ActA Is Required for Crossing of the Fetoplacental Barrier by Listeria monocytogenes

A Le Monnier, N Autret, OF Join-Lambert… - Infection and …, 2007 - Am Soc Microbiol
A Le Monnier, N Autret, OF Join-Lambert, F Jaubert, A Charbit, P Berche, S Kayal
Infection and immunity, 2007Am Soc Microbiol
The facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes induces severe fetal
infection during pregnancy. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms allowing the
maternofetal transmission of bacteria. In this work, we studied fetoplacental invasion by
infecting mice with various mutants lacking virulence factors involved in the intracellular life
cycle of L. monocytogenes. We found that the placenta was highly susceptible to bacteria,
including avirulent bacteria, such as an L. monocytogenes mutant with an hly deletion …
Abstract
The facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes induces severe fetal infection during pregnancy. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms allowing the maternofetal transmission of bacteria. In this work, we studied fetoplacental invasion by infecting mice with various mutants lacking virulence factors involved in the intracellular life cycle of L. monocytogenes. We found that the placenta was highly susceptible to bacteria, including avirulent bacteria, such as an L. monocytogenes mutant with an hly deletion (ΔLLO) and a nonpathogenic species, Listeria innocua, suggesting that permissive trophoblastic cells, trapping bacteria, provide a protective niche for bacterial survival. The ΔLLO mutant, which is unable to escape the phagosomal compartment of infected cells, failed to grow in the trophoblast tissue and to invade the fetus. Mutant bacteria with inlA and inlB deletion (ΔInlAB) grew in the placenta and fetus as well as did the wild-type virulent stain (EGDwt), indicating that in the murine model, internalins A and B are not involved in fetoplacental invasion by L. monocytogenes. Pregnant mice were then infected with an actA deletion (ΔActA) strain, a virulence-attenuated mutant that is unable to polymerize actin and to spread from cell to cell. With the ΔActA mutant, fetal infection occurs, but with a significant delay and restriction, and it requires a placental bacterial load 2 log units higher than that for the wild-type virulent strain. Definitive evidence for the role of ActA was provided by showing that a actA-complemented ΔActA mutant was restored in its capacity to invade fetuses. ActA-mediated cell-to-cell spreading plays a major role in the vertical transmission of L. monocytogenes to the fetus in the murine model.
American Society for Microbiology