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A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression

One-third of the world population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and multi-drug resistant strains are rapidly evolving. The noticeable absence of a whole organism high-throughput screening system for studying the progression of tuberculosis is fast becoming the bottleneck in tuberculosi...

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Autores principales: Carvalho, Ralph, de Sonneville, Jan, Stockhammer, Oliver W., Savage, Nigel D. L., Veneman, Wouter J., Ottenhoff, Tom H. M., Dirks, Ron P., Meijer, Annemarie H., Spaink, Herman P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21390204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016779
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author Carvalho, Ralph
de Sonneville, Jan
Stockhammer, Oliver W.
Savage, Nigel D. L.
Veneman, Wouter J.
Ottenhoff, Tom H. M.
Dirks, Ron P.
Meijer, Annemarie H.
Spaink, Herman P.
author_facet Carvalho, Ralph
de Sonneville, Jan
Stockhammer, Oliver W.
Savage, Nigel D. L.
Veneman, Wouter J.
Ottenhoff, Tom H. M.
Dirks, Ron P.
Meijer, Annemarie H.
Spaink, Herman P.
author_sort Carvalho, Ralph
collection PubMed
description One-third of the world population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and multi-drug resistant strains are rapidly evolving. The noticeable absence of a whole organism high-throughput screening system for studying the progression of tuberculosis is fast becoming the bottleneck in tuberculosis research. We successfully developed such a system using the zebrafish Mycobacterium marinum infection model, which is a well-characterized model for tuberculosis progression with biomedical significance, mimicking hallmarks of human tuberculosis pathology. Importantly, we demonstrate the suitability of our system to directly study M. tuberculosis, showing for the first time that the human pathogen can propagate in this vertebrate model, resulting in similar early disease symptoms to those observed upon M. marinum infection. Our system is capable of screening for disease progression via robotic yolk injection of early embryos and visual flow screening of late-stage larvae. We also show that this system can reliably recapitulate the standard caudal vein injection method with a throughput level of 2,000 embryos per hour. We additionally demonstrate the possibility of studying signal transduction leading to disease progression using reverse genetics at high-throughput levels. Importantly, we use reference compounds to validate our system in the testing of molecules that prevent tuberculosis progression, making it highly suited for investigating novel anti-tuberculosis compounds in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-30401952011-03-09 A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression Carvalho, Ralph de Sonneville, Jan Stockhammer, Oliver W. Savage, Nigel D. L. Veneman, Wouter J. Ottenhoff, Tom H. M. Dirks, Ron P. Meijer, Annemarie H. Spaink, Herman P. PLoS One Research Article One-third of the world population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and multi-drug resistant strains are rapidly evolving. The noticeable absence of a whole organism high-throughput screening system for studying the progression of tuberculosis is fast becoming the bottleneck in tuberculosis research. We successfully developed such a system using the zebrafish Mycobacterium marinum infection model, which is a well-characterized model for tuberculosis progression with biomedical significance, mimicking hallmarks of human tuberculosis pathology. Importantly, we demonstrate the suitability of our system to directly study M. tuberculosis, showing for the first time that the human pathogen can propagate in this vertebrate model, resulting in similar early disease symptoms to those observed upon M. marinum infection. Our system is capable of screening for disease progression via robotic yolk injection of early embryos and visual flow screening of late-stage larvae. We also show that this system can reliably recapitulate the standard caudal vein injection method with a throughput level of 2,000 embryos per hour. We additionally demonstrate the possibility of studying signal transduction leading to disease progression using reverse genetics at high-throughput levels. Importantly, we use reference compounds to validate our system in the testing of molecules that prevent tuberculosis progression, making it highly suited for investigating novel anti-tuberculosis compounds in vivo. Public Library of Science 2011-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3040195/ /pubmed/21390204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016779 Text en Carvalho et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Carvalho, Ralph
de Sonneville, Jan
Stockhammer, Oliver W.
Savage, Nigel D. L.
Veneman, Wouter J.
Ottenhoff, Tom H. M.
Dirks, Ron P.
Meijer, Annemarie H.
Spaink, Herman P.
A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title_full A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title_fullStr A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title_full_unstemmed A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title_short A High-Throughput Screen for Tuberculosis Progression
title_sort high-throughput screen for tuberculosis progression
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21390204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016779
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