Effect of colony morphology variation of Burkholderia pseudomallei on intracellular survival and resistance to antimicrobial environments in human macrophages in vitro.
Tandhavanant. Sarunporn S; Thanwisai. Aunchalee A; Limmathurotsakul. Direk D; Korbsrisate. Sunee S; Day. Nicholas Pj NP; Peacock. Sharon J SJ; Chantratita. Narisara N
Key Findings
- Bacterial colony morphotype influences survival when exposed to LL‑37 and H2O2.
- Acid, nitrite, lysozyme, lactoferrin, and other human peptides did not show morphotype‑dependent differences.
- Anaerobic (low‑oxygen) conditions trigger morphotype switching, especially from type III to another form.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in LL‑37 as a supplement or therapeutic, this work suggests that bacterial resistance to LL‑37 can vary widely depending on bacterial shape and environment, but it offers no direct guidance for human dosing or protocols. The findings mainly inform microbiology and infection control rather than personal health optimization.
Summary
The study looked at how different shapes (morphotypes) of the bacteria Burkholderia pseudomallei survive inside human immune cells and how they react to the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37. Some bacterial forms are more resistant to LL‑37 and hydrogen peroxide, while others are not, and the bacteria can even change shape under low‑oxygen conditions.
Abstract
Primary diagnostic cultures from patients with melioidosis demonstrate variation in colony morphology of the causative organism, Burkholderia pseudomallei. Variable morphology is associated with changes in the expression of a range of putative virulence factors. This study investigated the effect of B. pseudomallei colony variation on survival in the human macrophage cell line U937 and under laboratory conditions simulating conditions within the macrophage milieu. Isogenic colony morphology types II and III were generated from 5 parental type I B. pseudomallei isolates using nutritional limitation. Survival of types II and III were compared with type I for all assays. Morphotype was associated with survival in the presence of H2O2 and antimicrobial peptide LL-37, but not with susceptibility to acid, acidified sodium nitrite, or resistance to lysozyme, lactoferrin, human neutrophil peptide-1 or human beta defensin-2. Incubation under anaerobic conditions was a strong driver for switching of type III to an alternative morphotype. Differences were noted in the survival and replication of the three types following uptake by human macrophages, but marked strain-to strain-variability was observed. Uptake of type III alone was associated with colony morphology switching. Morphotype is associated with phenotypes that alter the ability of B. pseudomallei to survive in adverse environmental conditions.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-11-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/1471-2180-10-303
47
28