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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,99(6):1936-1943
We used quantitative fluorescence microscopy to measure the pH of phagosomes in human monocytes that contain virulent Legionella pneumophila, a bacterial pathogen that multiplies intracellularly in these phagocytes. The mean pH of phagosomes that contain live L. pneumophila was 6.1 in 14 experiments. In the same experiments, the mean pH of phagosomes containing dead L. pneumophila averaged 0.8 pH units lower than the mean pH of phagosomes containing live L. pneumophila, a difference that was highly significant (P less than 0.01 in all 14 experiments). In contrast, the mean pH of phagosomes initially containing live E. coli, which were then killed by monocytes, was the same as for phagosomes initially containing dead E. coli. The mean pH of L. pneumophila phagosomes in activated monocytes, which inhibit L. pneumophila intracellular multiplication, was the same as in nonactivated monocytes. To simultaneously measure the pH of different phagosomes within the same monocyte, we digitized and analyzed fluorescence images of monocytes that contained both live L. pneumophila and sheep erythrocytes. Within the same monocyte, live L. pneumophila phagosomes had a pH of approximately 6.1 and sheep erythrocyte phagosomes had a pH of approximately 5.0 or below. This study demonstrates that L. pneumophila is capable of modifying the pH of its phagocytic vacuole. This capability may be critical to the intracellular survival and multiplication of this and other intracellular pathogens.  相似文献   

2.
The presence of high levels of Legionella pneumophila in man-made aquatic systems correlates with the incidence of nosocomial Legionnaires' disease. This requires a rapid, reliable, and sensitive quantification of L. pneumophila concentrations in suspected water systems. In this research, a homologous competitor was developed and evaluated in a L. pneumophila competitive polymerase chain reaction (cPCR) to quantify this human pathogen in a quick, cost-effective, and reliable way. Accuracy of cPCR was evaluated by analyzing cooling tower and tap water samples spiked with known concentrations of L. pneumophila bacteria, in parallel with the standard culture method. Legionella pneumophila amounts detected and calculated from cPCR and culture correlated very well: r = 0.998, P = 0.002 for tap water and r = 0.990, P = 0.009 for cooling tower water. Nevertheless, for both kinds of water samples, mean numbers of L. pneumophila calculated from cPCR results were always higher than those obtained by culture. This study makes it clear that the rapid, sensitive, and cost-effective L. pneumophila cPCR is a promising alternative to the standard time-consuming culture method and expensive real-time PCR to enumerate L. pneumophila bacteria in environmental water samples.  相似文献   

3.
The need for protozoa for the proliferation of Legionella pneumophila in aquatic habitats is still not fully understood and is even questioned by some investigators. This study shows the in vivo growth of L. pneumophila in protozoa in aquatic biofilms developing at high concentrations on plasticized polyvinyl chloride in a batch system with autoclaved tap water. The inoculum, a mixed microbial community including indigenous L. pneumophila originating from a tap water system, was added in an unfiltered as well as filtered (cellulose nitrate, 3.0-microm pore size) state. Both the attached and suspended biomasses were examined for their total amounts of ATP, for culturable L. pneumophila, and for their concentrations of protozoa. L. pneumophila grew to high numbers (6.3 log CFU/cm2) only in flasks with an unfiltered inoculum. Filtration obviously removed the growth-supporting factor, but it did not affect biofilm formation, as determined by measuring ATP. Cultivation, direct counting, and 18S ribosomal DNA-targeted PCR with subsequent sequencing revealed the presence of Hartmannella vermiformis in all flasks in which L. pneumophila multiplied and also when cycloheximide had been added. Fluorescent in situ hybridization clearly demonstrated the intracellular growth of L. pneumophila in trophozoites of H. vermiformis, with 25.9% +/- 10.5% of the trophozoites containing L. pneumophila on day 10 and >90% containing L. pneumophila on day 14. Calculations confirmed that intracellular growth was most likely the only way for L. pneumophila to proliferate within the biofilm. Higher biofilm concentrations, measured as amounts of ATP, gave higher L. pneumophila concentrations, and therefore the growth of L. pneumophila within engineered water systems can be limited by controlling biofilm formation.  相似文献   

