S. pneumoniae is the most common causative agent of meningitis, and is associated with high morbidity and mortality. We aimed to develop an integrated and representative pneumococcal meningitis mouse model resembling the human situation.
Methods
Adult mice (C57BL/6) were inoculated in the cisterna magna with increasing doses of S. pneumoniae serotype 3 colony forming units (CFU; n = 24, 104, 105, 106 and 107 CFU) and survival studies were performed. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), brain, blood, spleen, and lungs were collected. Subsequently, mice were inoculated with 104 CFU S. pneumoniae serotype 3 and sacrificed at 6 (n = 6) and 30 hours (n = 6). Outcome parameters were bacterial outgrowth, clinical score, and cytokine and chemokine levels (using Luminex®) in CSF, blood and brain. Meningeal inflammation, neutrophil infiltration, parenchymal and subarachnoidal hemorrhages, microglial activation and hippocampal apoptosis were assessed in histopathological studies.
Results
Lower doses of bacteria delayed onset of illness and time of death (median survival CFU 104, 56 hrs; 105, 38 hrs, 106, 28 hrs. 107, 24 hrs). Bacterial titers in brain and CSF were similar in all mice at the end-stage of disease independent of inoculation dose, though bacterial outgrowth in the systemic compartment was less at lower inoculation doses. At 30 hours after inoculation with 104 CFU of S. pneumoniae, blood levels of KC, IL6, MIP-2 and IFN- γ were elevated, as were brain homogenate levels of KC, MIP-2, IL-6, IL-1β and RANTES. Brain histology uniformly showed meningeal inflammation at 6 hours, and, neutrophil infiltration, microglial activation, and hippocampal apoptosis at 30 hours. Parenchymal and subarachnoidal and cortical hemorrhages were seen in 5 of 6 and 3 of 6 mice at 6 and 30 hours, respectively.
Conclusion
We have developed and validated a murine model of pneumococcal meningitis.
The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2334-12-71) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Barry Mook-Kanamori, Madelijn Geldhoff contributed equally to this work.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
BM-K and MG equally participated in the planning and conducting of all the herein mentioned experiments, as well as the writing of the manuscript. DT aided in the histological analyses. TP and DB conceived of the study, participated in design and execution and evaluation of the various experiments. DB provided funding and aided in the drafting of this manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Background
Bacterial meningitis is a life threatening infectious disease of the central nervous system (CNS). The annual incidence is estimated to be up to 2.6 to 6.0 cases per 100 000 in Europe and may be up to ten times higher in developing countries [1, 2]. The most common pathogen beyond the neonatal period is Streptococcus pneumoniae [1, 3], causing 70% of cases. Despite advances in medical care, mortality from pneumococcal meningitis remains between 16% and 37% and neurological sequelae affect 30-52% of survivors [4‐6]. There is a continuing need for the development of new treatment strategies.
Complications associated with pneumococcal meningitis include cerebral infarction, hemorrhages, motor and sensory deficit, seizures, memory and learning impairments, and hearing loss [2, 7, 8]. Autopsy studies of patients who died following pneumococcal meningitis revealed cerebral edema, cerebral infarctions and hemorrhages, apoptosis and necrosis of the hippocampal dentate gyrus [9‐11]. Many of these pathological features have been reproduced in animal models, which provide the setting for novel drug development and pathophysiological studies [12, 13].
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Several murine models have been developed, using intracerebral [14, 15], intraperitoneal [16], intravenous [16], intranasal [17] or intracisternal inoculation methods [18, 19], and have recently been reviewed [12]. Problems with reproducibility, limited disease progression or iatrogenic structural damage, combined with a need for a single model in which most pathological features seen in human pneumococcal meningitis can be measured, has fueled the development of new animal models. Here we describe the development of an adult mouse model of pneumococcal meningitis in which many of the human pathological features are demonstrated.
