M.
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tuberculosis and M. bovis mutant strains lacking adhesin/toxin ESAT-6 and adhesin
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HBHA were tested for macrophage-free migration across the barrier. Strains that
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disseminate similarly in vivo migrated similarly across the in vitro alveolar-barrier.
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Strains lacking ESAT-6 expression/secretion were attenuated, and absence of both
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ESAT-6 and HBHA increased attenuation of bacterial migration across the barrier.
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Thus, like other Gram-positive bacteria, M. tuberculosis utilizes adhesins and toxins for
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macrophage-independent crossing of the alveolar-barrier. This in vitro model will allow
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identification and characterization of
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tuberculosis to establish systemic LTBI during primary infection.
molecules/mechanisms employed
by
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Key words: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; in vitro model; alveolar barrier; ESAT-6;
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HBHA; adhesins; toxins; dissemination; primary infection
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2
M.
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INTRODUCTION
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Tuberculosis (TB) is initiated by a few Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) bacilli
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entering the alveoli. In TB-endemic countries, infection mostly occurs during childhood,
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and while ~10% of the infected individuals progress to primary TB, the remaining
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infections lead to latent TB infection (LTBI). Approximately 15-20% of the reactivation
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TB in immunocompetent individuals, and ~50% in HIV+ cases occurs exclusively at
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extrapulmonary sites, indicating systemic bacterial dissemination during primary
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infection. Studies in animal models demonstrate extensive bacterial replication (>20,000
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fold) in the lungs and systemic dissemination during the first few days and weeks (2-3
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weeks) post-aerosol infection and prior to the elicitation of adaptive immunity (Wolf et
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al., 2008; Chackerian et al., 2002; Ordway et al., 2007). Earlier studies reported the
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presence of M. tb DNA in normal lung and adipose tissue from autopsied non-
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tuberculous subjects living in TB-endemic settings (Hernandez-Pando et al., 2000;
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Neyrolles et al., 2006). Subsequently, LTBI with viable M. tb in macrophages,
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endothelial cell (EC) and/or epithelial cells in autopsied tissue from lungs, liver, spleen
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and kidney was demonstrated (Barrios-Payan et al., 2012). In many subjects, LTBI was
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detected only in the extrapulmonary sites. Same cell-types infected with M. tb are also
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present in apparently normal tissues in the mouse model of latency (Barrios-Payan et
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al., 2012). Together these studies confirm the establishment of systemic LTBI during
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primary infection (Barrios-Payan et al., 2012; Laal, 2012).
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Systemic dissemination is fundamental to the pathogenesis of M. tb (Vidal
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Pessolani et al., 2003); however, understanding M. tb dissemination during primary
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infection in humans is limited by the small number of the bacteria that are inhaled, and
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the inability to identify the time of infection. It is believed that dissemination of M. tb
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occurs by the “Trojan Horse” mechanism wherein alveolar macrophages that
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phagocytose M. tb invade the epithelium, elicit inflammatory responses, and recruit
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macrophages from the blood stream, which in turn transport the bacteria systemically.
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However, other bacteria also utilize repertoires of adhesins, which promote
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adherence/invasion of the barrier cells, and toxins, which lyse these cells to increase
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barrier permeability, in order to directly cross their relevant barriers. Studies with an in
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vitro alveolar bilayer model (A549- apical:EAhy926-basolateral) implicated the use of
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both the “Trojan horse” and the “direct migration” mechanisms by M. tb (Bermudez et
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al., 2002). However, this model lacked a basement membrane (BM) between the
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alveolar epithelial cell (AEC) and EC bilayer, and the direct bacterial migration of M. tb
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could be ascribed to an incomplete BM.
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M. tb expresses several adhesins, HBHA, malate synthase (Rv1837c; MS), and
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ESAT-6, that enable bacterial attachment to the AEC (Pethe et al., 2001; Kinhikar et al.,
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2006; Kinhikar et al., 2010). HBHA, a heparan sulphate proteoglycan receptor-binding
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adhesion, promotes adherence to AEC but not to macrophages (Pethe et al., 2001).
