Abstract
The enteric pathogen Shigella is one of the leading causes of moderate-to-severe diarrhea and death in young children in developing countries. Transformed cell lines and animal models have been widely used to study Shigella pathogenesis. In addition to altered physiology, transformed cell lines are composed of a single cell type that does not sufficiently represent the complex multicellular environment of the human colon. Most available animal models do not accurately mimic human disease. The human intestinal enteroid model, derived from LGR5+ stem cell-containing intestinal crypts from healthy subjects, represents a technological leap in human gastrointestinal system modeling and provides a more physiologically relevant system that includes multiple cell types and features of the human intestine. We established the utility of this model for studying basic aspects of Shigella pathogenesis and host responses. In this study, we show that Shigellaflexneri is capable of infecting and replicating intracellularly in human enteroids derived from different segments of the intestine. Apical invasion by S. flexneri is very limited but increases ∼10-fold when enteroids are differentiated to include M cells. Invasion via the basolateral surface was at least 2-log10 units more efficient than apical infection. Increased secretion of interleukin-8 and higher expression levels of the mucin glycoprotein Muc2 were observed in the enteroids following S. flexneri infection. The human enteroid model promises to bridge some of the gaps between traditional cell culture, animal models, and human infection.
Highlights
The enteric pathogen Shigella is one of the leading causes of moderateto-severe diarrhea and death in young children in developing countries
Human intestinal enteroids, derived from LGR5ϩ stem cell-containing colonic crypts from healthy subjects, represent a physiologically relevant model that includes some additional features of the human intestine compared to traditional cell culture models [32,33,34]
The human enteroid model promises to serve as a novel model to help fill some of these knowledge gaps
Summary
The enteric pathogen Shigella is one of the leading causes of moderateto-severe diarrhea and death in young children in developing countries. We show that Shigella flexneri is capable of infecting and replicating intracellularly in human enteroids derived from different segments of the intestine. Enteroids derived from different sections of the intestine retain the unique functional properties (segmental specificity) of the region and exhibit apical and basolateral polarity with appropriate localization of surface markers and transporter proteins [34, 36,37,38]. These features make enteroids a very attractive model to study host-pathogen interactions. In the enteroid model used in this study, components such as the host immune system, the gut microbiome, and peristalsis, etc., are not captured
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