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A privileged intraphagocyte niche is responsible for disseminated infection of Staphylococcus aureus in a zebrafish model

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posted on 2025-07-31, 21:08 authored by TK Prajsnar, R Hamilton, J Garcia-Lara, G McVicker, A Williams, M Boots, SJ Foster, SA Renshaw
The innate immune system is the primary defence against the versatile pathogen, Staphylococcus aureus. How this organism is able to avoid immune killing and cause infections is poorly understood. Using an established larval zebrafish infection model, we have shown that overwhelming infection is due to subversion of phagocytes by staphylococci, allowing bacteria to evade killing and found foci of disease. Larval zebrafish coinfected with two S. aureus strains carrying different fluorescent reporter gene fusions (but otherwise isogenic) had bacterial lesions, at the time of host death, containing predominantly one strain. Quantitative data using two marked strains revealed that the strain ratios, during overwhelming infection, were often skewed towards the extremes, with one strain predominating. Infection with passaged bacterial clones revealed the phenomenon not to bedue to adventitious mutations acquired by the pathogen. After infection of the host, all bacteria are internalized by phagocytes and the skewing of population ratios is absolutely dependent on the presence of phagocytes. Mathematical modelling of pathogen population dynamics revealed the data patterns are consistent with the hypothesis that a small number of infected phagocytes serve as an intracellular reservoir for S. aureus, which upon release leads to disseminated infection. Strategies to specifically alter neutrophil/macrophage numbers were used to map the potential subpopulation of phagocytes acting as a pathogen reservoir, revealing neutrophils as the likely 'niche'. Subsequently in a murine sepsis model, S. aureus abscesses in kidneys were also found to be predominantly clonal, therefore likely founded by an individual cell, suggesting a potential mechanism analogous to the zebrafish model with few protected niches. These findings add credence to the argument that S. aureus control regimes should recognize both the intracellular as well as extracellular facets of the S. aureus life cycle.

Funding

This work was funded by a Wellcome Trust Project Grant (Reference Number WT089981MA) and an EU project: Predicting Antibiotic Resistance (PAR, Reference Number 241476). S. A. R. is supported by an MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship (Reference Number: G0701932). Microscopy studies were supported by a Wellcome Trust grant to the MBB/BMS Light Microscopy Facility (GR077544AIA), and the work was supported by an MRC Centre Grant (G0700091).

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Open access. Re‐use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Terms and Conditions set out at http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/onlineopen#OnlineOpen_Terms

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This is the final version of the article. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Cellular Microbiology

Publisher

Wiley

Place published

England

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 14 (10), pp. 1600 - 1619

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