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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 3956-3962, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.3956-3962.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin,1 Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin,2 Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin,3 Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland,4 Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin5
Received 25 November 2004/ Returned for modification 5 January 2005/ Accepted 13 April 2005
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Several studies comparing oropharyngeal cultures and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cultures found that the sensitivity of oropharyngeal cultures in predicting lower-airway P. aeruginosa infection was poor. Although more sensitive, BAL is an invasive procedure that requires sedation and is often performed on a single lobe, which may miss regional disease (1, 27, 35, 38). The timing of collection of BAL specimens in CF patients is unlikely to reveal information about the acquisition of specific pathogens or the evolution of the genotypic or phenotypic changes in P. aeruginosa (40).
P. aeruginosa produces a number of virulence factors, which are cell surface components or secreted toxins. An ADP-ribosylating exotoxin, exotoxin A (ETA), is the most toxic protein secreted by P. aeruginosa (23). The type III system of P. aeruginosa consists of three coordinately functional protein complexes: the secretion apparatus; the translocation or targeting apparatus; the secreted toxins and cognate chaperones (22). P. aeruginosa secretes four cytotoxins via the type III secretion system: ExoS, ExoT, ExoU, and ExoY (44). These cytotoxins have been implicated in increased cellular and animal toxic effects in experimental models of P. aeruginosa infection (14, 39, 41, 44). Feltman and coworkers have reported the common occurrence of popB, indicating that the type III secretion system was present in clinical isolates and that exoS was more prevalent than exoU in CF isolates of P. aeruginosa (12).
P. aeruginosa is the most significant pathogen in cystic fibrosis, and based on the immune responses in children with CF, infection appears to occur earlier than diagnosed by culture techniques (4, 42). The early diagnosis of P. aeruginosa infections has been sought to allow treatment or eradication of the pathogen before irreversible lung damage has occurred. Johansen et al. monitored the development of an immune response to P. aeruginosa cell lysates as an early indication of infection (26). While there is controversy regarding the ability to use seroconversion to specific Pseudomonas antigens as an early indication of infection, West et al. (42) evaluated the longitudinal relationship between the antibody responses against P. aeruginosa and clinical factors associated with P. aeruginosa infections in children with CF and reported that seroconversion to the cell lysate and ETA occurred before the isolation of P. aeruginosa. This suggested the potential utility of longitudinal monitoring of P. aeruginosa titers, along with the patient's Wisconsin Chest X-Ray (WCXR) score, for early detection and treatment of P. aeruginosa infection in children with CF. Immune responses to components of the type III system in adults and children with CF have been reported (2, 34). In the current study, the hypothesis being tested is that identification of the immune response to type III antigens will lead to earlier detection of infection than has been measured for the analysis of other Pseudomonas antigens. If this hypothesis is true, then detection of seroconversion to type III antigens may allow early therapeutic intervention and improved clinical outcome for patients with CF.
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F508 CFTR mutation from 1 July 1991 to 30 June 1994. Presumptive diagnosis of CF was confirmed with a positive sweat test. After consent for participation was obtained from their parents, patients were enrolled at the Milwaukee CF Center and managed clinically with an evaluation and treatment protocol. The Research and Publications Committee/Human Rights Board at Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, approved the original Wisconsin CF Neonatal Screening Project and the Pseudomonas study reported here. Bacterial cultures. Samples of oropharyngeal secretions were obtained and cultured for P. aeruginosa every 6 months as part of the longitudinal evaluation protocol. Additional samples were obtained as needed at the request of the examining physician, resulting in a median culture interval of 2.7 ± 2.3 months (11). For infants and young children who could not cough on instruction, a tongue depressor was used and the oropharyngeal area was aggressively swabbed using the BD Culturette Collection and Transport system (Becton Dickinson and Co., Franklin Lakes, NJ). For patients who could cough on instruction, the oropharyngeal area was vigorously swabbed while they were coughing. Expectorated sputum samples (<10% of specimens) were cultured from patients who could produce such samples.
Quantitation of anti-Pseudomonas type III antibodies.