Methods
A clinical isolate of S. pneumoniae serotype 3 was obtained from ATCC (catalog number 6303), and was grown to mid log phase in 4 hours at 37°C in Todd-Hewitt broth supplemented with 0.5% yeast extract. At an OD620 of 0.8 to 1.0 the S. pneumoniae were centrifuged and washed twice by resuspension in sterile 0.9% NaCl and recentrifugation. Finally, the bacteria were resuspended in sterile NaCl 0.9% to yield an approximate concentration of 1 × 109 colony forming units (CFU)/ml. The exact number of CFUs was subsequently determined for inoculates by serial dilution method and on blood agar plates (overnight at 37°C).
Animal experiments were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam. To determine the inoculation dose and optimal time points of sacrifice, 24 8-10 week old male C57BL/6 mice (Charles River Laboratories, Germany) received 0.1 mg/kg s.c. buprenorphine and short-term anesthesia using 1.5-2.0% isoflurane during inoculation. The mice were divided into 4 groups, each receiving a different concentration of bacterial inoculum (104, 105, 106 and 107 CFU S. pneumoniae per mouse; n = 6 per dose). Inoculation was conducted by injecting 10 μL of bacterial suspension into the cisterna magna using a 32-gauge needle. All animals were evaluated directly following inoculation and subsequently at 4-hour intervals. The following scoring was used (Table 1): range: 0-41 pts; each scoring parameter ranging from 0, corresponding to no deficit, to a variable maximum score. The maximum score was determined by the estimated contribution of the variable to overall health of the mouse): weight loss (0-4 pts), activity (0-4 pts), time to return to upright position (0-6 pts), state of skin/fur (0-3 pts), posture (0-2 pts), eye discharge or protrusion (0-4 pts), respiration rate (0-4 pts), irregular/labored breathing (0-4 pts), epilepsy, limb paresis or ataxia (0-10pts). The clinical course was divided into a pre-symptomatic period (from time of inoculation until clinical score ≤ 10) and symptomatic period (clinical score > 10 until death/sacrifice). Survival studies were performed and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), brain, blood, spleen, and lungs were collected post mortem. After determining inoculation dose and time-points of sacrifice, the model was further characterized using 12 additional mice inoculated with 104 CFU S. pneumoniae serotype 3 and sacrificed at 6 (n = 6) and 30 hours (n = 6).
Table 1
Clinical score parameters, assessed values and weighted scores
Parameter
Value
Weighted score
Maximum score
Weight loss from baseline
5%
0
10%
1
15%
2
20%
3
25%
4
4
Activity
normal
0
increased/decreased
1
mildely deminished
1
deminished
2
severely deminished
3
coma
4
4
Time to return to upright
normal
0
position
upright < 5 sec
2
upright < 30 sec
4
no turn upright
6
6
Coat
normal
0
deminished grooming
1
soiled
1
piloerection
1
3
Posture
normal
0
sligh hunched back
1
sev hunched back
2
2
Eyes
normal
0
protruding
1
sunken eyes
1
closed eyelids
1
discharge
1
4
Respiration rate (per min)
> 150
0
< 150
1
< 100
2
< 75
3
< 50
4
4
Breathing
irregular
2
laboured
2
4
Neurologic exam
normal
0
ataxia
2
limb paresis/paralysis
2
epileptic seizure
2
status epilepticus
6
10
Total
41
Bacterial titers were determined in samples of lung, brain, and spleen (diluted 1:4 in sterile NaCl 0.9% and homogenized). Blood was heparinized in a 1:4 dilution and CSF was diluted 1:100 in sterile NaCl 0.9%. All bacterial titers were determined by plating serial dilutions on blood agar plates and incubating overnight at 37 C.
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Cytokine and chemokine measurement were performed on the left cerebral hemisphere diluted 1:4 in sterile NaCl 0.9%, homogenized and lysed in lysis buffer (150 mM NaCl, 15 mM Tris, 1 mM MgCl(H2O)6, 1 mM CaCl2(H2O)2, 1% Triton, AEBSF 4 μg/ml, EDTA-NA2 50 μg/ml, pepstatin 10 ng/ml, leupeptin 10 ng/ml, pH 7.4). Samples of brain homogenate, serum and CSF were then centrifuged and supernatant stored at -80 C. Cytokine concentrations were determined with luminex® technology using a mouse cytokine and chemokine Bioplex kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Veenendaal, The Netherlands).