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ESAT-6 is both a laminin-binding adhesin that binds AEC and is a pore-forming toxin
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that lyses macrophages and AEC in vivo and in vitro (Hsu et al., 2003; Kinhikar et al.,
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2010; McDonough & Kress, 1995) Transcripts for ESAT-6, MS, and HBHA are
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upregulated in M. tb in AEC cells (Ryndak et al., 2015; Delogu et al., 2006), while they
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are unaffected in bacteria replicating in macrophages (Schnappinger et al., 2003;
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Fontan et al., 2008). M. bovis BCG, M. tb H37Rv esat-6 and M. bovis BCG hbha are
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attenuated for dissemination from the lungs in animal models (Lewis et al., 2003; Pethe
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et al., 2001). Together, these results raise the possibility that like other bacteria, M. tb
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also uses adhesins and toxins to achieve “direct migration” across the alveolar barrier
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by transcellular and/or paracellular mechanisms.
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To investigate roles for HBHA and ESAT-6 in the direct migration of M. tb across
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the alveolar barrier, we modified the in vitro alveolar barrier to address the shortcomings
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of the earlier model (Bermudez et al., 2002). While AECs express the components of
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the BM in vitro, the provision of exogenous laminin is necessary for complete BM
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formation (Furuyama & Mochitate, 2000). Our model therefore incorporates a BM
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between the AEC and EC monolayers and uses the more relevant human pulmonary
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artery EC line, HPAE-26.
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Studies with our human in vitro alveolar barrier demonstrate the macrophage-
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free migration of clinical M. tb strains. ESAT-6 mutants, M. bovis BCG and M. tb H37Rv
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esat-6, and ESAT-6 secretion-deficient M. tb H37Rv phoP are similarly attenuated for
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transmigration; and the M. bovis BCG hbha (lacking both ESAT-6 and HBHA),
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demonstrates greater attenuation of transmigration compared to strains lacking ESAT-6
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alone. These results provide evidence that like other Gram-positive bacteria, M. tb may
109
also employ the synergistic activity of adhesins and toxins to achieve macrophage-
110
independent direct transmigration across the alveolar barrier during primary infection.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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M. tb infection and replication in HPAE-26 cells: The earlier in vitro alveolar bilayer
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barrier included bilayers of AEC (A549; human type II AEC), but a non-physiological EC
115
line (EAhy926) which is a hybrid of human umbilical vein EC and A549 cells) (Bermudez
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et al., 2002). To confirm that human pulmonary artery EC (HPAE-26) (Coriell;
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WC00107) get infected with and support M. tb replication (Fig. 1), 5 x 105/well HPAE-26
118
were seeded into wells of a 24 well plate (or glass coverslips in wells for microscopy)
119
pre-coated with 0.1% pig gelatin 10 min and cultured in F12K medium supplemented
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with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 0.1 mg/ml heparin and 0.03 mg/ml endothelial cell
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growth factor and grown to confluency. Confluent monolayers were washed with F12K
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medium and infected with M. tb H37Rv at multiplicities of infection (MOI) 1:1 and 5:1
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bacteria to cell for 2 hr. Infected cells were washed thrice with F12K medium and
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remaining extracellular bacteria were killed by amikacin treatment (200 ug/ml) for 1 hr.
125
Amikacin was removed by washing thrice with F12K medium and replaced with F12K
126
1% FCS. At indicated time points and in triplicate, infected cells were washed thrice with
127
F12K medium and lysed with 0.1% triton X-100 for colony forming units (CFUs) (Fig. 1a)
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or fixed with 60% acetone 20 min for staining and light microscopy (Fig. 1b). Lysates
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were serially diluted, plated onto 7H11 Middlebrook plates and incubated at 37C for
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CFUs. Fixed infected cells on coverslips were acid-fast stained by the Kinyoun stain (TB
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Stain kit K; Fisher Scientific), visualized under oil-emersion (Nikon Eclipse 80i light
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microscope) and images captured using a mounted Nikon CoolPix 9400 digital camera.
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Human in vitro alveolar barrier: To mimic the human in vivo alveolar barrier (Fig. 2a and
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2b), BM preparation (Matrigel; BD Biosiences), diluted in ice-cold serum-free medium,
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was pipetted (60 g/cm2) onto 3 m porous membranes of transwell permeable
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supports (Costar), incubated 1 hr at 37°C followed by overnight at room temperature.
