Abstract

Acinetobacter baumannii is a cause of healthcare-associated infections. Although A. baumannii is an opportunistic pathogen, its infections are notoriously difficult to treat due to intrinsic and acquired antimicrobial resistance, often limiting effective therapeutic options. A. baumannii can survive for long periods in the hospital environment, particularly on inanimate surfaces. Such environments may act as a reservoir for cross-colonization and infection outbreaks and should be considered a substantial factor in infection control practices. Moreover, clothing of healthcare personnel and gadgets may play a role in the spread of nosocomial bacteria. A link between contamination of hospital surfaces and A. baumannii infections or between its persistence in the environment and its virulence has not yet been established. Bacteria under stress (i.e., long-term desiccation in hospital setting) could conserve factors that favor infection. To investigate whether desiccation and/or starvation may be involved in the ability of certain strains of A. baumannii to retain virulence factors, we have studied five well-characterized clinical isolates of A. baumannii for which survival times were determined under simulated hospital conditions. Despite a considerable reduction in the culturability over time (up to 88% depending on strain and the condition tested), some A. baumannii strains were able to maintain their ability to form biofilms after rehydration, addition of nutrients, and changing temperature. Also, after long-term desiccation, several clinical strains were able to grow in the presence of non-immune human serum as fine as their non-stressed homologs. Furthermore, we also show that the ability of bacterial strains to kill Galleria mellonella larvae does not change although A. baumannii cells were stressed by long-term starvation (up to 60 days). This means that A. baumannii can undergo a rapid adaptation to both the temperature shift and nutrients availability, conditions that can be easily found by bacteria in a new patient in the hospital setting.

Highlights

  • A. baumannii is a non-motile opportunistic extracellular human pathogen

  • A. baumannii strains were routinely cultured on blood agar (BA) plates, or Luria broth (LB) at 37 ̊C and stock cultures were frozen at -80 ̊C with 20% glycerol

  • A. baumannii culturability was reduced by 46.66%, 40.40%, 71.78%, and 11.94% in plastic, glass, white lab coat, and saline, respectively

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A. baumannii is a non-motile opportunistic extracellular human pathogen. Antibiotic-resistant A. baumannii has emerged as one of the most problematic nosocomial pathogens [1]. While more than 80 complete genome sequences of several strains of A. baumannii have been published, only very few potential virulence factors have been implicated in its disease pathogenesis [2]. Other surface components or secreted proteins play a minor role both in vitro or in vivo. With these limited number of virulence factors, it has been suggested that the fulminant course of disease might be due to exaggerated host response to A. baumannii lipopolysaccharide [5,6,7,8]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call