Medical Immunology
Medical Immunology
Medical Immunology
CONTENT ALERTS
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a diverse species causing invasive as well as localized infections that result in massive global morbidity and mortality. Strains vary markedly in pathogenic potential, but the molecular basis is obscured by the diversity and
plasticity of the pneumococcal genome. In the present study, S. pneumoniae serotype 3 blood (n ! 12) or ear (n ! 13) isolates
were multilocus sequence typed (MLST) and assessed for biofilm formation and virulence phenotype. Blood and ear isolates exhibited similar MLST distributions but differed markedly in phenotype. Blood isolates formed robust biofilms only at pH 7.4,
which were enhanced in Fe(III)-supplemented medium. Conversely, ear isolates formed biofilms only at pH 6.8, and Fe(III) was
inhibitory. Biofilm formation paralleled luxS expression and genetic competence. In a mouse intranasal challenge model, blood
isolates did not stably colonize the nasopharynx but spread to the blood; none spread to the ear. Ear isolates colonized the nasopharynx at higher levels and also spread to the ear compartment in a significant proportion of animals; none caused bacteremia.
Thus, pneumococci of the same serotype and MLST exhibit distinct phenotypes in accordance with clinical site of isolation, indicative of stable niche adaptation within a clonal lineage.
p. 505513
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Research Centre for Infectious Diseases, School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australiaa; SA Pathology, Womens and
Childrens Hospital, North Adelaide, South Australia, Australiab
Trappetti et al.
Source
ST232/1
ST233/3
ST180/4
ST458/5
ST233/6
ST180/7
ST180/8
ST180/15
ST458/20
ST232/23
ST180/24
ST232/25
ST180/2
ST180/9
ST180/10
ST232/11
ST180/12
ST233/13
ST180/14
ST180/16
ST232/17
ST232/18
ST232/19
ST180/21
ST180/22
ST232
ST233
ST180
ST458
ST233
ST180
ST180
ST180
ST458
ST232
ST180
ST232
ST180
ST180
ST180
ST232
ST180
ST233
ST180
ST180
ST232
ST232
ST232
ST180
ST180
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Blood
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Ear
Strains were isolated between 1988 and 1996 from patients at either the Womens and
Childrens Hospital, North Adelaide, South Australia, or the Alice Springs Hospital,
Northern Territory, Australia. Similar proportions of OM and blood isolates were
derived from each site.
506 iai.asm.org
ing cells using a sonicating water bath, and plating serial dilutions onto
blood agar. Statistical analysis was performed using 2-tailed Students t
test.
RNA extraction and quantitative real-time RT-PCR. Selected clinical
isolates were grown in C!Y with or without additional Fe(III) (100 #M)
for 24 h in a static biofilm model and total RNA was extracted as previously described (26). The level of gene expression relative to that of 16S
rRNA was determined using a one-step reverse transcriptase PCR (RTPCR) kit and a LC480 real-time cycler (Roche) as described previously
(19). Statistical analysis was performed using 2-tailed Students t test.
Mutagenesis of luxS. The luxS gene was deleted from various type 3
strains using overlap extension PCR and transformation as described previously (19).
Infection of mice. Animal experiments were approved by the University of Adelaide Animal Ethics Committee. Female outbred 5- to 6-weekold CD-1 (Swiss) mice were inoculated intranasally with 1 $ 107 CFU of
S. pneumoniae (confirmed retrospectively by viable count) in a volume of
10 #l. Groups of 15 mice were inoculated for each strain, and 5 randomly
selected mice from each group were euthanized by CO2 asphyxiation at
24, 48, or 72 h postinfection. Nasal wash, nasopharyngeal tissue, ear tissue,
lung, brain, and blood samples were collected and processed as previously
described (27, 28). Samples were serially diluted and plated onto BA plates
for enumeration of viable pneumococci. Statistical analyses were done
using the Mann-Whitney U test.
RESULTS
Serotype 3 biofilm formation is pH dependent. It has been reported that certain serotypes and STs of S. pneumoniae have a
greater potential to cause invasive disease in humans than others;
likewise, strains differ in their propensities to cause OM (29, 30).
This suggests that strains may differ in their capacity to adapt to
and survive or proliferate within distinct host microenvironments. This further implies that clinical isolates from cases of otitis
media may exhibit in vitro and in vivo phenotypes distinct from
those of blood isolates.
Two conditions that vary significantly between different niches
of the human body are metal ion concentrations (31) and pH; the
pH of the blood is typically around 7.4, while in the (uninfected)
ear cavity it is in the range of 6.5 to 6.8 (32). We first examined
whether a relationship exists between the site of isolation and ability to form biofilms under different pH and [Fe(III)] conditions.