4.
AIMS: To determine the rate of reduction of Legionella pneumophila by stainless steel surfaces with zeolite ceramic coatings containing 2.5% (w/w) silver (Ag) and 14% zinc (Zn) ions. METHODS AND RESULTS: Stainless steel pans with and without Ag/Zn coatings were inoculated with solutions of Leg. pneumophila ATCC 33155 and incubated at 37 degrees C. Survival was monitored using the spread-plate technique on selective buffered charcoal yeast extract agar. Significant reductions of Leg. pneumophila were effected by the Ag/Zn zeolite coatings within 2 h of exposure. CONCLUSIONS, Significance and Impact of the Study: Zeolite ceramic Ag/Zn coatings impart significant anti-Legionella properties to stainless steel surfaces. Coated stainless steel could be used in the manufacture of air ducts, condensation pans and intake and exhaust vents. These products have the potential to reduce numbers of Legionella in air-handling systems.  相似文献   

5.
Shower heads and hot-water faucets containing Legionella pneumophila were evaluated for aerosolization of the organism with a multistage cascade impaction air sampler. Air was collected above two shower doors and from the same rooms approximately 3 ft (91 cm) from the shower doors while the hot water was running. Low numbers (3 to 5 CFU/15 ft3 [0.43 m3] of air) of L. pneumophila were recovered above both shower doors, but none was recovered from the air in either room outside the shower door. Approximately 90% (7 of 8 CFU) of the L. pneumophila recovered were trapped in aerosol particles between 1 and 5 micron in diameter. Air was collected 1 to 3 ft (30 to 91 cm) from 14 sinks while the hot water was running. Low numbers (1 to 5 CFU/15 ft3 of air) were recovered from 6 of 19 air samples obtained. Approximately 50% (6 of 13 CFU) of the organisms recovered were trapped in aerosol particles between 1 and 8 microns in diameter. Shower heads and hot-water taps containing L. pneumophila can aerosolize low numbers of the organism during routine use. The aerosol particle size is small enough to penetrate to the lower human respiratory system. Thus, these sites may be implicated as a means of transmission of L. pneumophila from potable water to the patient.  相似文献   

6.
Shower heads and hot-water faucets containing Legionella pneumophila were evaluated for aerosolization of the organism with a multistage cascade impaction air sampler. Air was collected above two shower doors and from the same rooms approximately 3 ft (91 cm) from the shower doors while the hot water was running. Low numbers (3 to 5 CFU/15 ft3 [0.43 m3] of air) of L. pneumophila were recovered above both shower doors, but none was recovered from the air in either room outside the shower door. Approximately 90% (7 of 8 CFU) of the L. pneumophila recovered were trapped in aerosol particles between 1 and 5 micron in diameter. Air was collected 1 to 3 ft (30 to 91 cm) from 14 sinks while the hot water was running. Low numbers (1 to 5 CFU/15 ft3 of air) were recovered from 6 of 19 air samples obtained. Approximately 50% (6 of 13 CFU) of the organisms recovered were trapped in aerosol particles between 1 and 8 microns in diameter. Shower heads and hot-water taps containing L. pneumophila can aerosolize low numbers of the organism during routine use. The aerosol particle size is small enough to penetrate to the lower human respiratory system. Thus, these sites may be implicated as a means of transmission of L. pneumophila from potable water to the patient.  相似文献   

7.
Legionella pneumophila is a gram-negative pathogen that causes a severe pneumonia known as Legionnaires' disease. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that L. pneumophila infects and grows within cultured human endothelial cells. Endothelial infection may contribute to lung damage observed during Legionnaires' disease and to systemic spread of this organism.  相似文献   

