Davis Gregg S, Marino Simeone, Marrs Carl F, Gilsdorf Janet R, Dawid Suzanne, Kirschner Denise E
Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, 1150 West Medical Center Drive, 5641 Med Sci II SPC 5620, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
J Theor Biol. 2014 Aug 21;355:208-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.04.010. Epub 2014 Apr 18.
Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is a bacterium that resides within the human pharynx. Because NTHi is human-restricted, its long-term survival is dependent upon its ability to successfully colonize new hosts. Adherence to host epithelium, mediated by bacterial adhesins, is one of the first steps in NTHi colonization. NTHi express several adhesins, including the high molecular weight (HMW) adhesins that mediate attachment to the respiratory epithelium where they interact with the host immune system to elicit a strong humoral response. hmwA, which encodes the HMW adhesin, undergoes phase variation mediated by 7-base pair tandem repeats located within its promoter region. Repeat number affects both hmwA transcription and HMW-adhesin production such that as the number of repeats increases, adhesin production decreases. Cells expressing large amounts of HMW adhesins may be critical for the establishment and maintenance of NTHi colonization, but they might also incur greater fitness costs when faced with an adhesin-specific antibody-mediated immune response. We hypothesized that the occurrence of large deletion events within the hmwA repeat region allows NTHi cells to maintain adherence in the presence of antibody-mediated immunity. To study this, we developed a mathematical model, incorporating hmwA phase variation and antibody-mediated immunity, to explore the trade-off between bacterial adherence and immune evasion. The model predicts that antibody levels and avidity, catastrophic loss rates, and population carrying capacity all significantly affected numbers of adherent NTHi cells within a host. These results suggest that the occurrence of large, yet rare, deletion events allows for stable maintenance of a small population of adherent cells in spite of HMW adhesin specific antibody-mediated immunity. These adherent subpopulations may be important for sustaining colonization and/or maintaining transmission.
不可分型流感嗜血杆菌(NTHi)是一种寄居于人类咽部的细菌。由于NTHi仅限于人类宿主,其长期存活取决于它成功定殖新宿主的能力。由细菌黏附素介导的对宿主上皮细胞的黏附是NTHi定殖的首要步骤之一。NTHi表达多种黏附素,包括介导与呼吸道上皮细胞附着的高分子量(HMW)黏附素,在那里它们与宿主免疫系统相互作用以引发强烈的体液免疫反应。编码HMW黏附素的hmwA基因,通过位于其启动子区域的7个碱基对串联重复序列介导发生相变。重复次数影响hmwA转录和HMW黏附素的产生,使得随着重复次数增加,黏附素产生减少。表达大量HMW黏附素的细胞对于NTHi定殖的建立和维持可能至关重要,但当面对黏附素特异性抗体介导的免疫反应时,它们可能也会付出更高的适应性代价。我们推测hmwA重复区域内大缺失事件的发生使NTHi细胞在抗体介导的免疫存在下能够维持黏附。为了研究这一点,我们建立了一个数学模型,纳入hmwA相变和抗体介导的免疫,以探索细菌黏附与免疫逃逸之间的权衡。该模型预测抗体水平和亲和力、灾难性损失率以及种群承载能力均显著影响宿主体内黏附性NTHi细胞的数量。这些结果表明,尽管存在HMW黏附素特异性抗体介导的免疫,大的但罕见的缺失事件的发生仍允许一小部分黏附细胞稳定维持。这些黏附亚群对于维持定殖和/或维持传播可能很重要。