PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Importance of Propionibacterium acnes hemolytic activity in human intervertebral discs: A microbiological study.

  • Manu N Capoor,
  • Filip Ruzicka,
  • Gurpreet Sandhu,
  • Jess Rollason,
  • Konstantinos Mavrommatis,
  • Fahad S Ahmed,
  • Jonathan E Schmitz,
  • Assaf Raz,
  • Holger Brüggemann,
  • Peter A Lambert,
  • Vincent A Fischetti,
  • Ondrej Slaby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208144
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0208144

Abstract

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Most patients with chronic lower back pain (CLBP) exhibit degenerative disc disease. Disc specimens obtained during initial therapeutic discectomies are often infected/colonized with Propionibacterium acnes, a Gram-positive commensal of the human skin. Although pain associated with infection is typically ascribed to the body's inflammatory response, the Gram-positive bacterium Staphylococcus aureus was recently observed to directly activate nociceptors by secreting pore-forming α-hemolysins that disrupt neuronal cell membranes. The hemolytic activity of P. acnes in cultured disc specimens obtained during routine therapeutic discectomies was assessed through incubation on sheep-blood agar. The β-hemolysis pattern displayed by P. acnes on sheep-blood agar was variable and phylogroup-dependent. Their molecular phylogroups were correlated with their hemolytic patterns. Our findings raise the possibility that pore-forming proteins contribute to the pathogenesis and/or symptomology of chronic P. acnes disc infections and CLBP, at least in a subset of cases.