Abstract

Aeromonas sobria, a common conditional pathogenic bacteria, is widely distributed in the environment and causes gastroenteritis in humans or septicemia in fish. Of all Aeromonas species, A. sobria is the most frequently isolated from human infections especially in immunocompromised subjects. Innate immunity is the first protection system of organism to resist non-specific pathogens invasion; however, the immune response process of hosts against A. sobria infection re\\mains unexplored. The present study established an A. sobria infection model using primary mouse peritoneal macrophages (PMφs). The adherence and cytotoxicity of A. sobria on PMφs were determined by May-Grünwald Giemsa staining and LDH release measurement. Pro-inflammatory cytokine expression levels were measured using qPCR, western blotting, and ELISA methods. We also investigated the levels of ASC oligomerization and determined the roles of active caspase-1 in IL-1β secretion through inhibition assays and explored the activated pattern recognition receptors through immunofluorescence. We further elucidated the roles of activated inflammasome in regulating the host’s inflammatory response through inhibition combined with ELISA assays. Our results showed that A. sobria induced lytic cell death and LDH release, whereas it had no adhesive properties on PMφs. A. sobria triggered various proinflammatory cytokine transcription level upregulation, and IL-1β occupied the highest levels. The pro-IL-1β protein expression levels increased in a dose-dependent manner with MOI ranging from 1 to 100. This process was regulated by ASC-dependent inflammasome, which cleavage pro-IL-1β into active IL-1β p17 with activated caspase-1 p20. Meanwhile, the expression levels of NLRP3 receptor significantly increased, location analysis revealed puncta-like surrounding nuclear, and inhibition of NLRP3 inflammasome downregulated caspase-1 activation and IL-1β secretion. Blocking of NLRP3 inflammasome activation through K+ efflux and cathepsin B or caspase approaches downregulated A. sobria–induced proinflammatory cytokine production. Overall, these data indicated that A. sobria induced proinflammatory cytokine production in PMφs through activating NLRP3 inflammasome signaling pathways.

Highlights

  • Aeromonas species are the causative agents of varieties of illnesses, including gastrointestinal infections and extraintestinal localizations in open wounds, hepatobiliary system, or eyes (King et al, 1992)

  • Among the Aeromonas isolates from human infections, a number of 85% cases are related to Aeromonas hydrophila, Aeromonas caviae, and Aeromonas sobria (A. sobria) (Janda and Abbott, 1998); and A. sobria is more frequently associated with human infections (Daily et al, 1981)

  • To determine the function of A. sobria in PMjs, many proinflammatory cytokines were determined after 90 min of infection with A. sobria at an MOI of 10 and 2 h gentamycin treatment followed by 12 h incubation

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Summary

Introduction

Aeromonas species are the causative agents of varieties of illnesses, including gastrointestinal infections and extraintestinal localizations in open wounds, hepatobiliary system, or eyes (King et al, 1992). A. sobria is a Gram-negative, single-flagella, rod-shaped, motile, facultative anaerobic bacterium of genus Aeromonas (Taslimi et al, 2018). It is widely distributed in the natural environments, including water, soil, feces, etc., being a conditional pathogenic bacterium to humans, aquatic animals, livestock, and poultry (Cahill, 1990; Song et al, 2019). Humans or animals get infected through ingestion of contaminated food or direct contact, exhibiting symptoms of bacteremia, tissue damage, pneumonia, meningitis, gastroenteritis, or septicemia, especially in people with weakened immune system (San Joaquin and Pickett, 1988; Su et al, 2013; Wang et al, 2009). Deep research in the interaction between A. sobria and hosts is urgently necessary to develop effective strategies against A. sobria infection

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