8.
Genetic structure of populations of Legionella pneumophila.   总被引:56,自引:4,他引:52       下载免费PDF全文
The genetic structure of populations of Legionella pneumophila was defined by an analysis of electrophoretically demonstrable allelic variation at structural genes encoding 22 enzymes in 292 isolates from clinical and environmental sources. Nineteen of the loci were polymorphic, and 62 distinctive electrophoretic types (ETs), representing multilocus genotypes, were identified. Principal coordinates and clustering analyses demonstrated that isolates received as L. pneumophila were a heterogeneous array of genotypes that included two previously undescribed species. For 50 ETs of L. pneumophila (strict sense), mean genetic diversity per locus was 0.312, and diversity was equivalent in ETs represented by isolates recovered from clinical sources and those collected from environmental sources. Cluster analysis revealed four major groups or lineages of ETs in L. pneumophila. Genetic diversity among ETs of the same serotype was, on average, 93% of that in the total sample of ETs. Isolates marked by particular patterns of reactivity to a panel of nine monoclonal antibodies were also genetically heterogeneous, mean diversity within patterns being about 75% of the total. Both Pontiac fever and the pneumonic form of legionellosis may be caused by isolates of the same ET. The genetic structure of L. pneumophila is clonal, and many clones apparently are worldwide in distribution. The fact that L. pneumophila is only 60% as variable as Escherichia coli raises the possibility that isolates recovered from clinical cases and man-made environments are a restricted subset of all clones in the species as a whole.  相似文献   

9.
Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of Legionnaires' disease, is able to survive and multiply efficiently in a variety of mammalian cells. By using in vitro assays, the uptake of L. pneumophila into monocytes has shown to be mediated, at least in part, through attachment of complement-coated bacteria to complement receptors, but complement-independent phagocytosis could also be demonstrated. Since complement levels in the human lung are normally low, the role of complement-dependent phagocytosis in the pathogenesis of Legionnaires' disease is doubtful. However, the contribution of other potential phagocytosis-related host cell surface molecules to the phagocytosis of L. pneumophila has never been investigated. We therefore analyzed the role of complement receptors 1 (CD35) and 3 (CD11b/18), the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) receptor (CD14), the beta(1)-integrin chain of the fibronectin receptor (CD29), the intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1, CD54) and the transferrin receptor (CD71) in the complement-independent uptake of L. pneumophila. To exclude any influence of culture conditions onto phagocytosis rates, we compared a fresh clinical isolate with an agar-adapted isolate of L. pneumophila. In addition, we used three different host cell types (MM6, HeLa and Jurkat cells) expressing different rates of complement receptors. We could show that both strains of L. pneumophila were phagocytized by the three host cell lines to the same extent, but intracellular multiplication was only found in MM6 and, although to a much lesser degree, in Jurkat cells. Preincubation of MM6 cells with monoclonal antibodies directed against the above cited phagocytosis-related receptors did not result in inhibition of L. pneumophila uptake. We therefore conclude that typical phagocytosis-related cell surface receptors are not involved in the complement-independent phagocytosis of L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

10.
Fatal attraction of mammalian cells to Legionella pneumophila   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Legionella pneumophila is a protozoan parasite that causes Legionnaires' disease. Its ability to do so is dependent on its capacity to replicate intracellularly within a phagosome that is not trafficked through the endosomal-lysosomal pathway and is surrounded by the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Within this unique niche, the bacterium undergoes alterations in gene expression. In addition, many virulence-related phenotypes that are induced in vitro by starvation are expressed intracellularly as the bacteria exit the logarithmic growth phase. (p)ppGpp appears to signal expression of the virulence-related genes in L. pneumophila upon starvation. This growth phase-dependent phenotypical transition is concomitant with lysis of the host cell, in which both necrosis and apoptosis seem to play roles. Many genetic loci that are required for intracellular replication within mammalian and protozoan cells have been identified, and the majority of them are novel. Two secretion systems have been identified, one of which may be distantly related to type IV secretion systems. The other is a type II secretion system similar to the PilBCD piliation system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.  相似文献   