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The polymerized BM was moistened for 1-2 hr at 37°C with serum-free F12K media,
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surplus media removed, and inserts placed upside-down in wells of a 24-well plate. The
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exposed bottom sides of the transwells were seeded with 10 5/100l HPAE-26 cells in
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F12K containing glutamine, 10% FBS, heparin (0.05 mg/ml) and EC growth supplement
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(ECGS) (0.02 mg/ml) and the cell-seeded inverted transwells left undisturbed for ~45
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min to allow cellular adherence. The HPAE-26-seeded inserts were gently turned into
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upright position into wells containing 500l F12K-glutamine/FBS/heparin/ECGS, and
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200l F12K-glutamine/10% FBS added to upper chambers. The slower growth rate of
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HPAE-26 cells compared to A549 cells requires that HPAE-26 cells be seeded to the
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basal surface of the BM-coated transwells 2 days prior to the seeding of A549 cells to
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the apical surface, to enable confluent monolayers of both cell-lines to form
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simultaneously. At 48 hr post-HPAE-26 seeding, the upper chambers are seeded with
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105/200l A549 cells (ATCC; CCL-185). Transwells with similarly seeded HPAE-26 or
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A549 cells alone were included as controls. Starting one day post-seeding for each cell
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type, the transmembrane electrical resistance (TER) of the monolayers/bilayer in
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triplicate wells was monitored daily using a MilliCell ERS Volt/Ohm meter (Millipore) until
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stabilization (Fig. 2c). TER of duplicate BM-infused, cell-free transwells were also
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recorded daily to account for fluctuations in TER readings.
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Mycobacterial strains: M. tb H37Rv and clinical isolates CDC1551 and HN878 exhibit
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similar dissemination from the lungs in aerosol-infected animal models (Palanisamy et
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al., 2008). M. tb esat-6 and M. bovis BCG (attenuated for expression of ESAT-6 and
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in vivo dissemination) (Hsu et al., 2003; Lewis et al., 2003; Guinn et al., 2004), and M.
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tb H37Rv phoP (deficient for secretion of ESAT-6) (Frigui et al., 2008) were tested in
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parallel with wild type M. tb H37Rv. In addition, M. bovis BCG hbha (attenuated for
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expression of both ESAT-6 and HBHA) (Pethe et al., 2001) was evaluated for migration
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across the human in vitro alveolar barrier.
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Trans-alveolar barrier migration experiments: Mid-log phase bacteria (cultured in 7H9
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broth supplemented with 0.2% glycerol, 10% ADC, 0.05% Tween80) in single-cell
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suspensions (~107 CFU; 200 l) were added to upper chambers of fully-formed in vitro
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alveolar barriers in triplicate for each strain. Inocula CFUs were verified by plating serial
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dilutions on 7H11 Middlebrook agar. At 72 hr post-infection, media from the bottom
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chambers were collected, diluted, and plated for CFUs. Percent migration was
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calculated (# CFU in bottom chamber/# CFU in inoculum) x 100. Percent migrations
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were normalized in comparison to the value obtained for the M. tb H37Rv assayed in
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parallel and set at 1. (Absolute percent migrations of M. tb H37Rv ranged 0.15 – 1% in
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separate experiments.) The Mann Whitney one tailed test was used to determine
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statistical significance (GraphPad Prism 5 software); P values ≤ 0.05 were considered
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statistically significant. (While attenuations of M. tb H37Rv esat-6 and M. bovis BCG
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compared to M. tb H37Rv wild type and of M. bovis BCG hbha to BCG wild type were
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verified in additional separate experiments, the migration of M. tb H37Rv phoP across
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the in vitro alveolar barrier was performed once in comparison to M. tb H37Rv wild type
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and M. bovis BCG.)
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RESULTS
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HPAE-26 cells are infected with and support M. tb replication: Human cell-line
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A549 is widely used for studies of interactions of other pulmonary pathogens e.g.,
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Influenza A, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus etc., with human AEC.
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In contrast to the extensive information on M. tb invasion and replication in A549 cells,
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studies with human HPAE-26 EC are not reported. Our results demonstrate that at
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MOIs of 1:1 and 5:1, intra-HPAE-26 M. tb H37Rv CFU increased by ~1.7 and ~3.6 fold
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by day 3, and ~12.8 and ~8.5 fold by day 5, respectively (Fig. 1a). Kinyoun staining of
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fixed M. tb-infected HPAE-26 revealed increasing numbers of acid-fast bacteria in the
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cells over time (Fig. 1b). Thus M. tb infects EC and replicates intracellularly in these
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cells.