Serum samples were obtained at intervals of approximately 6 months and stored at 80°C. The ExoS used in the analysis was the full-length form from which residues 51 to 72 had been deleted to yield a soluble, nonaggregative protein that was purified from Escherichia coli (33). An expression vector for glutathione S-transferase (GST)-PcrV was obtained from Dara Frank (Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee) and purified as a GST fusion protein in E. coli (16). PopB, comprising the N-terminal 170 amino acids of PopB (396 amino acids), was engineered for expression in E. coli as a His6 fusion protein by standard PCR techniques. P. aeruginosa cell lysate was prepared from a 6-h or overnight culture supernatant of P. aeruginosa PA01 that was provided by Steven Lory (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA). The bacterium was grown in a deferrated dialysate of Trypticase soy broth supplemented with 10 mM nitrilotriacetic acid (Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, MO), 1% glycerol, and 100 mM monosodium glutamate at 32°C (15). The cells were pelleted (14,000 x g for 40 min), and the spent culture supernatant was subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation (65% final concentration). The cells were broken by a French press, and the soluble and membrane fractions were separated by centrifugation (27,000 x g for 20 min). The supernatant (
5 µg total protein) was used for subsequent analysis. Exotoxin A was purchased from List Biological Laboratories, Inc. (Campbell, CA). Preliminary analyses of four sera from the protocol patients showed that immune reactivity to antigens in the cell lysate (supernatant) was equal to or greater than that of the membrane or cytosol fractions, and the cell lysate was used as a source of P. aeruginosa PA01 antigens for Western blotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analyses (R. Corech and J. T. Barbieri, unpublished data).
Western blots were performed on polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes that had the indicated proteins transferred from sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels. After being blocked in buffer containing 0.01% Triton X-100 and 2% dry milk (wt/vol), sera (1/4,000 final dilution or 1/2,000 final dilution if the initial probe was negative) were incubated in buffer containing 0.01% Triton X-100 and 2% dry milk for 1 h at room temperature (RT). The blots were washed three times with Western blotting buffer containing 0.05% Triton X-100 before incubation with secondary antibody (goat anti-human immunoglobulin G-horseradish peroxidase [
-human IgG-HRP] [catalog no. 31410; Pierce Chemicals, Rockford, IL]) at a 1:100,000 dilution for 1 h at RT. The blots were washed three times with buffer containing 0.05% Triton X-100, incubated in SuperSignal West Pico (Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 5 min, and exposed to X-ray film. Signals were scored relative to that of serum from a patient with CF that reacted to PopB, which was probed with each analysis. Each set of Western blots included the analysis of the reactivity of a human serum that contained antibodies to PopB. Western blot signals were scored as either positive or negative on X-ray film when the reactivity of this human serum to PopB was not saturated. Signals were scored in a blinded manner where both the identity of the patient and the absolute age of the patient when the serum samples were drawn were coded.
ELISA was performed in 96-well plates (Corning), each well containing 250 ng purified antigen or 1 µg of cell lysate in 50 mM sodium carbonate binding buffer, pH 9.6 (100 µl), and the plates were incubated overnight at 4°C. The plates were rinsed four times with 350 µl of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and blocked with 200 µl of 50 mM sodium carbonate, pH 9.6, plus 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) for 1 h at RT. Next, serum (100 µl of a 1/500 dilution in PBS plus 1% BSA) was added, and the plates were incubated for 1 h at 37°C, followed by four PBS washes. Next, secondary antibody (goat
-human IgG-HRP; 100 µl of a 1/8,000 dilution in PBS plus 1% BSA) was added, and the plates were incubated for 1 h at RT. The plates were rinsed four times with PBS and incubated with 100 µl of 1-Step Slow TMB (Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 30 min at RT, after which 100 µl 1.0 M H2SO4 was added to stop the reaction. Absorbance was read at 450 nm. ELISA was performed on duplicate sample sets, and the results reported were the averages of duplicate, independent analyses. An analysis was repeated if the duplicate determinations differed by more than
20% (0.2 optical density [OD] units). Seroconversion was scored positive when the OD increased to 0.2 OD units above background.
Statistical methods.
The age at the first antibody titer above 1/500 for ELISA and above 1/4,000 or 1/1,000 for Western blotting (cell lysate, ETA, ExoS, PopB, and PcrV) compared to the age at the first positive culture for P. aeruginosa and the age at the first significant clinical event (coughing or WCXR of
5) were summarized with Kaplan-Meier estimates of the cumulative distribution function to account for right censoring of the data (29). Comparisons between event-time distributions were made with a paired log rank test (5), using a robust variance estimate for the many individuals who typically experienced both events being compared.
