Differences in the association of Chlamydia trachomatis serovar E and serovar L2 with epithelial cells in vitro may reflect biological differences in vivo.

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RESUMO

Chlamydia trachomatis serovar E is one of the most common bacterial sexually transmitted pathogens. Since it is an obligate intracellular bacterium, efficient colonization of genital mucosal epithelial cells is crucial to the infectious process. Serovar E elementary bodies (EB) metabolically radiolabeled with 35S-Cys-Met and harvested from microcarrier bead cultures, which significantly improves the infectious EB-to-particle ratio, provided a more accurate picture of the parameters of attachment of EB to human endometrial epithelial cells (HEC-1B) than did less infectious 14C-EB harvested from flask cultures. Binding of serovar E EB was (i) equivalent at 35 and 4 degrees C, (ii) decreased by preexposure of EB to heat or the topical microbicide C31G, (iii) comparable among common eukaryotic cell lines (HeLa, McCoy), and (iv) significantly increased to the apical surfaces of polarized cells versus nonpolarized cells. In parallel experiments with C. trachomatis serovar L2, serovar E attachment was not affected by heparin or heparan sulfate whereas these glucosaminoglycans dramatically reduced serovar L2 attachment. These data were confirmed by competitive inhibition of serovar E binding and infectivity by excess unlabeled live and UV-inactivated serovar E EB but not by excess serovar L2 EB. The noninvasive serovar E strains in the lumen of the genital tract enter and exit the apical domains of target columnar epithelial cells to spread canalicularly in an ascending fashion from the lower to the upper genital tract. In contrast, the invasive serovar L2 strains are primarily submucosal pathogens and likely use the glucosaminoglycans concentrated in the extracellular matrix to colonize the basolateral domains of mucosal epithelia to perpetuate the infectious process.

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