Membranous cells in nasal-associated lymphoid tissue: a portal of entry for the respiratory mucosal pathogen group A streptococcus

HS Park, KP Francis, J Yu, PP Cleary - The Journal of Immunology, 2003 - journals.aai.org
HS Park, KP Francis, J Yu, PP Cleary
The Journal of Immunology, 2003journals.aai.org
Human tonsils are suspected to be an antibiotic-impervious human reservoir for group A
streptococcus. An intranasal infection model in mice and a bioluminescent-tagged strain
were used to investigate this possibility. Viable streptococci were predominantly found both
intra-and extracellularly in nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT), a human tonsil
homologue. Ulex europaeus-1, a membranous (M) cell-specific lectin, identified cells
harboring streptococci at the epithelial surface of NALT and blocked bacterial colonization of …
Abstract
Human tonsils are suspected to be an antibiotic-impervious human reservoir for group A streptococcus. An intranasal infection model in mice and a bioluminescent-tagged strain were used to investigate this possibility. Viable streptococci were predominantly found both intra-and extracellularly in nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT), a human tonsil homologue. Ulex europaeus-1, a membranous (M) cell-specific lectin, identified cells harboring streptococci at the epithelial surface of NALT and blocked bacterial colonization of this tissue. These results suggest that M cells in NALT transport this Gram-positive pathogen across the epithelial layers in a manner similar to those in Peyer’s patches, which permit enteric pathogens to invade deeper tissues from the gastrointestinal tract.
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