Intranasal challenge with B. pertussis leads to more severe disease manifestations in mice than aerosol challenge

Author:

Weaver Kelly L.,Bitzer Graham J.,Wolf M. Allison,Pyles Gage M.,DeJong Megan A.,Dublin Spencer R.,Huckaby Annalisa B.,Gutierrez Maria de la Paz,Hall Jesse M.,Wong Ting Y.,Warden Matthew,Petty Jonathan E.,Witt William T.,Cunningham Casey,Sen-Kilic Emel,Damron F. Heath,Barbier MarietteORCID

Abstract

The murine Bordetella pertussis challenge model has been utilized in preclinical research for decades. Currently, inconsistent methodologies are employed by researchers across the globe, making it difficult to compare findings. The objective of this work was to utilize the CD-1 mouse model with two routes of challenge, intranasal and aerosol administration of B. pertussis, to understand the differences in disease manifestation elicited via each route. We observed that both routes of B. pertussis challenge result in dose-dependent colonization of the respiratory tract, but overall, intranasal challenge led to higher bacterial burden in the nasal lavage, trachea, and lung. Furthermore, high dose intranasal challenge results in induction of leukocytosis and pro-inflammatory cytokine responses compared to aerosol challenge. These data highlight crucial differences in B. pertussis challenge routes that should be considered during experimental design.

Funder

NIH

West Virginia Space Grant Consortium

West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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