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Human in vitro alveolar barrier: A bilayer model of the alveolar barrier based on
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monolayers of human AEC and EC on opposing sides of a BM-infused permeable
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transwell membrane was devised (Fig. 2b). There was no effect on morphology or
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cellular replication of either cell type during growth on BM (data not shown). The
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developing monolayers of the two cell-types were monitored individually and in parallel
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with the bilayer by measuring the TER between the upper and bottom chambers of
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triplicate wells (Fig. 2c). TER measurements for EC-seeded transwell inserts increase
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from 1 day post-seeding (~382 +/-14 ohms/cm2) to peak/plateau at 8 days post-seeding
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(~464 +/- 64 ohms/cm2). TER values in AEC-seeded transwell inserts also increase
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from 1 day post-seeding (~398 +/-4 ohms/cm2) to peak/plateau 6 days post-seeding
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(~472 +/- 19 ohms/cm2). The initial TER for the bilayer (419 +/-11 ohms/cm2) at 1 day
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post-A549 seeding increases to peak/plateau at ~493 +/- 9 ohms/cm2 on day 8 post-
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EC-seeding (day 6 post- AEC-seeding) and is higher than the TER for either monolayer
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alone. The resulting bilayer mimics the gas exchange regions of the human alveolar
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barrier in that the AEC and EC share a BM with the apical AEC-seeded side
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representing the alveolar lumen and the basolateral EC-seeded side representing the
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capillary lumen (Fig. 2a and 2b).
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Migration of M. tb H37Rv and clinical isolates across the human in vitro alveolar
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barrier: M. tb H37Rv, CDC1551 and HN878, strains that disseminate similarly in vivo
210
(Palanisamy et al., 2008), demonstrated similar migration across the human in vitro
211
alveolar barrier (Fig. 3a). There was no statistically significant difference between the
212
percent migration of the three strains (0.99 +/- 0.33%; 1.0 +/- 0.14%; 1.0 +/-0.13%,
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respectively) suggesting that the bacterial factors and mechanisms responsible for
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direct migration across the alveolar barrier are conserved and similar in all 3 strains.
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Migration of in vivo dissemination–attenuated mycobacterial strains across the
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human in vitro alveolar barrier: The migrations of M. tb H37Rv esat-6, M. bovis
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BCG, and M. tb H37Rv phoP were evaluated in parallel with M. tb H37Rv (Fig. 3b).
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The three mutant strains were all similarly attenuated for migration across the human in
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vitro alveolar barrier (~50% compared to H37Rv). There was no significant difference
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between the percent migrations of the three mutant strains (Fig. 3b). These results
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demonstrate a role for ESAT-6 in the direct crossing of M. tb across the alveolar barrier.
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Disruption/deletion of hbha in M. tb or M. bovis BCG causes attenuated
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dissemination from the lungs of intra-nasally-infected mice (Pethe et al., 2001). The
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migration of H37Rv, BCG, and BCG hbha were also evaluated in parallel (Figure 3B).
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Migration of BCG hbha was 40% lower than BCG (P value = 0.05) and 72% lower than
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H37Rv (P value = 0.05). Migration of BCG hbha, was diminished compared to both M.
227
tb esat-6 and M. tb phoP as well as BCG, all of which express hbha in a background
228
attenuated for esat-6 expression and/or ESAT-6 secretion. Importantly, simultaneous
10
229
deficiency of two adhesins demonstrated increased attenuation of bacterial migration
230
across the barrier. Thus, strains that exhibit attenuated dissemination from the lung in
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vivo in animal models are also attenuated for migration across the human in vitro
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alveolar barrier, validating the model for studies of macrophage-independent M. tb
233
dissemination across the alveolar barrier.
