Mans Jeffrey J, von Lackum Kate, Dorsey Cassandra, Willis Shaun, Wallet Shannon M, Baker Henry V, Lamont Richard J, Handfield Martin
Department of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2009 Aug 18;10:380. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-10-380.
The human microflora is known to be extremely complex, yet most pathogenesis research is conducted in mono-species models of infection. Consequently, it remains unclear whether the level of complexity of a host's indigenous flora can affect the virulence potential of pathogenic species. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether the colonization by commensal species affects a host cell's response to pathogenic species beyond the direct physical saturation of surface receptors, the sequestration of nutrients, the modulation of the physico-chemical environment in the oral cavity, or the production of bacteriocins. Using oral epithelial cells as a model, we hypothesized that the virulence of pathogenic species may vary depending on the complexity of the flora that interacts with host cells.
This is the first report that determines the global epithelial transcriptional response to co-culture with defined complex microbiota. In our model, human immortalized gingival keratinocytes (HIGK) were infected with mono- and mixed cultures of commensal and pathogenic species. The global transcriptional response of infected cells was validated and confirmed phenotypically. In our model, commensal species were able to modulate the expression of host genes with a broad diversity of physiological functions and antagonize the effect of pathogenic species at the cellular level. Unexpectedly, the inhibitory effect of commensal species was not correlated with its ability to inhibit adhesion or invasion by pathogenic species.
Studying the global transcriptome of epithelial cells to single and complex microbial challenges offers clues towards a better understanding of how bacteria-bacteria interactions and bacteria-host interactions impact the overall host response. This work provides evidence that the degree of complexity of a mixed microbiota does influence the transcriptional response to infection of host epithelial cells, and challenges the current dogma regarding the potential versus the actual pathogenicity of bacterial species. These findings support the concept that members of the commensal oral flora have evolved cellular mechanisms that directly modulate the host cell's response to pathogenic species and dampen their relative pathogenicity.
已知人类微生物群极其复杂,但大多数发病机制研究是在单一物种感染模型中进行的。因此,宿主原生菌群的复杂程度是否会影响致病物种的毒力潜力仍不清楚。此外,共生物种的定殖是否会影响宿主细胞对致病物种的反应,除了表面受体的直接物理饱和、营养物质的隔离、口腔物理化学环境的调节或细菌素的产生之外,仍不清楚。我们以口腔上皮细胞为模型,假设致病物种的毒力可能因与宿主细胞相互作用的菌群的复杂程度而异。
这是第一份确定与特定复杂微生物群共培养时上皮细胞整体转录反应的报告。在我们的模型中,人类永生化牙龈角质形成细胞(HIGK)被共生和致病物种的单一培养物和混合培养物感染。感染细胞的整体转录反应在表型上得到了验证和确认。在我们的模型中,共生物种能够调节具有广泛生理功能的宿主基因的表达,并在细胞水平上拮抗致病物种的作用。出乎意料的是,共生物种的抑制作用与其抑制致病物种黏附或侵袭的能力无关。
研究上皮细胞对单一和复杂微生物挑战的整体转录组,为更好地理解细菌-细菌相互作用和细菌-宿主相互作用如何影响宿主的整体反应提供了线索。这项工作提供了证据,表明混合微生物群的复杂程度确实会影响宿主上皮细胞对感染的转录反应,并挑战了当前关于细菌物种潜在致病性与实际致病性的教条。这些发现支持了这样一种概念,即共生口腔菌群的成员已经进化出细胞机制,直接调节宿主细胞对致病物种的反应,并降低它们的相对致病性。