Masanori Asai, Yanwen Li, Sandra M Newton, Brian D Robertson, Paul R Langford
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引用次数: 0
摘要
大蜡蛾幼虫由于易于使用,且具有与脊椎动物功能相似的先天免疫系统,因此被广泛用作传染性疾病的替代模型。在此,我们回顾了伯克霍尔德氏菌属、柯克西氏菌属、弗朗西斯氏菌属、李斯特氏菌属和分枝杆菌属的G. mellonella-人类细胞内细菌病原体感染模型。对所有菌属而言,使用 G. mellonella 增加了对宿主-细菌交互生物学的了解,特别是通过比较近亲物种和/或野生型与突变型对的致病力的研究。在许多情况下,G. mellonella 的致病力与哺乳动物感染模型中的致病力相同,但致病机制是否相同尚不清楚。由于美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)不再要求动物试验才能获得许可,因此这一领域将不断扩大。G.Mellonella遗传学、成像、代谢组学、蛋白质组学和转录组学方法的进步,以及用于量化免疫标记物的试剂的开发和普及,将推动G.Mellonella-细胞内细菌感染模型的进一步使用,而所有这些都将以完全注释的基因组为基础。
Galleria mellonella-intracellular bacteria pathogen infection models: the ins and outs.
Galleria mellonella (greater wax moth) larvae are used widely as surrogate infectious disease models, due to ease of use and the presence of an innate immune system functionally similar to that of vertebrates. Here, we review G. mellonella-human intracellular bacteria pathogen infection models from the genera Burkholderia, Coxiella, Francisella, Listeria, and Mycobacterium. For all genera, G. mellonella use has increased understanding of host-bacterial interactive biology, particularly through studies comparing the virulence of closely related species and/or wild-type versus mutant pairs. In many cases, virulence in G. mellonella mirrors that found in mammalian infection models, although it is unclear whether the pathogenic mechanisms are the same. The use of G. mellonella larvae has speeded up in vivo efficacy and toxicity testing of novel antimicrobials to treat infections caused by intracellular bacteria: an area that will expand since the FDA no longer requires animal testing for licensure. Further use of G. mellonella-intracellular bacteria infection models will be driven by advances in G. mellonella genetics, imaging, metabolomics, proteomics, and transcriptomic methodologies, alongside the development and accessibility of reagents to quantify immune markers, all of which will be underpinned by a fully annotated genome.
期刊介绍:
Title: FEMS Microbiology Reviews
Journal Focus:
Publishes reviews covering all aspects of microbiology not recently surveyed
Reviews topics of current interest
Provides comprehensive, critical, and authoritative coverage
Offers new perspectives and critical, detailed discussions of significant trends
May contain speculative and selective elements
Aimed at both specialists and general readers
Reviews should be framed within the context of general microbiology and biology
Submission Criteria:
Manuscripts should not be unevaluated compilations of literature
Lectures delivered at symposia must review the related field to be acceptable