Anthrax toxins inhibit neutrophil signaling pathways in brain endothelium and contribute to the pathogenesis of meningitis

NM van Sorge, CM Ebrahimi, SM McGillivray, D Quach… - PloS one, 2008 - journals.plos.org
NM van Sorge, CM Ebrahimi, SM McGillivray, D Quach, M Sabet, DG Guiney, KS Doran
PloS one, 2008journals.plos.org
Background Anthrax meningitis is the main neurological complication of systemic infection
with Bacillus anthracis approaching 100% mortality. The presence of bacilli in brain
autopsies indicates that vegetative bacteria are able to breach the blood-brain barrier (BBB).
The BBB represents not only a physical barrier but has been shown to play an active role in
initiating a specific innate immune response that recruits neutrophils to the site of infection.
Currently, the basic pathogenic mechanisms by which B. anthracis penetrates the BBB and …
Background
Anthrax meningitis is the main neurological complication of systemic infection with Bacillus anthracis approaching 100% mortality. The presence of bacilli in brain autopsies indicates that vegetative bacteria are able to breach the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB represents not only a physical barrier but has been shown to play an active role in initiating a specific innate immune response that recruits neutrophils to the site of infection. Currently, the basic pathogenic mechanisms by which B. anthracis penetrates the BBB and causes anthrax meningitis are poorly understood.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Using an in vitro BBB model, we show for the first time that B. anthracis efficiently invades human brain microvascular endothelial cells (hBMEC), the single cell layer that comprises the BBB. Furthermore, transcriptional profiling of hBMEC during infection with B. anthracis revealed downregulation of 270 (87%) genes, specifically key neutrophil chemoattractants IL-8, CXCL1 (Groα) and CXCL2 (Groβ), thereby strongly contrasting hBMEC responses observed with other meningeal pathogens. Further studies using specific anthrax toxin-mutants, quantitative RT-PCR, ELISA and in vivo assays indicated that anthrax toxins actively suppress chemokine production and neutrophil recruitment during infection, allowing unrestricted proliferation and dissemination of the bacteria. Finally, mice challenged with B. anthracis Sterne, but not the toxin-deficient strain, developed meningitis.
Conclusions/Significance
These results suggest a significant role for anthrax toxins in thwarting the BBB innate defense response promoting penetration of bacteria into the central nervous system. Furthermore, establishment of a mouse model for anthrax meningitis will aid in our understanding of disease pathogenesis and development of more effective treatment strategies.
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