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DISCUSSION
236
In vitro models of mucosal barriers have enhanced our understanding of the
237
mechanisms used by pathogens such as Shigella spp., enteropathogenic Yersinia, and
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Streptococcus pneumoniae, just to name a few, to cross their relevant barriers
239
(McCormick, 2003). To investigate the M. tb proteins and the mechanisms employed by
240
M. tb to directly cross the alveolar barrier during primary infection, we devised an
241
accurate mimic of the human in vivo alveolar barrier. M. tb strains that disseminate
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similarly in animal models migrated similarly across this human in vitro alveolar barrier
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(Fig. 3a). Importantly, BCG and M. tb esat-6, which are attenuated for dissemination
244
from the lungs in aerosol-infected mice, are equally attenuated for transmigration across
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the human in vitro alveolar barrier (Fig. 3b), as is M. tb phoP (deficient for ESAT-6
246
secretion) (Fig. 3b). The BCG hbha strain demonstrated enhanced attenuation for
247
macrophage-independent transmigration compared to the mutants lacking only ESAT-6
248
(Fig. 3b). Together, these results provide evidence for synergistic participation of ESAT-
249
6 and HBHA in direct migration across the alveolar barrier in humans.
250
The massive replication of M. tb in a non-migrating, non-antigen-presenting
251
compartment of the lungs in aerosol-infected mice (Wolf et al., 2008), the presence of
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M. tb in the AEC in non-TB humans (Barrios-Payan et al., 2012; Hernandez-Pando et
253
al., 2000), and the enhanced infectivity of M. tb retrieved from type II AEC to cross a
254
bilayer of A549 and Eahy926 cells (Bermudez et al., 2002) indicate that M. tb exploits
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the non-phagocytic intra-AEC environment to both replicate actively (Wolf et al., 2008;
256
Mehta et al., 1996) and to transition to a disseminative phenotype. This is supported by
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the transcriptional profile of M. tb replicating in human type II AEC (Ryndak et al., 2015).
258
Thus, intra-AEC M. tb downregulate DosR (DevR) regulon genes and dormancy-
259
inducing stress-related genes, and upregulate genes involved in energy production,
260
protein synthesis, and cell-wall synthesis (Ryndak et al., 2015). In contrast, intra-
261
macrophage M. tb show upregulation of DosR (DevR) regulon genes and stress-related
262
genes associated with transition to dormancy (Schnappinger et al., 2003; Fontan et al.,
263
2008). While esat-6 is downregulated in M. tb in macrophages, esat-6 and 5 genes
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encoding ESAT-6-like proteins, esxH, esxW, esxJ, esxK and esxP, are upregulated in
265
M. tb in type II AEC (Ryndak et al., 2015), as are genes encoding the laminin-binding
266
adhesin MS which promotes bacterial adherence to type II AEC (Kinhikar et al., 2006),
267
Ag 85C (Rv0129c) which is a member of the fibronectin-binding Ag85 complex (Kuo et
268
al., 2012) and Rv3922c which has sequence similarity to hemolysins of other bacteria.
269
Importantly, transcripts for these genes are unaffected during bacterial residence in
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macrophages (Schnappinger et al., 2003; Fontan et al., 2008).
271
Bacterial dissemination requires that after crossing the alveolar barrier, M. tb
272
survive and adapt to the blood to eventually infect the cells of other organs. Our studies
273
of ex vivo adaptation of M. tb to whole blood from HIV- and HIV+ subjects demonstrated
274
that esat-6 is upregulated in M. tb replicating in both environments (Ryndak et al.,
12
275
2014); esat-6 was the most upregulated of ~150 upregulated M. tb genes in blood from
276
HIV+ patients. As in AEC, upregulation of esat-6 was accompanied by upregulation of
277
esxW, esxJ, esxK and esxP. The higher susceptibility of HIV+ patients to M. tb infection
278
as well as disseminated and extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) further emphasizes a potential
279
role for these ESAT-6-like proteins in dissemination of M. tb.
