A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection. / Maboni, Grazieli; Davenport, Rebecca; Sessford, Kate; Baiker, Kerstin; Jensen, Tim Kåre; Blanchard, Adam M.; Wattegedera, Sean; Entrican, Gary; Tötemeyer, Sabine.

In: Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Maboni, G, Davenport, R, Sessford, K, Baiker, K, Jensen, TK, Blanchard, AM, Wattegedera, S, Entrican, G & Tötemeyer, S 2017, 'A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection', Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404

APA

Maboni, G., Davenport, R., Sessford, K., Baiker, K., Jensen, T. K., Blanchard, A. M., Wattegedera, S., Entrican, G., & Tötemeyer, S. (2017). A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404

Vancouver

Maboni G, Davenport R, Sessford K, Baiker K, Jensen TK, Blanchard AM et al. A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. 2017. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404

Author

Maboni, Grazieli ; Davenport, Rebecca ; Sessford, Kate ; Baiker, Kerstin ; Jensen, Tim Kåre ; Blanchard, Adam M. ; Wattegedera, Sean ; Entrican, Gary ; Tötemeyer, Sabine. / A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection. In: Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. 2017.

Bibtex

@article{9ca83a25121849409da9388a8212a068,
title = "A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection",
abstract = "Skin infection studies are often limited by financial and ethical constraints, and alternatives, such as monolayer cell culture, do not reflect many cellular processes limiting their application. For a more functional replacement, 3D skin culture models offer many advantages such as the maintenance of the tissue structure and the cell types present in the host environment. A 3D skin culture model can be set up using tissues acquired from surgical procedures or post slaughter, making it a cost effective and attractive alternative to animal experimentation. The majority of 3D culture models have been established for aerobic pathogens, but currently there are no models for anaerobic skin infections. Footrot is an anaerobic bacterial infection which affects the ovine interdigital skin causing a substantial animal welfare and financial impact worldwide. Dichelobacter nodosus is a Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium and the causative agent of footrot. The mechanism of infection and host immune response to D. nodosus is poorly understood. Here we present a novel 3D skin ex vivo model to study anaerobic bacterial infections using ovine skin explants infected with D. nodosus. Our results demonstrate that D. nodosus can invade the skin explant, and that altered expression of key inflammatory markers could be quantified in the culture media. The viability of explants was assessed by tissue integrity (histopathological features) and cell death (DNA fragmentation) over 76 h showing the model was stable for 28 h. D. nodosus was quantified in all infected skin explants by qPCR and the bacterium was visualized invading the epidermis by Fluorescent in situ Hybridization. Measurement of pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines in the culture media revealed that the explants released IL1β in response to bacteria. In contrast, levels of CXCL8 production were no different to mock-infected explants. The 3D skin model realistically simulates the interdigital skin and has demonstrated that D. nodosus invades the skin and triggered an early cellular inflammatory response to this bacterium. This novel model is the first of its kind for investigating an anaerobic bacterial infection.",
author = "Grazieli Maboni and Rebecca Davenport and Kate Sessford and Kerstin Baiker and Jensen, {Tim K{\aa}re} and Blanchard, {Adam M.} and Sean Wattegedera and Gary Entrican and Sabine T{\"o}temeyer",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404",
language = "English",
journal = "Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology",
issn = "2235-2988",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A novel 3D skin explant model to study anaerobic bacterial infection

AU - Maboni, Grazieli

AU - Davenport, Rebecca

AU - Sessford, Kate

AU - Baiker, Kerstin

AU - Jensen, Tim Kåre

AU - Blanchard, Adam M.

AU - Wattegedera, Sean

AU - Entrican, Gary

AU - Tötemeyer, Sabine

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Skin infection studies are often limited by financial and ethical constraints, and alternatives, such as monolayer cell culture, do not reflect many cellular processes limiting their application. For a more functional replacement, 3D skin culture models offer many advantages such as the maintenance of the tissue structure and the cell types present in the host environment. A 3D skin culture model can be set up using tissues acquired from surgical procedures or post slaughter, making it a cost effective and attractive alternative to animal experimentation. The majority of 3D culture models have been established for aerobic pathogens, but currently there are no models for anaerobic skin infections. Footrot is an anaerobic bacterial infection which affects the ovine interdigital skin causing a substantial animal welfare and financial impact worldwide. Dichelobacter nodosus is a Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium and the causative agent of footrot. The mechanism of infection and host immune response to D. nodosus is poorly understood. Here we present a novel 3D skin ex vivo model to study anaerobic bacterial infections using ovine skin explants infected with D. nodosus. Our results demonstrate that D. nodosus can invade the skin explant, and that altered expression of key inflammatory markers could be quantified in the culture media. The viability of explants was assessed by tissue integrity (histopathological features) and cell death (DNA fragmentation) over 76 h showing the model was stable for 28 h. D. nodosus was quantified in all infected skin explants by qPCR and the bacterium was visualized invading the epidermis by Fluorescent in situ Hybridization. Measurement of pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines in the culture media revealed that the explants released IL1β in response to bacteria. In contrast, levels of CXCL8 production were no different to mock-infected explants. The 3D skin model realistically simulates the interdigital skin and has demonstrated that D. nodosus invades the skin and triggered an early cellular inflammatory response to this bacterium. This novel model is the first of its kind for investigating an anaerobic bacterial infection.

AB - Skin infection studies are often limited by financial and ethical constraints, and alternatives, such as monolayer cell culture, do not reflect many cellular processes limiting their application. For a more functional replacement, 3D skin culture models offer many advantages such as the maintenance of the tissue structure and the cell types present in the host environment. A 3D skin culture model can be set up using tissues acquired from surgical procedures or post slaughter, making it a cost effective and attractive alternative to animal experimentation. The majority of 3D culture models have been established for aerobic pathogens, but currently there are no models for anaerobic skin infections. Footrot is an anaerobic bacterial infection which affects the ovine interdigital skin causing a substantial animal welfare and financial impact worldwide. Dichelobacter nodosus is a Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium and the causative agent of footrot. The mechanism of infection and host immune response to D. nodosus is poorly understood. Here we present a novel 3D skin ex vivo model to study anaerobic bacterial infections using ovine skin explants infected with D. nodosus. Our results demonstrate that D. nodosus can invade the skin explant, and that altered expression of key inflammatory markers could be quantified in the culture media. The viability of explants was assessed by tissue integrity (histopathological features) and cell death (DNA fragmentation) over 76 h showing the model was stable for 28 h. D. nodosus was quantified in all infected skin explants by qPCR and the bacterium was visualized invading the epidermis by Fluorescent in situ Hybridization. Measurement of pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines in the culture media revealed that the explants released IL1β in response to bacteria. In contrast, levels of CXCL8 production were no different to mock-infected explants. The 3D skin model realistically simulates the interdigital skin and has demonstrated that D. nodosus invades the skin and triggered an early cellular inflammatory response to this bacterium. This novel model is the first of its kind for investigating an anaerobic bacterial infection.

UR - https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/89cc0dc6-8047-4dbb-aa20-860367e2072b

U2 - 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404

DO - 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00404

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28959685

JO - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology

JF - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology

SN - 2235-2988

ER -

ID: 339138129