• Login
    View Item 
    •   DORA Home
    • Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
    • Leicester School of Pharmacy
    • View Item
    •   DORA Home
    • Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
    • Leicester School of Pharmacy
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Primary ciliary dyskinesia ciliated airway cells show increased susceptibility to Haemophilus influenzae biofilm formation

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    Main Article (2.603Mb)
    Date
    2017-09-10
    Author
    Walker, W. T.;
    Jackson, C.;
    Allan, Raymond N.;
    Collins, S. A.;
    Kelso, M. J.;
    Rineh, A.;
    Yepuri, N. R.;
    Nicholls, B.;
    Lau, L.;
    Johnstone, D.;
    Lackie, P.;
    Faust, S. N.;
    Lucas, J. S. A.;
    Hall-Stoodley, L.
    Metadata
    Show attachments and full item record
    Abstract
    Non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is the most common pathogen in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) patients. We hypothesised that abnormal ciliary motility and low airway nitric oxide (NO) levels on airway epithelial cells from PCD patients might be permissive for NTHi colonisation and biofilm development. We used a primary epithelial cell co-culture model to investigate NTHi infection. Primary airway epithelial cells from PCD and non-PCD patients were differentiated to ciliation using an air–liquid interface culture and then co-cultured with NTHi. NTHi adherence was greater on PCD epithelial cells compared to non-PCD cells ( p<0.05) and the distribution of NTHi on PCD epithelium showed more aggregated NTHi in biofilms (p<0.001). Apart from defective ciliary motility, PCD cells did not significantly differ from non-PCD epithelial cells in the degree of ciliation and epithelial integrity or in cytokine, LL-37 and NO production. Treatment of PCD epithelia using exogenous NO and antibiotic significantly reduced NTHi viability in biofilms compared with antibiotic treatment alone. Impaired ciliary function was the primary defect in PCD airway epithelium underlying susceptibility to NTHi biofilm development compared with non-PCD epithelium. Although NO responses were similar, use of targeted NO with antibiotics enhanced killing of NTHi in biofilms, suggesting a novel therapeutic approach.
    Description
    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.
    Citation : Walker, W.T. et al. (2017) Primary ciliary dyskinesia ciliated airway cells show increased susceptibility to Haemophilus influenzae biofilm formation. European Respiratory journal, 50, 1700612
    URI
    https://www.dora.dmu.ac.uk/handle/2086/18385
    DOI
    https://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.00612-2017
    Research Institute : Leicester Institute for Pharmaceutical Innovation - From Molecules to Practice (LIPI)
    Peer Reviewed : Yes
    Collections
    • Leicester School of Pharmacy [1196]

    Submission Guide | Reporting Guide | Reporting Tool | DMU Open Access Libguide | Take Down Policy | Connect with DORA
    DMU LIbrary
     

     

    Browse

    All of DORACommunities & CollectionsAuthorsTitlesSubjects/KeywordsResearch InstituteBy Publication DateBy Submission DateThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesSubjects/KeywordsResearch InstituteBy Publication DateBy Submission Date

    My Account

    Login

    Submission Guide | Reporting Guide | Reporting Tool | DMU Open Access Libguide | Take Down Policy | Connect with DORA
    DMU LIbrary