PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Pasteurella pneumotropica evades the human complement system by acquisition of the complement regulators factor H and C4BP.

  • Alfredo Sahagún-Ruiz,
  • Adriana Patricia Granados Martinez,
  • Leandro Carvalho Dantas Breda,
  • Tatiana Rodrigues Fraga,
  • Mónica Marcela Castiblanco Valencia,
  • Angela Silva Barbosa,
  • Lourdes Isaac

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111194
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. e111194

Abstract

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Pasteurella pneumotropica is an opportunist Gram negative bacterium responsible for rodent pasteurellosis that affects upper respiratory, reproductive and digestive tracts of mammals. In animal care facilities the presence of P. pneumotropica causes severe to lethal infection in immunodeficient mice, being also a potential source for human contamination. Indeed, occupational exposure is one of the main causes of human infection by P. pneumotropica. The clinical presentation of the disease includes subcutaneous abscesses, respiratory tract colonization and systemic infections. Given the ability of P. pneumotropica to fully disseminate in the organism, it is quite relevant to study the role of the complement system to control the infection as well as the possible evasion mechanisms involved in bacterial survival. Here, we show for the first time that P. pneumotropica is able to survive the bactericidal activity of the human complement system. We observed that host regulatory complement C4BP and Factor H bind to the surface of P. pneumotropica, controlling the activation pathways regulating the formation and maintenance of C3-convertases. These results show that P. pneumotropica has evolved mechanisms to evade the human complement system that may increase the efficiency by which this pathogen is able to gain access to and colonize inner tissues where it may cause severe infections.