Abstract

Enzootic pneumonia incurs major economic losses to pork production globally. The primary pathogen and causative agent, Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae, colonises ciliated epithelium and disrupts mucociliary function predisposing the upper respiratory tract to secondary pathogens. Alleviation of disease is reliant on antibiotics, vaccination, and sound animal husbandry, but none are effective at eliminating M. hyopneumoniae from large production systems. Sustainable pork production systems strive to lower reliance on antibiotics but lack of a detailed understanding of the pathobiology of M. hyopneumoniae has curtailed efforts to develop effective mitigation strategies. M. hyopneumoniae is considered an extracellular pathogen. Here we show that M. hyopneumoniae associates with integrin β1 on the surface of epithelial cells via interactions with surface-bound fibronectin and initiates signalling events that stimulate pathogen uptake into clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) and caveosomes. These early events allow M. hyopneumoniae to exploit an intracellular lifestyle by commandeering the endosomal pathway. Specifically, we show: (i) using a modified gentamicin protection assay that approximately 8% of M. hyopneumoniae cells reside intracellularly; (ii) integrin β1 expression specifically co-localises with the deposition of fibronectin precisely where M. hyopneumoniae cells assemble extracellularly; (iii) anti-integrin β1 antibodies block entry of M. hyopneumoniae into porcine cells; and (iv) M. hyopneumoniae survives phagolysosomal fusion, and resides within recycling endosomes that are trafficked to the cell membrane. Our data creates a paradigm shift by challenging the long-held view that M. hyopneumoniae is a strict extracellular pathogen and calls for in vivo studies to determine if M. hyopneumoniae can traffic to extrapulmonary sites in commercially-reared pigs.

Highlights

  • Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is the etiological agent of enzootic pneumonia and a primary pathogen in the porcine respiratory disease complex[1]

  • We were able to confirm that these engulfed bacteria were M. hyopneumoniae cells using anti-F2P94-J antiserum, which is specific for M. hyopneumoniae

  • Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and 3D-Structured Illumination Microscopy (3D-SIM) images of these samples depict extracellular, F2P94-J-labelled M. hyopneumoniae cells adhering to PK-15 cells, and numerous intracellular bacteria stained solely with DAPI (Fig. 1G,H)

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Summary

Introduction

Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is the etiological agent of enzootic pneumonia and a primary pathogen in the porcine respiratory disease complex[1]. Strategies that are implemented to control infection by M. hyopneumoniae include vaccination (predominantly with bacterin formulations); antibiotic therapy and herd management (high standards in hygiene, all-in-all-out production models and swiss de-population with re-stocking from herds considered free of M. hyopneumoniae). It is well known that numerous mycoplasma species can invade host cells[26,27,28,29], and it has historically been characterised as a strict extracellular pathogen, M. hyopneumoniae has been cultured from the liver, spleen, kidneys and bronchial lymph nodes of pigs infected experimentally with M. hyopneumoniae[30,31,32] It is not known if M. hyopneumoniae colonises tissue sites distal to the respiratory tract in commercially-reared herds. Our data have significant implications for detecting animals infected with M. hyopneumoniae and for development of therapies to eliminate this difficult-to-control pathogen

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