11.
In the present study, immunomagnetic separation of Legionella pneumophila from mock bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid samples, which were artificially spiked with L. pneumophila, and culture positive patient BAL fluid samples, was achieved using BioMags (superparamagnetic particles) loaded with purified rabbit immunoglobulin G specific for L. pneumophila. Bacteria binding onto BioMag-immunomatrix were directly stained with a L. pneumophila species-specific DFA reagent and examined under a fluorescence microscope. BioMag-based immunomagnetic separation (BIMS) followed by DFA staining (BIMS-DFA) could correctly identify all the 20 (100%) BAL samples which were spiked with low numbers (2x10(2) CFU) of L. pneumophila. Cultures could be recovered from 15 (75%) of these 20 spiked BAL samples, 5 (25%) of the samples failed to yield positive cultures. Both culture and BIMS-DFA methods showed 100% positive results when spiked BAL samples containing high bacterial load (10(4) CFU) were tested. The findings with true patient culture positive BAL specimens which were examined retrospectively indicated that BIMS-DFA is significantly more sensitive for detecting L. pneumophila than conventional cytospin method of DFA staining (cytospin-DFA). Out of the 25 culture positive BAL specimens tested, 7 (28%) proved negative by cytospin-DFA whereas BIMS-DFA correctly detected all the 25 (100%) specimens. It is suggested that the BIMS-DFA procedure increases the sensitivity of DFA testing for L. pneumophila in large volume samples such as BAL fluids.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: The nonculturable form of Legionella pneumophila in multiple-nutrient starvation culture was studied. During extended starvation, the total direct counts (TDC) of L. pneumophila did not change significantly, but no colonies were detected on day 50. Quantitative PCR detection of L. pneumophila DNA demonstrated that nonculturable cells retained PCR-detectable DNA even after starvation for 300 days, and part of the nonculturable population possessed nonspecific esterase activity. However, resuscitation trials of nonculturable L. pneumophila on day 100 of starvation recovered no colony-forming units, and electrophoresis of nucleic acids extracted from nonculturable cells revealed rRNA subunit (23S, 16S and 5S) degradation. When legionellae have lost the ability to multiply, at least some DNA and enzyme functions may be retained for prolonged periods.  相似文献   

13.
Ecology of Legionella pneumophila within water distribution systems   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The reservoir for hospital-acquired Legionnaires disease has been shown to be the potable water distribution system. We investigated the influence of the natural microbial population and sediment (scale and organic particulates) found in water systems as growth-promoting factors for Legionella pneumophila. Our in vitro experiments showed that: (i) water from hot-water storage tank readily supported the survival of L. pneumophila, (ii) the concentration of sediment was directly related to the survival of L. pneumophila, (iii) the presence of environmental bacteria improved the survival of L. pneumophila via nutritional symbiosis, (iv) the combination of sediment and environmental bacteria acted synergistically to improve the survival of L. pneumophila, and (v) the role of sediment in this synergistic effect was determined to be nutritional. Sediment was found to stimulate the growth of environmental microflora, which in turn stimulated the growth of L. pneumophila. These findings confirm the empiric observations of the predilection of L. pneumophila for growth in hot-water tanks and its localization to sediment. L. pneumophila occupies an ecological niche within the potable water system, with interrelationships between microflora, sediment, and temperature.  相似文献   

14.
Amoebae are the natural hosts for Legionella pneumophila and play essential roles in bacterial ecology and infectivity to humans. When L. pneumophila colonizes an aquatic installation, it can persist for years despite repeated treatments with disinfectants. We hypothesized that freshwater amoebae play an important role in bacterial resistance to disinfectants, and in subsequent resuscitation of viable non-culturable (VNC) L. pneumophila that results in re-emergence of the disease-causing strain in the disinfected water source. Our work showed that in the absence of Acanthamoeba polyphaga, seven L. pneumophila strains became non-culturable after treatment by 256 p.p.m. of sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl). In contrast, intracellular L. pneumophila within A. polyphaga was resistant to 1024 p.p.m. of NaOCl. In addition, L. pneumophila-infected A. polyphaga exhibited increased resistance to NaOCl. When chlorine-sterilized water samples were co-cultured with A. polyphaga, the non-culturable L. pneumophila were resuscitated and proliferated robustly within A. polyphaga. Upon treatment by NaOCl, uninfected amoebae differentiated into cysts within 48 h. In contrast, L. pneumophila-infected A. polyphaga failed to differentiate into cysts, and L. pneumophila was never detected in cysts of A. polyphaga. We conclude that amoebic trophozoites protect intracellular L. pneumophila from eradication by NaOCl, and play an essential role in resuscitation of VNC L. pneumophila in NaOCl-disinfected water sources. Intracellular L. pneumophila within trophozoites of A. polyphaga block encystation of the amoebae, and the resistance of both organisms to NaOCl is enhanced. To ensure long-term eradication and complete loss of the VNC state of L. pneumophila, we recommend that Legionella-protozoa co-culture should be an important tool to ensure complete loss of the VNC state of L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract Water and biofilms from two hydrothermal areas in central Portugal, and one hydrothermal area in New Mexico, USA, were examined for Legionella spp. In general, Legionella spp were isolated in higher numbers from biofilms than from water, although one biofilm with a temperature of 50°C, did not yield isolates of these organisms. In one area L. pneumophila serogroup (sg) 3 constituted the major population in the thermal discharge by the stream and the biofilm below it; however, L. pneumophila sg 1 was predominant in the sediments of the stream bed with minor thermal springs below the main discharge and in the water downstream. No Legionellae were isolated from water upstream of the hydrothermal area indicating that the thermal area was the source of the organisms in the stream water. In the other two hydrothermal areas, L. pneumophila sg 1 constituted the major population isolated, whereas L. pneumophila sg 3 was absent or isolated in low numbers. Isolates of L. micdadei were also recovered from one hydrothermal area, while ‘ L. londoniensis ’ was isolated from another.  相似文献   

