Zinc deficiency enhances sensitivity to influenza A associated bacterial pneumonia in mice

Author:

Gopal Radha1ORCID,Tutuncuoglu Egemen23,Bakalov Veli23,Wasserloos Karla4,Li HuiHua4,Lemley David4,DeVito Louis J.1,Constantinesco Nicholas J.1,Reed Douglas S.5,McHugh Kevin J.1,Chinnappan Baskaran1,Andreas Alexis R.3,Maloy Abigail3,Bain Daniel6,Alcorn John F.1,Pitt Bruce R.4,Kaynar Ata Murat237ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

2. The Clinical Research, Investigation, and Systems Modeling of Acute Illness (CRISMA) Center University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Critical Care Medicine University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Center for Vaccine Research University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Geology and Planetary Science University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

7. Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractAlthough zinc deficiency (secondary to malnutrition) has long been considered an important contributor to morbidity and mortality of infectious disease (e.g. diarrhea disorders), epidemiologic data (including randomized controlled trials with supplemental zinc) for such a role in lower respiratory tract infection are somewhat ambiguous. In the current study, we provide the first preclinical evidence demonstrating that although diet‐induced acute zinc deficiency (Zn‐D: ~50% decrease) did not worsen infection induced by either influenza A (H1N1) or methicillin‐resistant staph aureus (MRSA), Zn‐D mice were sensitive to the injurious effects of superinfection of H1N1 with MRSA. Although the mechanism underlying the sensitivity of ZnD mice to combined H1N1/MRSA infection is unclear, it was noteworthy that this combination exacerbated lung injury as shown by lung epithelial injury markers (increased BAL protein) and decreased genes related to epithelial integrity in Zn‐D mice (surfactant protein C and secretoglobins family 1A member 1). As bacterial pneumonia accounts for 25%–50% of morbidity and mortality from influenza A infection, zinc deficiency may be an important pathology component of respiratory tract infections.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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