We tested 12 blood isolates and 13 ear isolates belonging to serotype 3, a type that is frequently associated with both OM and
invasive disease. Interestingly, the two groups contained representatives of the same four STs in similar proportions (ST180, ST232,
ST233, and ST458, in order of prevalence) (Table 1). All 25 strains
were in the opaque phase, as judged by opacity phenotype when
grown on THY-catalase plates (28), and there was no significant
difference in the level of type 3 capsular polysaccharide production, as determined by uronic acid assay (33) (results not presented). In the first instance, strains were grown in C!Y medium
(pH 7.4) with or without supplementation with 100 #M Fe(III)
nitrate and were tested in the static biofilm assay. Pneumococcal
growth rates were not significantly different in the presence of this
Fe(III) concentration compared with rates in standard C!Y medium, which contains 0.8 #M total Fe, as measured by inductively
coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICPMS) (data not shown).
After 24 h of incubation, a marked increase in biofilm density in
the presence of Fe(III) was observed in strains isolated from the
blood compared with strains isolated from the ear, as judged by
viable counts of dispersed, unstained biofilms (P % 0.001) (Fig.
1A). The biofilm density was also significantly greater in blood
Infection and Immunity
Strain
boosted further by Fe(III), whereas ear isolates formed robust biofilms only at pH 6.8 and in the absence of Fe(III) (Fig. 2).
LuxS is involved in serotype 3 biofilm formation. To test
whether the iron- and pH-dependent biofilm formation of serotype 3 strains is linked to the activity of the LuxS quorum sensing
system, a relationship previously identified in strain D39 serotype
2 (19), the level of luxS and piuA expression was measured using
real-time RT-PCR. For this analysis, one blood isolate and one ear
isolate belonging to each of the three major STs (ST180, ST232,
and ST233) were selected. The difference in luxS expression levels
(Fig. 1B) between strains and growth conditions closely paralleled
the pattern of biofilm formation (Fig. 1A). In the blood isolates
ST180/15, ST232/1, and ST233/3, luxS expression was significantly higher when cells were grown at pH 7.4 in the presence of
Fe(III) than under other growth conditions (P % 0.001 for
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FIG 1 Biofilm formation and gene expression. (A) Biofilm formation by clinical isolates (12 from blood and 13 from ear) after 24 h of growth at either pH 7.4
or 6.8, with or without 100 #M Fe(III), determined by viable count. Data are the means & standard deviations for three independent experiments (*, P % 0.05;
**, P % 0.01; and ***, P % 0.001; 2-tailed Students t test). (B and C) Expression of luxS (B) and piuA (C) relative to 16S rRNA in the indicated clinical isolates
grown either at pH 7.4 or 6.8, with or without addition of 100 #M Fe(III). Data are the means & standard deviations for three independent experiments (*, P %
0.05; **, P % 0.01; and ***, P % 0.001; 2-tailed Students t test).
Trappetti et al.
for the luxS mutants of all three blood isolates grown at pH 7.4 in
the presence of Fe(III) (data not shown).
Transformability is pH dependent in serotype 3 strains. Induction of the competence state has been shown to parallel biofilm formation in S. pneumoniae (13, 19), and so the transformability of the six serotype 3 clinical isolates, as well as the reference
invasive type 2 strain D39, was measured in planktonic cells grown
at pH 7.4 and pH 6.8, as described previously (19). The transformability of the strains was found to be strongly influenced by the
pH; blood isolates exhibited a significantly greater propensity to
take up external DNA at pH 7.4 (P % 0.001 for ST180/15 and
ST232/1; P % 0.01 for ST233/3), as did the reference strain D39. In
contrast, the ear isolates showed higher rates of transformability at
pH 6.8 (P % 0.001 for ST180/2 and ST232/11; P % 0.01 for ST233/
13) (Fig. 3B). Indeed, for the ST180 and ST232 strains, the blood
isolates were completely untransformable at pH 6.8, while the ear
isolates were not transformable at pH 7.4. Strains of ST233 were
transformable under both conditions tested, but a significant increase in efficiency was observed for the blood isolate at pH 7.4
and ear isolate at pH 6.8.