16.
The population structure of Legionella pneumophila was studied by using partial RNA polymerase gene (rpoB) and DotA gene (dotA) sequences. Trees inferred from rpoB sequences showed that two subspecies of L. pneumophila, Legionella pneumophila subsp. pneumophila and Legionella pneumophila subsp. fraseri, were clearly separated genetically. In both rpoB and dotA trees, 79 Korean isolates used in this study constituted six clonal populations, four of which (designated subgroups P-I to P-IV) were identified in L. pneumophila subsp. pneumophila and two of which (designated subgroups F-I and F-II) were identified in L. pneumophila subsp. fraseri. Although the relationships among subgroups were not identical, such subgrouping was congruent between the rpoB and dotA trees. Type strains of several serogroups did not belong to any subgroup, presumably because isolates similar to these strains were not present among our local sample of the population. There was evidence that horizontal gene transfer or recombination had occurred within L. pneumophila. Contrary to the phylogeny from rpoB and the taxonomic context, subgroups P-III and P-IV of L. pneumophila subsp. pneumophila proved to be closely related to those of L. pneumophila subsp. fraseri or showed a distinct clustering in the dotA tree. It can be inferred that dotA of subgroups P-III and P-IV has been transferred horizontally from other subspecies. The diverse distribution of serogroup 1 strains through the gene trees suggests that surface antigen-coding genes that determine serogroup can be exchanged. Thus, it can be inferred that genetic recombination has been important in the evolution of L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

17.
Legionella pneumophila is known as a facultative intracellular parasite of free-living soil and freshwater amoebae, of which several species have been shown to support the growth of the pathogenic bacteria. We report for the first time the behaviour of two strains (c2c and Z503) of the amoeba Willaertia magna towards different strains of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 and compared it with Acanthamoeba castellanii and Hartmannella vermiformis , known to be L. pneumophila permissive. In contrast to the results seen with other amoebae, W. magna c2c inhibited the growth of one strain of Legionella ( L. pneumophila , Paris), but not of others belonging to the same serogroup ( L. pneumophila , Philadelphia and L. pneumophila , Lens). Also, the different L. pneumophila inhibited cell growth and induced cell death in A. castellanii, H. vermiformis and W. magna Z503 within 3–4 days while W. magna c2c strain remained unaffected even up to 7 days. Electron microscopy demonstrated that the formation of numerous replicative phagosomes observed within Acanthamoeba and Hartmannella is rarely seen in W. magna c2c cocultured with L. pneumophila . Moreover, the morphological differences were observed between L. pneumophila cultured either with Willaertia or other amoebae. These observations show that amoebae are not all equally permissive to L. pneumophila and highlight W. magna c2c as particularly resistant towards some strains of this bacterium.  相似文献   

