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Differential secretome profiling of a swine tracheal cell line infected with mycoplasmas of the swine respiratory tract
- Source :
- Journal of Proteomics. 192:147-159
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and Mycoplasma flocculare are genetically similar. However, M. hyopneumoniae causes porcine enzootic pneumonia, while M. flocculare is a commensal bacterium. M. hyopneumoniae and M. flocculare do not penetrate their host cells, and secreted proteins are important for bacterium-host interplay. Thus, the secretomes of a swine trachea cell line (NPTr) infected with M. hyopneumoniae 7448 (a pathogenic strain), M. hyopneumoniae J (a non-pathogenic strain) and M. flocculare were compared to shed light in bacterium-host interactions. Medium from the cultures was collected, and secreted proteins were identified by a LC-MS/MS. Overall numbers of identified host and bacterial proteins were, respectively, 488 and 58, for NPTr/M. hyopneumoniae 7448; 371 and 67, for NPTr/M. hyopneumoniae J; and 203 and 81, for NPTr/M. flocculare. The swine cells revealed different secretion profiles in response to the infection with each M. hyopneumoniae strain or with M. flocculare. DAMPs and extracellular proteasome proteins, secreted in response to cell injury and death, were secreted by NPTr cells infected with M. hyopneumoniae 7448. All three mycoplasmas secreted virulence factors during NPTr infection, but M. hyopneumoniae 7448 secreted higher number of adhesins and hypothetical proteins, that may be related with pathogenicity. SIGNIFICANCE: The enzootic pneumonia caused by mycoplasmas of swine respiratory tract has economic loss consequences in pig industry due to antibiotic costs and pig weight loss. However, some genetically similar mycoplasmas are pathogenic while others, such as Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and Mycoplasma flocculare, are non-pathogenic. Here, we conducted an infection assay between swine cells and pathogenic and non-pathogenic mycoplasmas to decipher secreted proteins during host-pathogen interaction. Mycoplasma response to cell infection was also observed. Our study provided new insights on secretion profile of swine cells in response to the infection with pathogenic and non-pathogenic mycoplasmas. It was possible to observe that pathogenic M. hyopneumoniae 7448 secreted known virulence factors and swine cells responded by inducing cell death. Otherwise, M. hyopneumoniae J and M. flocculare, non-pathogenic mycoplasmas, secreted a different profile of virulence factors in response to swine cells. Consequently, swine cells altered their secretome profile, but the changes were not sufficient to cause disease.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Proteome
Swine
Biophysics
Virulence
medicine.disease_cause
Biochemistry
Cell Line
Microbiology
03 medical and health sciences
Mycoplasma
Porcine enzootic pneumonia
Bacterial Proteins
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
medicine
Animals
Secretion
030102 biochemistry & molecular biology
biology
Pneumonia of Swine, Mycoplasmal
biology.organism_classification
Trachea
Bacterial adhesin
030104 developmental biology
Secretory protein
Cell culture
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18743919
- Volume :
- 192
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Proteomics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e70181a15efdf7f5c2902edf9d367754