Vande Velde Greetje, Kucharíková Soňa, Van Dijck Patrick, Himmelreich Uwe
Department of Imaging and Pathology, Biomedical MRI/MoSAIC, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Methods Mol Biol. 2014;1098:153-67. doi: 10.1007/978-1-62703-718-1_13.
Fungal biofilms formed on various types of medical implants represent a major problem for hospitalized patients. These biofilms and related infections are usually difficult to treat because of their resistance to the classical antifungal drugs. Animal models are indispensable for investigating host-pathogen interactions and for identifying new antifungal targets related to biofilm development. A limited number of animal models is available that can be used for testing novel antifungal drugs in vivo against C. albicans, one of the most common pathogens causing fungal biofilms. Fungal load in biofilms in these models is traditionally analyzed postmortem, requiring host sacrifice and enumeration of microorganisms from individual biofilms in order to evaluate the amount of colony forming units and the efficacy of antifungal treatment. Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) made compatible with small animal models for in vivo biofilm formation is a valuable noninvasive tool to follow-up biofilm development and its treatment longitudinally, reducing the number of animals needed for such studies. Due to the nondestructive and noninvasive nature of BLI, the imaging procedure can be repeated in the same animal, allowing follow-up of the biofilm growth in vivo without removing the implanted device or detaching the biofilm from its substrate. The method described here introduces BLI of C. albicans biofilm formation in vivo on subcutaneously implanted catheters in mice. One of the main challenges to overcome for BLI of fungi is the hampered intracellular substrate delivery through the fungal cell wall, which is managed by using extracellularly located Gaussia luciferase. Although detecting a quantifiable in vivo BLI signal from biofilms formed on the inside of implanted catheters is challenging, BLI proved to be a practical tool in the study of fungal biofilms. This method describing the use of BLI for in vivo follow-up of device-related fungal biofilm formation has the potential for efficient in vivo screening for interesting genes of the pathogen and the host involved in C. albicans biofilm formation as well as for testing novel antifungal therapies.
在各类医用植入物上形成的真菌生物膜是住院患者面临的一个重大问题。这些生物膜及相关感染通常难以治疗,因为它们对传统抗真菌药物具有抗性。动物模型对于研究宿主与病原体的相互作用以及识别与生物膜形成相关的新抗真菌靶点而言不可或缺。目前可用的动物模型数量有限,可用于在体内测试新型抗真菌药物对白色念珠菌(引起真菌生物膜的最常见病原体之一)的效果。在这些模型中,生物膜中的真菌载量传统上是在死后进行分析的,这需要牺牲宿主并从单个生物膜中枚举微生物,以评估菌落形成单位的数量和抗真菌治疗的效果。与用于体内生物膜形成的小动物模型兼容的生物发光成像(BLI)是一种有价值的非侵入性工具,可纵向跟踪生物膜的形成及其治疗过程,减少此类研究所需的动物数量。由于BLI具有非破坏性和非侵入性的特点,成像过程可在同一只动物身上重复进行,从而能够在不移除植入装置或不将生物膜从其基质上分离的情况下,对体内生物膜的生长进行跟踪。本文所述方法介绍了在小鼠皮下植入导管上白色念珠菌生物膜形成的体内BLI。真菌BLI要克服的主要挑战之一是细胞内底物通过真菌细胞壁的传递受阻,这可通过使用位于细胞外的高斯荧光素酶来解决。尽管从植入导管内部形成的生物膜中检测到可量化的体内BLI信号具有挑战性,但BLI被证明是研究真菌生物膜的一种实用工具。这种描述使用BLI对与装置相关的真菌生物膜形成进行体内跟踪的方法,有可能高效地在体内筛选参与白色念珠菌生物膜形成的病原体和宿主的相关有趣基因,以及测试新型抗真菌疗法。