Article
A Murine Model of Mycobacterium kansasii Infection Reproducing Necrotic Lung Pathology Reveals Considerable Heterogeneity in Virulence of Clinical Isolates
Registro en:
MUSSI, Vinicius O. et al. A Murine Model of Mycobacterium kansasii Infection Reproducing Necrotic Lung Pathology Reveals Considerable Heterogeneity in Virulence of Clinical Isolates. Frontiers in Microbiology, v. 12, Article 718477, p. 1 - 13, Aug. 2021.
1664-302X
10.3389/fmicb.2021.718477
Autor
Mussi, Vinicius O.
Simão, Thatiana L. B. V.
Almeida, Fabrício M.
Machado, Edson
Carvalho, Luciana D. de
Calixto, Sanderson D.
Sales, Guilherme A. M.
Carvalho, Eulógio C. Q.
Vasconcellos, Sidra E. G.
Catanho, Marcos
Suffys, Philip N.
Lasunskaia, Elena B.
Resumen
Among non-tuberculous mycobacteria, Mycobacterium kansasii is one of the most
pathogenic, able to cause pulmonary disease indistinguishable from tuberculosis in
immunocompetent susceptible adults. The lack of animal models that reproduce
human-like lung disease, associated with the necrotic lung pathology, impairs studies
of M. kansasii virulence and pathogenicity. In this study, we examined the ability of
the C57BL/6 mice, intratracheally infected with highly virulent M. kansasii strains, to
produce a chronic infection and necrotic lung pathology. As a first approach, we
evaluated ten M. kansasii strains isolated from Brazilian patients with pulmonary disease
and the reference strain M. kansasii ATCC 12478 for virulence-associated features in
macrophages infected in vitro; five of these strains differing in virulence were selected
for in vivo analysis. Highly virulent isolates induced progressive lung disease in mice,
forming large encapsulated caseous granulomas in later stages (120–150 days postinfection),
while the low-virulent strain was cleared from the lungs by day 40. Two strains
demonstrated increased virulence, causing premature death in the infected animals.
These data demonstrate that C57BL/6 mice are an excellent candidate to investigate
the virulence of M. kansasii isolates. We observed considerable heterogeneity in the
virulence profile of these strains, in which the presence of highly virulent strains
allowed us to establish a clinically relevant animal model. Comparing public genomic
data between Brazilian isolates and isolates from other geographic regions worldwide
demonstrated that at least some of the highly pathogenic strains isolated in Brazil display
remarkable genomic similarities with the ATCC strain 12478 isolated in the United States
70 years ago (less than 100 SNPs of difference), as well as with some recent European
clinical isolates. These data suggest that few pathogenic clones have been widely
spread within M. kansasii population around the world.