Clinical isolation site corresponds with virulence phenotype
in mice. To investigate the virulence profile of the clinical isolates,
we used a murine nasopharyngeal inoculation model, which
mimics the natural route of infection for S. pneumoniae. At all the
time points examined (24, 48, and 72 h postinfection), the majority of mice in each group infected with blood isolates (ST180/15,
ST232/1, or ST233/3) showed bacteremia, whereas no bacteremia
could be detected in any of the mice in groups challenged with the
ear isolates (ST180/2, ST232/11, or ST233/13) (Fig. 5C). Collectively, the degree of bacteremia for blood isolates was significantly
greater than that for the combined ear isolate groups at all time
points (P % 0.001). When individual groups within an ST were
compared, the bacteremia level for the ST180/15 group was significantly greater than that for the ST180/2 group at all time points
(P % 0.05), while bacteremia levels in the ST232/1 and ST233/3
groups were significantly greater than those for ST232/11 and
ST233/13, respectively, at 48 h (P % 0.05). The situation was reversed in the nasopharyngeal tissue (Fig. 5A), where blood isolates
as a whole were inferior to ear isolates in terms of overall colonization levels at 48 and 72 h (P % 0.001 in both cases). Comparing
the individual STs, ST232/11 colonized the nasopharyngeal tissue
to a significantly greater extent than ST232/1 at both 48 and 72 h
(P % 0.05 and P % 0.01, respectively), while ST180/2 and
ST233/13 exhibited significantly higher rates of colonization at 72
h than the corresponding ST-matched blood isolate (P % 0.01 and
P % 0.05, respectively). Bacteria in ear tissue samples were detected only in groups challenged with the ear isolates, and this
difference was statistically significant (P % 0.05) at both 48 and 72
h (Fig. 5B).
Interestingly, at 24 h postinfection, pneumococci could not be
detected in the lungs of any of the mice challenged with blood
isolates, in spite of significant bacteremia in the majority of animals in each ST group (Fig. 6C). Moreover, only 4 of the 15 mice
challenged with blood isolates had evidence of pneumococci in
the lungs at either 48 or 72 h. In contrast, no bacteria could be
detected in the lungs of any of the mice challenged with the ear
isolates. Similar findings were observed in brain tissue (Fig. 6B). It
is also interesting to note that pneumococci could not be detected
in nasopharyngeal washes of any mice 24 h postinfection
independent experiments (**, P % 0.01, and ***, P % 0.001; 2-tailed Students t test). (B) Transformability of the reference invasive type 2 strain D39 and the type
3 clinical isolates (from blood or ear) grown at either pH 7.4 or 6.8. Data are the total numbers of transformants (means & standard deviations for three
independent experiments) (**, P % 0.01, and ***, P % 0.001; 2-tailed Students t test). Each transformation reaction mixture contained approximately 107
competent pneumococci.
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FIG 3 (A) Effect of luxS mutation on biofilm formation by ear isolates, determined by viable count. Data are the means & standard deviations for three
Trappetti et al.
from each group were euthanized and numbers of pneumococci in the indicated tissues were quantitated. (A) Nasopharyngeal tissue; (B) ear; (C) blood. Viable counts
are shown for each mouse at each site; horizontal bars indicate the median value for each group/time point. Blood isolates are represented by solid symbols; ear isolates
are represented by open symbols. Differences between groups were analyzed by 1-tailed Mann-Whitney U test (*, P % 0.05; **, P % 0.01; and ***, P % 0.001).
tation of the medium with Fe(III). On the other hand, only the ear
isolates were capable of forming biofilms at pH 6.8, and at this pH,
Fe(III) was inhibitory.
We then conducted more detailed phenotypic comparisons of
Infection and Immunity
FIG 5 Virulence phenotypes of blood and ear isolates. Groups of 15 mice were infected intranasally with 107 CFU of the indicated strain. At the indicated times, 5 mice
FIG 6 Virulence phenotypes of blood and ear isolates. Groups of 15 mice were infected intranasally with 107 CFU of the indicated strain. At the indicated times,
5 mice from each group were euthanized and numbers of pneumococci in the indicated tissues were quantitated. (A) Nasal wash; (B) brain; (C) lungs. Viable
counts are shown for each mouse at each site; horizontal bars indicate the median value for each group and time point. Blood isolates are represented by solid
symbols; ear isolates are represented by open symbols. Differences between groups were analyzed by 1-tailed Mann-Whitney U test (*, P % 0.05).
Trappetti et al.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research
Council (NHMRC) of Australia (Program Grant 565526 to J.C.P. and
A.W.P. and NHMRC Australia Fellowship to J.C.P.), the Australian Research Council (DORA Fellowship to A.W.P.), and the Garnett Passe and
Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation (Training Fellowship to C.T.).
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