Abstract

Central nervous system (CNS) tuberculosis is a serious, often fatal disease that disproportionately affects young children. It is thought to develop when Mycobacterium tuberculosis breaches the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which is composed of tightly apposed brain microvascular endothelial cells. However, the mechanism(s) involved in this process are poorly understood. To better understand these processes, we developed an in vitro model of M. tuberculosis BBB infection using primary human brain microvascular endothelial cells. M. tuberculosis was found to both invade and traverse the model BBB significantly more than did M. smegmatis (a nonpathogenic mycobacterium). Invasion by M. tuberculosis across the BBB required host-cell actin cytoskeletal rearrangements. By microarray expression profiling, we found 33 M. tuberculosis genes to be highly up-regulated during the early stages of invasion of the BBB by M. tuberculosis; 18 of them belong to a previously described in vivo-expressed genomic island (Rv0960-Rv1001). Defined M. tuberculosis isogenic transposon mutants for the up-regulated genes Rv0980c, Rv0987, Rv0989c, and Rv1801 were found to be deficient in their ability to invade the BBB model. We developed an in vitro model of M. tuberculosis BBB infection and identified M. tuberculosis genes that may be involved in CNS invasion.

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