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TABLE 1. Characteristics of patients with CF followed at the Milwaukee CF Center (n = 48) participating in the Wisconsin CF Newborn Screening Study with sera analyzed for type III antibodies
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FIG. 1. Antigens used for analysis of seroconversion in children with CF. The indicated purified proteins (1 µg), ExoS (S), PcrV (V), ETA (A), PopB (B), and a P. aeruginosa PA01 cell lysate, were subjected to SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. One gel (upper panel) was stained with Coomassie blue. Molecular weight (MW) markers are shown in the left lane. Proteins from two other gels were transferred to PVDF membranes and incubated with sera from two patients with CF. The membrane was then probed with goat -human IgG-HRP and developed by enhanced chemiluminescence. Exposed X-ray films are shown (middle and lower panels).
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FIG. 2. Representative immunoreactivities of sera from children with CF. Longitudinal ELISA assessments of sera from three patients with CF are represented in the top, middle, and bottom rows, showing probes with the indicated antigens with a 1/500 dilution of sera, followed by incubation with -human IgG-HRP. Antibody reactivity was detected with TMB. Western blots of the sera collected at the indicated times were performed, using the indicated purified proteins (1 µg), ExoS (S), PcrV (V), ETA (A), PopB (B), and a P. aeruginosa PA01 cell lysate subjected to SDS-PAGE, and they are shown to the right of the ELISA plot. OD 450, OD at 450 nm.
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TABLE 2. Median age of seroconversion to the indicated immunogen for patients with CF by Western blottingaand ELISAb
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Detection of an immune response to P. aeruginosa antigens and clinical correlations.
Longitudinal relationships were plotted as the percentage of patients with a specific event versus the time of first acquisition of that event using the Kaplan-Meier plot (Fig. 3). Each Kaplan-Meier plot utilized data from the results for the 48 patients. Potential early indicators of infection included the first report of significant cough; the first pulmonary infection or course of antibiotics; a WCXR score of 5 or greater; the first report of an antibody response against cell lysate, ETA, PcrV, ExoS, or PopB; and the first isolation of P. aeruginosa from an oropharyngeal culture. A category 2 cough was defined as a cough occurring in the morning or with postural drainage. The median time for a WCXR score of
5 was 48 months, which was later than the isolation of P. aeruginosa in any culture or the detection of the type III antibody response to ExoS/PopB.
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FIG. 3. Kaplan-Meier survival curve results comparing first acquisition of clinical profiles and seroconversion to Pseudomonas aeruginosa antigens in children with CF. (Left) First acquisition of P. aeruginosa from oropharyngeal cultures in screened patients versus all patients (median, 36.1 months for screened patients; median, 29.5 months for all patients). (Middle) Time to first cough score was 2 months (median, 5.3 months) for all patients; median time to a WCXR score of 5 was 47.5 months for all patients. (Right) First occurrences of ELISA-positive reactions to PA01 cell lysate, ExoS, ExoS/PopB, and ETA at 1:500 serum dilution; ETA, median = 77.8 months; ExoS, median = 59.8 months; ExoS/PopB, median = 39.8 months; lysate PA01, median = 27.1 months.
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The rank orders for seroconversion to Pseudomonas antigens were similar using ELISA or Western blotting, with earlier detection of seroconversion by ELISA. The greater sensitivity of ELISA was likely due to the use of lower serum dilutions relative to Western blotting. The largest discrepancy in the time to first antibody detection was observed for ETA, where ELISA was positive at 78 months and Western blotting was positive at 131 months. ELISA may detect antibodies against conformational epitopes that are not present in proteins subjected to Western blot analyses. An earlier study reported an earlier time to seroconversion to ETA than was observed in the current study (42). There are several differences between the ELISA described in the early study and that used in the current study, which could contribute to the differences in the observed times to serum conversion, including the serum dilution used in the analysis, the secondary antibody reactivity and antibody detection system, threshold scoring for seroconversion, and storage time of samples prior to analysis. Sera from a subset of patients that were analyzed in both studies for seroconversion to ETA showed first seroconversion in the West et al. study at 33 months and first seroconversion to ETA in the current study at 63 months, with 19 of the 24 samples having earlier or identical times to seroconversion in the earlier study and in the current study (Z. Li, unpublished analysis). While experimental conditions define the absolute sensitivity for the detection of the immune response to an antigen, the ranked times of detection should be constant between studies. Under conditions where patients with CF had detectable titers to Pseudomonas antigens, sera from normal controls did not have detectable reactivity by ELISA (42) or Western blotting (34).
