Harms Jerome S, Lasarev Michael, Warner Thomas, Oliveira Sergio Costa, Smith Judith A
Departments of Pediatrics and Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
mBio. 2025 Jun 11;16(6):e0054225. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00542-25. Epub 2025 May 14.
Brucellosis, one of the most prevalent zoonotic diseases worldwide, often results in osteoarticular complications including large joint and axial arthritis mimicking spondyloarthritis. To model this chronic manifestation, we infected autoimmunity-prone SKG mice containing a mutation in the T cell adaptor ZAP-70 with species. infection resulted in a fully penetrant, readily scoreable disease involving large joint wrist and foot arthritis, peri-ocular inflammation, and less frequent scaly paw rash. Infection with resulted in similar manifestations, although with delayed arthritis onset, and revealed sex differences, with a more severe disease in females. Heat-killed did not induce arthritis, evincing a requirement for viable infection. Across species, splenic CFU correlated well with final clinical score at 12 weeks (ρ = 0.79 and < 0.001). Moreover, viable was recovered from the paws at 12 weeks, consistent with persistent articular infection. Mice infected with a Δ mutant lacking a Type IV secretion system-dependent mediator displayed an intermediate phenotype without significant differences in splenic CFU. Thus, the degree of arthritis did not strictly correlate with the degree of systemic infection, but it suggested an additional reactive component. Together, these data suggest that -induced spondyloarthritis reflects both persistent colonization and excess host reactivity. Moreover, the sensitivity of the SKG model to different species and mutants will provide new opportunities for dissecting correlates of virulence and host immunity.IMPORTANCEBrucellosis, a bacterial infection acquired from herd animals, remains one of the most common zoonotic diseases worldwide. Chronic infection often results in spondyloarthritis-like complications. Investigation into pathogenesis has been limited by the lack of overt disease in standard laboratory mice. We addressed this issue using spondyloarthritis-susceptible SKG mice. Upon infection with , SKG mice develop robust, fully penetrant large joint arthritis. Arthritis development required viable bacteria, and live persisted in paw tissue out to 12 weeks. Disease onset, severity, and manifestations varied upon infection with different species and mutants, suggesting an additional immune reactive component. Together, these results suggest that this new model will be very useful to the scientific community for determining correlates of bacterial virulence leading to clinical disease.
布鲁氏菌病是全球最普遍的人畜共患病之一,常导致骨关节炎并发症,包括类似脊柱关节炎的大关节和中轴关节炎。为了模拟这种慢性表现,我们用该菌感染了自身免疫易感的SKG小鼠,这些小鼠的T细胞衔接蛋白ZAP-70存在突变。感染导致了一种完全显性、易于评分的疾病,包括大关节手腕和足关节炎、眼周炎症,以及较少见的鳞状爪皮疹。感染另一种布鲁氏菌也导致了类似表现,尽管关节炎发病延迟,并且显示出性别差异,雌性病情更严重。热灭活的布鲁氏菌未诱发关节炎,表明需要活菌感染。在不同菌种中,脾脏菌落形成单位(CFU)与12周时的最终临床评分密切相关(ρ = 0.79,P < 0.001)。此外,在12周时从爪子中回收了活菌,这与持续性关节感染一致。感染缺乏IV型分泌系统依赖性介质的Δ突变体的小鼠表现出中间表型,脾脏CFU无显著差异。因此,关节炎的程度与全身感染程度并不严格相关,但提示存在额外的反应性成分。总之,这些数据表明,布鲁氏菌诱发的脊柱关节炎反映了持续定植和宿主过度反应。此外,SKG模型对不同菌种和突变体的敏感性将为剖析布鲁氏菌毒力和宿主免疫的相关性提供新机会。
重要性
布鲁氏菌病是一种从家畜获得的细菌感染,仍然是全球最常见人畜共患病之一。慢性感染常导致类似脊柱关节炎的并发症。由于标准实验室小鼠缺乏明显疾病,发病机制的研究受到限制。我们使用易患脊柱关节炎的SKG小鼠解决了这个问题。感染布鲁氏菌后,SKG小鼠会发生强烈的、完全显性的大关节关节炎。关节炎的发展需要活菌,并且活菌在爪组织中持续存在至12周。感染不同布鲁氏菌种和突变体后,疾病的发病、严重程度和表现各不相同,提示存在额外的免疫反应性成分。总之,这些结果表明,这个新模型对于科学界确定导致临床疾病的细菌毒力相关性将非常有用。