Innate immunity against Granulibacter bethesdensis, an emerging gram-negative bacterial pathogen.
Zarember. Kol A KA; Marshall-Batty. Kimberly R KR; Cruz. Anna R AR; Chu. Jessica J; Fenster. Michael E ME; Shoffner. Adam R AR; Rogge. Larissa S LS; Whitney. Adeline R AR; Czapiga. Meggan M; Song. Helen H HH; Shaw. Pamela A PA; Nagashima. Kunio K; Malech. Harry L HL; DeLeo. Frank R FR; Holland. Steven M SM; Gallin. John I JI; Greenberg. David E DE
Key Findings
- G. bethesdensis is highly resistant to the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37
- The bacteria survive in high concentrations of human serum
- Normal immune cells only reduce bacterial numbers by about 50% over 24 hours, while CGD immune cells cannot kill it
Practical Outcomes
- LL‑37 is not a useful tool for fighting this specific infection, so biohackers should not rely on it for antimicrobial purposes. Focus on other strategies, such as enhancing oxidative immune functions or using different antimicrobial agents, when dealing with resistant Gram‑negative bacteria.
Summary
The study shows that the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 does not kill the bacteria Granulibacter bethesdensis, which can cause infections in people with immune deficiencies. This pathogen can survive in blood and avoids being killed by immune cells, especially in those lacking proper oxidative killing mechanisms.
Abstract
Acetic acid bacteria were previously considered nonpathogenic in humans. However, over the past decade, five genera of Acetobacteraceae have been isolated from patients with inborn or iatrogenic immunodeficiencies. Here, we describe the first studies of the interactions of the human innate immune system with a member of this bacterial family, Granulibacter bethesdensis, an emerging pathogen in patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). Efficient phagocytosis of G. bethesdensis by normal and CGD polymorphonuclear leukocytes (CGD PMN) required heat-labile serum components (e.g., C3), and binding of C3 and C9 to G. bethesdensis was detected by immunoblotting. However, this organism survived in human serum concentrations of ≥90%, indicating a high degree of serum resistance. Consistent with the clinical host tropism of G. bethesdensis, CGD PMN were unable to kill this organism, while normal PMN, in the presence of serum, reduced the number of CFU by about 50% after a 24-h coculture. This finding, together with the observations that G. bethesdensis was sensitive to H(2)O(2) but resistant to LL-37, a human cationic antimicrobial peptide, suggests an inherent resistance to O(2)-independent killing. Interestingly, 10 to 100 times greater numbers of G. bethesdensis were required to achieve the same level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production induced by Escherichia coli in normal PMN. In addition to the relative inability of the organism to elicit production of PMN ROS, G. bethesdensis inhibited both constitutive and FAS-induced PMN apoptosis. These properties of reduced PMN activation and resistance to nonoxidative killing mechanisms likely play an important role in G. bethesdensis pathogenesis.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-12-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/iai.05557-11