Abstract

A major gap in understanding infectious diseases is the lack of information about molecular interaction networks between pathogens and the human host. Haemophilus ducreyi causes the genital ulcer disease chancroid in adults and is a leading cause of cutaneous ulcers in children in the tropics. We developed a model in which human volunteers are infected on the upper arm with H. ducreyi until they develop pustules. To define the H. ducreyi and human interactome, we determined bacterial and host transcriptomic and host metabolomic changes in pustules. We found that in vivoH. ducreyi transcripts were distinct from those in the inocula, as were host transcripts in pustule and wounded control sites. Many of the upregulated H. ducreyi genes were found to be involved in ascorbic acid and anaerobic metabolism and inorganic ion/nutrient transport. The top 20 significantly expressed human pathways showed that all were involved in immune responses. We generated a bipartite network for interactions between host and bacterial gene transcription; multiple positively correlated networks contained H. ducreyi genes involved in anaerobic metabolism and host genes involved with the immune response. Metabolomic studies showed that pustule and wounded samples had different metabolite compositions; the top ion pathway involved ascorbate and aldarate metabolism, which correlated with the H. ducreyi transcriptional response and upregulation of host genes involved in ascorbic acid recycling. These data show that an interactome exists between H. ducreyi and the human host and suggest that H. ducreyi exploits the metabolic niche created by the host immune response.IMPORTANCE Dual RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) offers the promise of determining an interactome at a transcriptional level between a bacterium and the host but has yet to be done on any bacterial infection in human tissue. We performed dual RNA-seq and metabolomics analyses on wounded and infected sites following experimental infection of the arm with H. ducreyi Our results suggest that H. ducreyi survives in an abscess by utilizing l-ascorbate as an alternative carbon source, possibly taking advantage of host ascorbic acid recycling, and that H. ducreyi also adapts by upregulating genes involved in anaerobic metabolism and inorganic ion and nutrient transport. To our knowledge, this is the first description of an interaction network between a bacterium and the human host at a site of infection.

Highlights

  • A major gap in understanding infectious diseases is the lack of information about molecular interaction networks between pathogens and the human host

  • To determine if an interaction network exists between H. ducreyi and the human host and whether host transcriptional changes correlate with the metabolome, we inoculated 8 volunteers (3 men, 5 women; 5 whites, 2 blacks, 1 native American; 40.3 Ϯ 11.4 years old) with 144 Ϯ 7 CFU of 35000HP at 3 sites and at 1 site with a buffer control in 3 iterations

  • We isolated RNA from infected tissue, wounded tissue, and the H. ducreyi inocula used to infect the subjects and performed dual RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to identify the transcriptomes of both H. ducreyi and the host

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Summary

Introduction

A major gap in understanding infectious diseases is the lack of information about molecular interaction networks between pathogens and the human host. Metabolomic studies showed that pustule and wounded samples had different metabolite compositions; the top ion pathway involved ascorbate and aldarate metabolism, which correlated with the H. ducreyi transcriptional response and upregulation of host genes involved in ascorbic acid recycling. Our results suggest that H. ducreyi survives in an abscess by utilizing L-ascorbate as an alternative carbon source, possibly taking advantage of host ascorbic acid recycling, and that H. ducreyi adapts by upregulating genes involved in anaerobic metabolism and inorganic ion and nutrient transport. To our knowledge, this is the first description of an interaction network between a bacterium and the human host at a site of infection. H. ducreyi must evade phagocytosis and adapt to the nutrientpoor, anaerobic environment of the abscess, which includes serum, activated complement, oxidative products, and antimicrobial peptides, in order to survive

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