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Immune Response Modulation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa Persister Cells

Cody James Hastings, Grace E. Himmler, Arpeet Patel, Cláudia N. H. Marques

2023mBio35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial cells have a subpopulation-persister cells-that have a low metabolism. Persister cells survive antimicrobial treatment and can regrow to cause chronic and recurrent infections. Currently little is known as to whether the human immune system recognizes and responds to the presence of persister cells. In this work, we studied the ability of persister cells from Pseudomonas aeruginosa to resist the host defense system (innate immunity). We found that this subpopulation is recognized by the defense system, but it is not killed. The lack of killing likely stems from hindering the immune response regulation, resulting in a failure to distinguish whether a pathogen is present. Findings from this work increase the overall knowledge as to how chronic infections are resilient.

Topics & Concepts

Multidrug toleranceMicrobiologyBiologyInnate immune systemPseudomonas aeruginosaImmune systemAntibody opsonizationImmunityCD80CD86Immune toleranceComplement membrane attack complexComplement systemBacteriaImmunologyPhagocytosisCD40Cytotoxic T cellT cellBiofilmBiochemistryOpsoninIn vitroGeneticsBacterial biofilms and quorum sensingVibrio bacteria research studiesAntibiotic Resistance in Bacteria