Type III-dependent secretion is a common mechanism used by gram-negative pathogens for delivery of antihost factors. This implies either that during early colonization P. aeruginosa contacts host cells to stimulate expression of type III components or that the CF lung environment is sufficient to stimulate type III secretion in a contact-independent mechanism, similar to the indication observed with nitrilotriacetic acid in culture (14). Yersinia and P. aeruginosa utilize a common core of proteins for the secretion of the type III cytotoxins from the bacterium into the host cell. YopB and YopD of Yersinia and PopB and PopD of P. aeruginosa induce pore formation in the target cell membrane (18). Benner et al. (3) evaluated the humoral immune responses of mice that survived a lethal Yersinia pestis aerosol challenge after antibiotic treatment. The major antigens recognized by murine convalescent-phase sera included YopD, indicating the expression of the type III system. LcrV in Yersinia is part of the translocation apparatus and is required to deliver antihost effector proteins into host cells and, like PcrV in P. aeruginosa, is also essential for translocation of the cytotoxins. Antibodies directed against PcrV (39) and LcrV (20, 21) protect animals against infections, which has implicated these immunogens as possible candidates for vaccine therapy.
Serologic detection of P. aeruginosa infection has been used as a diagnostic tool in Europe. A 30-year study (26) investigated the effects of increasingly intensive treatment regimens on anti-Pseudomonas antibody levels and survival in five successive cohorts of Danish patients after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection. Cystic fibrosis patients treated intensively with antibiotics had lower antibody titers, less lung inflammation, and longer survival, even after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection. The European consensus on treatment of patients suffering from chronic P. aeruginosa infection is therapeutic intervention with antibiotics with specific activity against P. aeruginosa (8). In the United States, early diagnosis and early, aggressive treatment with anti-Pseudomonas antibiotics delays the onset of chronic P. aeruginosa infection (4), and the characteristics of early P. aeruginosa isolates infecting the CF airway appear to be more favorable for eradication and delayed reinfection with appropriate antibiotic therapy (17, 36, 43).
A rise in the serum titers of antibodies against P. aeruginosa exoproteins may serve as an early sign of infection for therapeutic intervention (19, 24). Several previous studies detected antibody responses to the P. aeruginosa exoproteins (e.g., ETA, proteases, and phospholipase C) by immune blotting techniques and established correlations between elevated titers and poor clinical status (9, 19, 24, 30). More recent studies have implicated the presence of an immune response to components of the type III secretion system of P. aeruginosa in patients with CF. Moss et al. (34) observed that antibodies to PopB were common in the sera of adults with CF, and a screen of sera from children with CF showed that 7/13 infants had antibodies against ExoS and PopB (2). The current study shows that children with CF have serum antibodies to the type III apparatus (PopB) at an early stage of P. aeruginosa infection. This early antibody response implies expression of type III cytotoxins during the initial and acute phases of P. aeruginosa infection in the lungs of children with CF. Other evidence implying a role for type III cytotoxins in P. aeruginosa infections in patients with CF includes the determination that the P. aeruginosa CF clinical isolate, CHA, showed toxicity for human polymorphonuclear neutrophils via a type III-dependent pathway (7) and that P. aeruginosa isolates from patients with CF that did not show type III-dependent cytotoxicity toward phagocytes were defective in the expression of exsA (6), a positive regulator for type III expression. In addition, a molecular analysis of clinical and environmental P. aeruginosa isolates reported that the gene encoding PopB was common and that the majority of isolates contained the gene encoding ExoS in clinical and environmental isolates (12). Measurement of seroconversion against PopB and or the combination of ExoS/PopB provides a sensitive and early indication of infection, and when combined with oropharyngeal culturing for P. aeruginosa, it does not miss CF patients with P. aeruginosa infections.
In this study, children with CF developed an early immune response to components of the type III apparatus, and the immune response to type III components occurred earlier than that to ETA and seroconversion to type III components occurred within a time similar to that of the seroconversion to antigens in the cell lysate of PA01. A recent characterization of environmental and clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa observed that while most isolates from the environment were positive for type III secretion, approximately half of the isolates from newly infected children secreted type III cytotoxins, while lower percentages of isolates from chronically infected children or chronically infected adults with CF showed the ability to secrete type III cytotoxins (25). The current study observed early seroconversion at 94% to Pop/ExoS in children with CF by ELISA. Thus, expression of the type III system is common at the earliest stages of P. aeruginosa infections, with the prevalence reduced during the chronic stages of infections. This suggests that the most important role of the type III system may be during the initial stages of colonization of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung and either that type III cytotoxins, such as ExoS, are less important in chronic infection or that the prevalence of isolates that express the type III system fluctuates to counter the host response to infection.
We thank Martha Vaughan for critical reading of the manuscript.
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