280
Other bacterial pathogens cross the relevant mucosal barriers by synergistic use
281
of repertoires of adhesins and lysins/toxins (Doran et al., 2013). Adhesins enable
282
bacterial anchoring to the cells of the barrier via binding to components of the ECM/BM
283
(laminin, proteoglycans, collagen, fibronectin, elastin etc), and toxins facilitate
284
dissemination by increasing barrier permeability via cell lysis. The upregulation of
285
transcripts for east-6 and hbha in M. tb replicating in AECs (Ryndak et al., 2015;
286
Kinhikar et al., 2010; Delogu et al., 2006), and the greater attenuation of BCG hbha
287
strain for migration across the in vitro alveolar barrier is reminiscent of the synergism of
288
adhesin(s) and toxin(s) reported for other Gram-positive bacteria for direct
289
dissemination. Thus, L. monocytogenes adhesins (FbpA, ActA, InlA) promote
290
attachment/invasion of small intestinal enterocytes (Dramsi et al., 2004; Suarez et al.,
291
2001; Bierne et al., 2007) and Listeriolysin O (LLO), a pore-forming toxin, impairs the
292
integrity of the intestinal epithelial barrier (Richter et al., 2009). S. pneumonia adhesins
293
PspC, CbpA and PsaA promote adherence to type II AEC (Nobbs et al., 2009; Chen et
294
al., 2010); while pneumolysin (Ply) is cytotoxic to AEC and EC resulting in increased
295
alveolar permeability (Marriott et al., 2008). S. aureus adhesin SpA promotes invasion
296
across airway epithelial cells via paracellular junctions, alters the epithelial barrier to
297
expose ECM, and enables the S. aureus fibronectin-binding proteins (FnbP) to bind to
13
298
EC (Soong et al., 2011; Sinha et al., 1999), and S. aureus α-toxin detaches epithelial
299
cells from the BM to increase the microvascular EC barrier permeability to promote
300
invasive disease (Phillips et al., 2006; Powers et al., 2012).
301
That relatively low numbers of bacteria (≤ 1%) cross the in vitro alveolar barrier is
302
likely a consequence of the limited time for which the in vitro barrier can be maintained
303
(3-4 days). The extensive replication of M. tb in AEC leads to necrosis and lysis (Dobos
304
et al., 2000; McDonough & Kress, 1995) and subsequent infection of the adjacent
305
AECs (Castro-Garza et al., 2002). Thus, in vivo, M. tb would replicate in the infected
306
AECs, transform to a disseminative phenotype, lyse the cells, spread to adjacent cells,
307
and continue to replicate/lyse, simultaneously disseminating systemically to achieve
308
widespread infection before adaptive immune responses that induce latency are elicited
309
(Wolf et al., 2008).
310
The lack of ESAT-6 and HBHA does not completely abolish dissemination from
311
the mouse lungs (Pethe et al., 2001; Lewis et al., 2003) or migration across the human
312
in vitro alveolar barrier (Fig. 3b), indicating participation of additional bacterial factors.
313
While the functional activities of EsxH, EsxW, EsxJ, EsxK and EsxP are not known, like
314
ESAT-6, these ESAT-6-like proteins are small (~100 amino acids) secreted proteins that
315
lack a secretion signal and share a known or predicted helix-turn-helix structure and
316
central WXG motif (Pallen, 2002). The conservation of these structural features with
317
ESAT-6 despite lack of significant sequence similarity suggests similarity in function
318
thus implicating a potential role for them as adhesins and/or toxins. The human in vitro
319
alveolar barrier described herein will enable exploration of their role in bacterial
320
dissemination from the lungs.
14
321
Strain/lineage-specific differences in virulence phenotype and tropism for
322
extrapulmonary sites are increasingly reported for M. tb (Gagneux & Small, 2007;
323
Palanisamy et al., 2009; Click et al., 2012; Caws et al., 2008). Thus, M. tb strains from
324
CSF of TB meningitis patients disseminate more efficiently than strains from pulmonary
325
TB (PTB) patients (Hernandez-Pando et al., 2010). W-Beijing strains of the East Asian
326
lineage are three times more likely to cause EPTB compared to non-Beijing strains
327
(Kong et al., 2007). The highly transmissible Beijing and F15/LAM4/KZN M. tb families
328
adhere and invade type II AEC with greater efficiency than genetically different clinical
329
strains and M. tb H37Rv (Ashiru et al., 2010). The human in vitro alveolar barrier could
330
also enable understanding of how M. tb strains/lineages differ in their dissemination
331
ability.
