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A118 EXPOSURE TO CROHN’S DISEASE-ASSOCIATED...
Journal article

A118 EXPOSURE TO CROHN’S DISEASE-ASSOCIATED ADHERENT-INVASIVE E.COLI (AIEC) AT THE HEIGHT OF INFECTIOUS COLITIS IMPAIRS HOST-MEDIATED CLEARANCE OF AIEC

Abstract

Prior exposure to foodborne pathogens causing acute gastroenteritis can have long lasting consequences, including an increased risk of Crohn’s disease (CD). However, the underlying pathologic connection between the inciting event and CD, a chronic inflammatory condition, is not known. Adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC) are enriched in the intestinal mucosa of CD patients though exactly how it contributes to this chronic illness is unclear. We recently demonstrated that AIEC-colonized mice exposed to acute infectious gastroenteritis drives the expansion of tissue-associated AIEC in regions of pronounced inflammation. Since AIEC are associated with inflamed regions of the gut, we hypothesized that host inflammation could be a susceptibility factor that promotes de novo AIEC colonization. We tested this in a conventional C57BL/6 mice that when exposed to AIEC develop a self-limited infection. C57BL/6 mice were infected with Citrobacter rodentium to initiate acute infectious colitis, or kept uninfected. Subsequently, C. rodentium-infected mice were exposed to AIEC at one of three distinct stages of colitis (peak Citrobacter load, peak inflammatory response, or during convalescence after Citrobacter clearance and mucosal restitution). Over the infectious period, bacterial load was measured in feces and tissues. Pathology was evaluated by ELISA and microscopically. We report that Citrobacter-colonized mice challenged with AIEC at either the peak of Citrobacter load or during the convalescence period resulted in clearance of AIEC within 2–3 weeks and without overt influence on overall pathology. Strikingly, Citrobacter-colonized mice infected with AIEC during peak period of colitis led to bacterial persistence and impaired clearance as mice remained AIEC-positive as late as day 59 after the acute infectious colitis resolved. In contrast, Citrobacter-naïve mice resolved the infection by day 19 and lacked the pronounced pathology observed in the co-infected group. Together, our data suggests that the period of peak inflammation following infectious colitis is a time when host succeptitibilty to AIEC is greatest, leading to protracted AIEC colonization and greater immunopathology. CAG, CIHR

Authors

Law H; Coombes BK

Journal

Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology, Vol. 1, No. suppl_1, pp. 208–208

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

March 1, 2018

DOI

10.1093/jcag/gwy008.119

ISSN

2515-2084

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