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The Journal of Medical Microbiology, Vol 35, Issue 6 349-357, Copyright © 1991 by Society for General Microbiology
JOURNAL ARTICLE |
G. R. Douce, I. I. Amin and J. Stephen
School of Biological Sciences, University of Birmingham.
Experiments to measure the invasiveness of seven strains of Salmonella typhimurium for HEp-2 cells showed that high inocula (100 bacteria/HEp-2 cell), as used by most workers to synchronise events and to increase the number of bacteria which invade, resulted in recovery of significantly less than 1% of the original inoculum after treatment with gentamicin to kill extracellular bacteria. Also, the cell culture medium became acidic, and microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained monolayers immediately following gentamicin treatment revealed high concentrations of bacteria associated with the cells. Moreover, with bacterium-cell interaction beyond 2 h, many HEp-2 cells became rounded, especially with virulent strains W118 and TML. Thus, the biological significance of the quantitative data was uncertain. The fall in pH and the rounding of HEp-2 cells were prevented by the use of a low (1:1) bacterium: cell ratio; but the recovery of bacteria after treatment with gentamicin was still lower than expected by microscopic examination. After treatment of cells with Triton X-100 to release bacteria, many remained bound to residual cell nuclei. Additional treatment with a rubber policeman, and vigorous pipetting to disperse aggregates of bacteria and cell debris, increased the recovery to c. 10% of the initial inoculum after interaction for 2 h, and 30-80% after 4 h, depending on the strain and experimental conditions. The pattern of invasiveness, but not the absolute count, was highly reproducible on different days and in different hands. However, after interaction exceeding 2 h, the distribution of bacteria was uneven, many cells having no associated organisms, others showing microcolonies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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