Emerging Aeromonas enteric infections: their association with inflammatory bowel disease and novel pathogenic mechanisms
Aeromonas species are emerging human enteric pathogens. This study examines the isolation of Aeromonas and other enteric bacterial pathogens from patients with and without inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This study also investigates the intestinal epithelial pathogenic mechanisms of Aeromonas vero...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Microbiology spectrum 2023-10, Vol.11 (5), p.e0108823-e0108823 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aeromonas
species are emerging human enteric pathogens. This study examines the isolation of
Aeromonas
and other enteric bacterial pathogens from patients with and without inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This study also investigates the intestinal epithelial pathogenic mechanisms of
Aeromonas veronii
. The isolation rates of seven enteric bacterial pathogens from 2,279 patients with IBD and 373,276 non-IBD patients were compared. An
A. veronii
strain (AS1) isolated from intestinal biopsies of a patient with IBD was used for pathogenic mechanism investigation, and
Escherichia coli
K12 was used as a bacterial control. HT-29 cells were used as a model of human intestinal epithelium. A significantly higher isolation of
Aeromonas
species was found in patients with IBD as compared to non-IBD patients (
P
= 0.0001, odds ratio = 2.11).
A. veronii
upregulated 177 inflammatory genes and downregulated 52 protein-coding genes affecting chromatin assembly, multiple small nuclear RNAs, multiple nucleolar RNAs, and 55 cytoplasmic tRNAs in HT-29 cells. These downregulation effects were unique to
A. veronii
and not observed in HT-29 cells infected with
E. coli
K12.
A. veronii
induced intestinal epithelial apoptosis involving the intrinsic pathway.
A. veronii
caused epithelial microvilli shortening and damage and epithelial production of IL-8. In conclusion, this study for the first time reports the association between IBD and
Aeromonas
enteric infection detected by bacterial cultivation. This study also reports that
A. veronii
damages intestinal epithelial cells via multiple mechanisms, of which the downregulating cytoplasmic tRNA, small nuclear RNA, and small nucleolar RNA are novel bacterial pathogenic mechanisms.
This study for the first time reports the association between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and
Aeromonas
enteric infection detected by bacterial pathogen cultivation, highlighting the need of clinical and public health attention. The finding that patients with IBD are more susceptible to
Aeromonas
enteric infection suggests that detection of
Aeromonas
enteric infection should be routinely performed for the diagnosis and treatment of IBD. This study also reports novel bacterial pathogenic mechanisms employed by
Aeromonas veronii
. Through comparative transcriptomic analysis and other techniques, this study revealed the pathogenic mechanisms by which
A. veronii
causes damage to intestinal epithelial cells. Among the various pathogenic mechanisms identified, |
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ISSN: | 2165-0497 2165-0497 |
DOI: | 10.1128/spectrum.01088-23 |