332
There are limitations to our human in vitro alveolar barrier model. First, the in vivo
333
alveolar barrier is comprised of both type I and type II AEC; the model includes only the
334
latter cell-type. There is no true type I AEC line available, and the current type I model
335
cell-line, WI-26, which is lysed by ESAT-6 (Kinhikar et al., 2010) and CFP21 (Vir et al.,
336
2014), is a lung fibroblast line with epithelial-like morphology. Second, our model mimics
337
only the gas-exchange region of the alveoli where there is no interstitial ECM. Other
338
adhesins and toxins may interact with different ECM components in the interstitium.
339
Finally, the contribution of inflammatory responses that damage the alveolar barrier in
340
vivo would not be captured in our model. Nevertheless, the current model will contribute
341
to the identification and characterization of additional M. tb adhesins and lysins that
342
participate in direct bacterial dissemination from the lungs, allow exploration of the
343
pathogen-alveolar interactions of M. tb strains with tropism for extrapulmonary sites of
15
344
infection, and promote understanding of the mechanisms employed by M. tb to establish
345
systemic latent infection.
346
347
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
348
We would like to acknowledge the sources of the mycobacterial strains used in this
349
study: Dr. William Jacobs Jr. (Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY) for M. tb
350
H37Rv and M. tb H37Rv esat-6; Dr. Michael Brennan (Aeras, Rockville, MD) for M.
351
bovis BCG and M. bovis hbha BCG; Dr. Issar Smith for M. tb H37Rv phoP and Dr.
352
Gilla Kaplan for clinical isolates CDC1551 and HN878 (both of New Jersey Medical
353
School, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey). This work was supported by research
354
funds from the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office
355
of Research and Development, and with salary support to Research Microbiologist and
356
Research Career Scientist, SL.
357
358
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FIGURE LEGENDS
536
Fig. 1. M. tb H37Rv invades and replicates in HPAE-26 cells. (a) Intracellular M. tb
537
CFU recovered from HPAE-26 infected with M. tb at MOI (bacteria:cells) 1:1 and 5:1 on
538
Days 0 (2 hr), 3 and 5 post-infection. (b) Representative light microscopy images of
539
HPAE-26 (stained with Brilliant Green) infected with M. tb (Kinyoun stain -pink) MOI 1:1
540
under the same conditions as described in panel A.
541
Fig. 2. Creating the human in vitro alveolar barrier. (a) Schematic illustration of the
542
in vivo alveolar barrier. The alveolar lumen is lined with a monolayer of type I (light grey)
543
and type II (blue) alveolar epithelial cells (AEC) which are separated from the alveolar
544
capillary endothelial cells (EC) (dark grey) by interstitial extracellular matrix (ECM) or by
545
a fused basement membrane (BM). To cross this barrier directly, M. tb (fuschia) must
546
invade and replicate in the AEC, exit these cells, cross the ECM/BM/EC and exit to the
24
547
blood circulation. (b) The in vitro alveolar barrier was constructed by growing
548
monolayers of A549 (human type II AEC line) and HPAE-26 (human pulmonary artery
549
EC line) cells on opposite sides of a BM-infused transwell permeable membrane. The
550
upper chamber (A549 side) represents the alveolar lumen while the lower chamber
551
(HPAE-26 side) represents entrance into the blood circulation. (c) Daily transmembrane
552
electrical resistance (TER) (ohms/cm2) measurements monitored in parallel and in
553
triplicate; BM-infused transwells seeded with HPAE-26 alone (red diamonds), A549
554
alone (green squares), or both HPAE-26 and A549 (blue triangles) starting one day post
555
seeding. TER measurements for BM-infused transwells with no cells (purple circles)
556
were also taken in duplicate and in parallel to control for fluctuations in meter reading.
557
Measurements were taken out to 9 days post-HPAE-26 seeding and 7 days post-A549
558
seeding.
559
Fig. 3. Percent migrations of different mycobacterial strains across the human in
560
vitro alveolar barrier. (a) Percent migrations of laboratory M. tb H37Rv and clinical
561
isolates CDC1551 and HN878. (b) Percent migrations of M. tb H37Rv, M. tb H37Rv
562
esat-6, M. tb H37Rv phoP, M. bovis BCG, and M. bovis BCG hbha. All migrations
563
were normalized to M. tb H37Rv = 1. Error bars represent standard errors of triplicate
564
barrier infections. Asterisks (*) indicates statistically significant difference (P value ≤
565
0.05 by Mann-Whitney one tail test); “ns” indicates not statistically different.
566
567
25