Intracellular Acinetobacter baumannii Acts as a Reservoir in Lung Infection via a ‘Persist and Resist’ Strategy
Abstract
Although considered primarily extracellular,Acinetobacter baumanniican survive and replicate within macrophagesin vitro. Intracellular bacteria are often protected from the host immune system and antibiotic treatment, potentially leading to chronic or recurrent infections. To investigate the role of intracellularA. baumanniiduring infection, we transferred infected bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), containing an intracellular bacterial population, to naïve immunocompromised mice. This BALF transfer resulted inA. baumanniilung infection, suggesting that intracellular bacteria may serve as a reservoir for recurrent lung infections. Using dual-proteomics, we characterized theA. baumannii-macrophages interactions. Infected macrophages exhibit an inflammatory and Type I interferon response, marked by increased ACOD1 (IRG1) protein levels. IntracellularA. baumanniiupregulates proteins involved in evading nutritional immunity, stress response, surface modification, and metabolic adaptation. These findings suggest thatA. baumanniiemploys a multifactorial strategy to survive and replicate within macrophages, which may contribute to recurrent and chronic infections, and compromise treatment efficacy.
Teaser
IntracellularA. baumanniican act as a reservoir in lung infection
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