18.
Copper-zinc superoxide dismutases (CuZnSODs) are infrequently found in bacteria although widespread in eukaryotes. Legionella pneumophila, the causative organism of Legionnaires' disease, is one of a small number of bacterial species that contain a CuZnSOD, residing in the periplasm, in addition to an iron SOD (FeSOD) in their cytoplasm. To investigate CuZnSOD function, we purified the enzyme from wild-type L. pneumophila, obtained amino acid sequence data from isolated peptides, cloned and sequenced the gene from a L. pneumophila library, and then constructed and characterized a CuZnSOD null mutant. In contrast to the cytoplasmic FeSOD, the CuZnSOD of L. pneumophila is not essential for viability. However, CuZnSOD is critical for survival during the stationary phase of growth. The CuZnSOD null mutant survived 10(4)- to 10(6)-fold less than wild-type L. pneumophila. In wild-type L. pneumophila, the specific activity of CuZnSOD increased during the transition from exponential to stationary-phase growth while the FeSOD activity was constant. These data support a role of periplasmic CuZnSOD in survival of L. pneumophila during stationary phase. Since L. pneumophila survives extensive periods of dormancy between growth within hosts. CuZnSOD may contribute to the ability of this bacterium to be a pathogen. In exponential phase, wild-type and CuZnSOD null strains grew with comparable doubling times. In cultured HL-60 and THP-1 macrophage-like cell lines and in primary cultures of human monocytes, multiplication of the CuZnSOD null mutant was comparable to that of wild type. This indicated that CuZnSOD is not essential for intracellular growth within macrophages or for killing of macrophages in those systems.  相似文献   

19.
Ecology of Legionella pneumophila within water distribution systems.   总被引:11,自引:10,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
J E Stout  V L Yu    M G Best 《Applied microbiology》1985,49(1):221-228
The reservoir for hospital-acquired Legionnaires disease has been shown to be the potable water distribution system. We investigated the influence of the natural microbial population and sediment (scale and organic particulates) found in water systems as growth-promoting factors for Legionella pneumophila. Our in vitro experiments showed that: (i) water from hot-water storage tank readily supported the survival of L. pneumophila, (ii) the concentration of sediment was directly related to the survival of L. pneumophila, (iii) the presence of environmental bacteria improved the survival of L. pneumophila via nutritional symbiosis, (iv) the combination of sediment and environmental bacteria acted synergistically to improve the survival of L. pneumophila, and (v) the role of sediment in this synergistic effect was determined to be nutritional. Sediment was found to stimulate the growth of environmental microflora, which in turn stimulated the growth of L. pneumophila. These findings confirm the empiric observations of the predilection of L. pneumophila for growth in hot-water tanks and its localization to sediment. L. pneumophila occupies an ecological niche within the potable water system, with interrelationships between microflora, sediment, and temperature.  相似文献   

20.
Legionella pneumophila is the causative pathogen of Legionnaires' disease, which is characterized by severe pneumonia. In regard to the pathophysiology of Legionella infection, the role of inflammatory phagocytes such as macrophages has been well documented, but the involvement of dendritic cells (DCs) has not been clarified. In this study, we have investigated the immune responses that DCs generate in vitro and in vivo after contact with L. pneumophila. Heat- and formalin-killed L. pneumophila, but not live L. pneumophila, induced immature DCs to undergo similar phenotypic maturation, but the secreted proinflammatory cytokines showed different patterns. The mechanisms of the DC maturation by heat- or formalin-killed L. pneumophila depended, at least in part, on Toll-like receptor 4 signaling or on Legionella LPS, respectively. After transfer to naive mice, DCs pulsed with dead Legionella produced serum Ig isotype responses specific for Legionella, leading to protective immunity against an otherwise lethal respiratory challenge with L. pneumophila. The in vivo immune responses required the Ag presentation of DCs, especially that on MHC class II molecules, and the immunity yielded cross-protection between clinical and environmental strains of L. pneumophila. Although the DC maturation was impaired by live Legionella, macrophages were activated by live as well as dead L. pneumophila, as evidenced by the up-regulation of MHC class II. Finally, DCs, but not macrophages, exhibited a proliferative response to live L. pneumophila that was consistent with their cell cycle progression. These findings provide a better understanding of the role of DCs in adaptive immunity to Legionella infection.  相似文献   

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