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Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources

Several Acinetobacter strains have utility for biotechnology applications, yet some are opportunistic pathogens. We compared strains of seven Acinetobacter species (baumannii, Ab; calcoaceticus, Ac; guillouiae, Ag; haemolyticus, Ah; lwoffii, Al; junii, Aj; and venetianus, Av-RAG-1) for their potenti...

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Autores principales: Tayabali, Azam F., Nguyen, Kathy C., Shwed, Philip S., Crosthwait, Jennifer, Coleman, Gordon, Seligy, Verner L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3360037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22655033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037024
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author Tayabali, Azam F.
Nguyen, Kathy C.
Shwed, Philip S.
Crosthwait, Jennifer
Coleman, Gordon
Seligy, Verner L.
author_facet Tayabali, Azam F.
Nguyen, Kathy C.
Shwed, Philip S.
Crosthwait, Jennifer
Coleman, Gordon
Seligy, Verner L.
author_sort Tayabali, Azam F.
collection PubMed
description Several Acinetobacter strains have utility for biotechnology applications, yet some are opportunistic pathogens. We compared strains of seven Acinetobacter species (baumannii, Ab; calcoaceticus, Ac; guillouiae, Ag; haemolyticus, Ah; lwoffii, Al; junii, Aj; and venetianus, Av-RAG-1) for their potential virulence attributes, including proliferation in mammalian cell conditions, haemolytic/cytolytic activity, ability to elicit inflammatory signals, and antibiotic susceptibility. Only Ah grew at 10(2) and 10(4) bacteria/well in mammalian cell culture medium at 37°C. However, co-culture with colonic epithelial cells (HT29) improved growth of all bacterial strains, except Av-RAG-1. Cytotoxicity of Ab and Ah toward HT29 was at least double that of other test bacteria. These effects included bacterial adherence, loss of metabolism, substrate detachment, and cytolysis. Only Ab and Ah exhibited resistance to killing by macrophage-like J774A.1 cells. Haemolytic activity of Ah and Av-RAG-1 was strong, but undetectable for other strains. When killed with an antibiotic, Ab, Ah, Aj and Av-RAG-1 induced 3 to 9-fold elevated HT29 interleukin (IL)-8 levels. However, none of the strains altered levels of J774A.1 pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor-α). Antibiotic susceptibility profiling showed that Ab, Ag and Aj were viable at low concentrations of some antibiotics. All strains were positive for virulence factor genes ompA and epsA, and negative for mutations in gyrA and parC genes that convey fluoroquinolone resistance. The data demonstrate that Av-RAG-1, Ag and Al lack some potentially harmful characteristics compared to other Acinetobacter strains tested, but the biotechnology candidate Av-RAG-1 should be scrutinized further prior to widespread use.
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spelling pubmed-33600372012-05-31 Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources Tayabali, Azam F. Nguyen, Kathy C. Shwed, Philip S. Crosthwait, Jennifer Coleman, Gordon Seligy, Verner L. PLoS One Research Article Several Acinetobacter strains have utility for biotechnology applications, yet some are opportunistic pathogens. We compared strains of seven Acinetobacter species (baumannii, Ab; calcoaceticus, Ac; guillouiae, Ag; haemolyticus, Ah; lwoffii, Al; junii, Aj; and venetianus, Av-RAG-1) for their potential virulence attributes, including proliferation in mammalian cell conditions, haemolytic/cytolytic activity, ability to elicit inflammatory signals, and antibiotic susceptibility. Only Ah grew at 10(2) and 10(4) bacteria/well in mammalian cell culture medium at 37°C. However, co-culture with colonic epithelial cells (HT29) improved growth of all bacterial strains, except Av-RAG-1. Cytotoxicity of Ab and Ah toward HT29 was at least double that of other test bacteria. These effects included bacterial adherence, loss of metabolism, substrate detachment, and cytolysis. Only Ab and Ah exhibited resistance to killing by macrophage-like J774A.1 cells. Haemolytic activity of Ah and Av-RAG-1 was strong, but undetectable for other strains. When killed with an antibiotic, Ab, Ah, Aj and Av-RAG-1 induced 3 to 9-fold elevated HT29 interleukin (IL)-8 levels. However, none of the strains altered levels of J774A.1 pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor-α). Antibiotic susceptibility profiling showed that Ab, Ag and Aj were viable at low concentrations of some antibiotics. All strains were positive for virulence factor genes ompA and epsA, and negative for mutations in gyrA and parC genes that convey fluoroquinolone resistance. The data demonstrate that Av-RAG-1, Ag and Al lack some potentially harmful characteristics compared to other Acinetobacter strains tested, but the biotechnology candidate Av-RAG-1 should be scrutinized further prior to widespread use. Public Library of Science 2012-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3360037/ /pubmed/22655033 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037024 Text en Crown Copyright. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tayabali, Azam F.
Nguyen, Kathy C.
Shwed, Philip S.
Crosthwait, Jennifer
Coleman, Gordon
Seligy, Verner L.
Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title_full Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title_fullStr Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title_short Comparison of the Virulence Potential of Acinetobacter Strains from Clinical and Environmental Sources
title_sort comparison of the virulence potential of acinetobacter strains from clinical and environmental sources
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3360037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22655033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037024
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