Role of exotoxin A in inducing severe Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections in mice

S Miyazaki, T Matsumoto, K Tateda… - Journal of medical …, 1995 - microbiologyresearch.org
S Miyazaki, T Matsumoto, K Tateda, A Ohno, K Yamaguchi
Journal of medical microbiology, 1995microbiologyresearch.org
The effects of exotoxin A (EXA) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa on polymorphonuclear
leucocytes (PMNLs) were studied in a mouse model and in vitro. P. aeruginosa PA103,
which produced EXA, was 20 times more virulent for normal mice than was its EXA-deficient
mutant, PA103-29. EXA was detected in the plasma of mice infected with P. aeruginosa
PA103, and its presence correlated with increasing numbers of bacteria in the blood and
internal organs. A monoclonal antibody (MAb) against EXA prevented the death of the mice …
Summary
The effects of exotoxin A (EXA) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa on polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs) were studied in a mouse model and in vitro. P. aeruginosa PA103, which produced EXA, was 20 times more virulent for normal mice than was its EXA-deficient mutant, PA103-29. EXA was detected in the plasma of mice infected with P. aeruginosa PA103, and its presence correlated with increasing numbers of bacteria in the blood and internal organs. A monoclonal antibody (MAb) against EXA prevented the death of the mice if it was given simultaneously with, or 2 h before, infection with strain PA 103. The number of PMNLs in murine blood decreased by 50% within 30 min of intravenous injection of EXA, but this decrease was prevented by simultaneous or prior injection of MAb to the toxin. EXA inhibited in-vitro phagocytosis and killing of P. aeruginosa by human and murine PMNLs and decreased the number of the PMNLs by between 60 and 68%. Collectively, these results not only confirm that EXA. is toxic in vivo, but also suggest that this toxin accelerates the growth of virulent P. aeruginosa in mice.
Microbiology Research