[HTML][HTML] Real-time visualization of mycobacterium-macrophage interactions leading to initiation of granuloma formation in zebrafish embryos

JM Davis, H Clay, JL Lewis, N Ghori, P Herbomel… - Immunity, 2002 - cell.com
JM Davis, H Clay, JL Lewis, N Ghori, P Herbomel, L Ramakrishnan
Immunity, 2002cell.com
Infection of vertebrate hosts with pathogenic Mycobacteria, the agents of tuberculosis,
produces granulomas, highly organized structures containing differentiated macrophages
and lymphocytes, that sequester the pathogen. Adult zebrafish are naturally susceptible to
tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium marinum. Here, we exploit the optical transparency
of zebrafish embryos to image the events of M. marinum infection in vivo. Despite the fact
that the embryos do not yet have lymphocytes, infection leads to the formation of …
Abstract
Infection of vertebrate hosts with pathogenic Mycobacteria, the agents of tuberculosis, produces granulomas, highly organized structures containing differentiated macrophages and lymphocytes, that sequester the pathogen. Adult zebrafish are naturally susceptible to tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium marinum. Here, we exploit the optical transparency of zebrafish embryos to image the events of M. marinum infection in vivo. Despite the fact that the embryos do not yet have lymphocytes, infection leads to the formation of macrophage aggregates with pathological hallmarks of granulomas and activation of previously identified granuloma-specific Mycobacterium genes. Thus, Mycobacterium-macrophage interactions can initiate granuloma formation solely in the context of innate immunity. Strikingly, infection can redirect normal embryonic macrophage migration, even recruiting macrophages seemingly committed to their developmentally dictated tissue sites.
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