Human PMNs exhibit greater phagocytosis, NETosis, and enhanced migration towards nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae newly released from biofilms Wilbanks et al.

Published: 13 December 2024| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/brsgf8h6dc.1
Contributor:
Lauren Bakaletz

Description

Biofilms exhibit diverse evasion mechanisms, thus releasing bacteria from biofilm residence affords both antibiotics and immune effectors greater access. A monoclonal antibody against an essential biofilm matrix protein induces rapid biofilm collapse with release of bacteria into a highly vulnerable phenotype. Newly released (‘NRel’) bacteria are significantly more sensitive to antibiotic-, PMN-, or antimicrobial peptide-mediated killing in vitro, and are rapidly eradicated in four animal models without antibiotic treatment, highlighting the role of innate immune effectors. Here, we characterize PMN-mediated activity against three clinical isolates of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae NRel. Indeed, NTHI was most sensitive in the NRel state to both PMN-mediated phagocytosis and NETosis elimination. Moreover, PMNs incubated with NTHI NRel released significantly more IL-8 to recruit additional PMNs. These data provide the mechanism and treatment regimen to facilitate host mediated biofilm eradication in our pre-clinical models where biofilm bacteria were induced into the highly vulnerable NRel state.

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Categories

Immunology, Microbiology, Biofilm

Funding

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

R01 DC003915

Licence