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Published in: European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases 6/2016

01-06-2016 | Original Article

Innate immune evasion of Escherichia coli clinical strains from orthopedic implant infections

Authors: L. Crémet, A. Broquet, C. Jacqueline, C. Chaillou, K. Asehnoune, S. Corvec, N. Caroff

Published in: European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | Issue 6/2016

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Abstract

Escherichia coli is one of the first causes of Gram-negative orthopedic implant infections (OII). Those infections, usually hematogenous, mostly originate from the urinary tract. We investigated the strategies developed by E. coli in this context to evade host innate immune responses, i.e. complement and polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN). Twenty strains from OII were compared with 20 strains from bacteremia in patients with non-infected orthopedic implant. In both groups, 6/20 (30 %) strains lysed PMNs, due to the production of the pore-forming toxin α-hemolysin (HlyA). For the others, resistance to phagocytic killing by PMN was not significantly different between both groups. In contrast, resistance to complement-mediated serum killing was significantly higher in OII strains than in the others (65 % vs 10 %; P <0.001). In E. coli, different mechanisms have been involved in complement resistance. Here, serum resistance was not linked to a group 2 capsule, or a loss of outer membrane permeability, or the recruitment of the complement inhibitor C4bp, but was significantly associated with the synthesis of long-chain LPS, regardless of the O-antigen. Thus, serum resistance could promote seeding of peri-implant tissues by helping E. coli to either persist in blood and reach the site of infection or overcome localized complement activation.
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Metadata
Title
Innate immune evasion of Escherichia coli clinical strains from orthopedic implant infections
Authors
L. Crémet
A. Broquet
C. Jacqueline
C. Chaillou
K. Asehnoune
S. Corvec
N. Caroff
Publication date
01-06-2016
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases / Issue 6/2016
Print ISSN: 0934-9723
Electronic ISSN: 1435-4373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10096-016-2628-6

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