All mice were perfused by cardiac puncture with PBS prior to harvesting tissue. Histopathology was performed on the right cerebral hemisphere fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and paraffin embedded. Coronal 10 μm sections of the entire hemisphere were cut for subsequent staining. Hematoxylin and eosin (HE) and Nissl staining were performed to visualize hemorrhages, cortical necrosis, vasculitis and abscess formation. To determine neuronal apoptosis in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, four 10 μm sections of the anterior, middle and posterior portion of the hippocampus were stained with Caspase-3 antibodies (polyclonal rabbit-anti-mouse, 1:100; Cell Signalling, Danvers, MA). In each section, the total number of caspase-3 positive cells was counted in both the dentate gyrus (DG) and cornu ammonis (CA) regions. Scoring was independently conducted by two investigators. Microglial activation was evaluated by immunohistochemistry using Iba-1 antibody (polyclonal rabbit-anti-mouse, 1:2000; ABcam, Cambridge, UK) staining of frontal lobe 10 μm sections. No quantitative analysis was performed.
Comparisons of cytokine levels between groups were calculated using the Mann-Whitney U test. A Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA was used to compare clinical scores of pre-symptomatic and symptomatic periods. Histopathological scores of neuronal apoptosis were compared using Student's t-test. For all analyses a p-value < 0.05 was considered significant.
Results
Mortality occurred in nearly all inoculated mice (Figure 1); one mouse inoculated with 104 CFU survived beyond the study window of 216 hours after inoculation and was sacrificed. The median survival time was dose dependent (104 CFU, 56 hrs; 105, 38 hrs, 106:, 28 hrs; 107, 24 hrs). To approximate a physiological setting, we selected 104 CFU as the lowest concentration of bacterial inoculum in which most animals would die if left untreated. Furthermore, for future experimentation we chose 30 hours post inoculation as the latest time point for sacrifice, at which all animals were still alive and the natural course of the infection could be followed as long as possible.
×
Clinical scoring was performed on all mice in the survival study. The average duration of the pre-symptomatic period (clinical score ≤ 10) was dose dependent, and increased approximately 1.5-fold with each successive 10-fold increase of bacterial inoculum concentration. The duration of the symptomatic period did not differ significantly between inoculation doses (mean, 11.7 hrs, SD 4.8; Table 2).
Table 2
Duration of pre-symptomatic (time from inoculation to clinical score ≤ 10) and symptomatic (time from clinical score > 10 to death/sacrifice) periods
Inoculation dose (CFU/mouse)
10e4
10e5
10e6
10e7
p-value
Pre-symptomatic period (hrs/st.dev)
40.7 (14.9)
26.1 (6.1)
18.7 (3.9)
12.0 (2.1)
0.001
Symptomatic period (hrs/st.dev)
9.1 (3.2)
13.0 (6.3)
10.8 (3.6)
13.6 (5.3)
0.557
Mean durations of the pre-symptomatic and symptomatic periods (expressed in hours) of the mice of the survival study. Mice were divided into 4 groups and inoculated with 104 (5 mice, 1 mouse was excluded from analysis due to lack of any symptoms due to failed inoculation), 105 (6 mice), 106 (6 mice) and 107 CFU (6 mice) S. pneumoniae per mouse. Comparison of the clinical scores of pre-symptomatic and symptomatic periods was made using a Kruskal- Wallis one-way ANOVA
Bacterial meningitis was confirmed in all 23 mice in the survival study by way of culture of CSF and brain homogenate following death or sacrifice. The average pneumococcal concentration in the CSF and brain homogenates was 2.0 × 109 CFU/ml and 7.9 × 108 CFU/ml respectively. Bacterial titers in de CNS compartment (CSF and brain) did not increase with higher inoculation doses (Figure 2). In comparison with the CNS compartment, in the systemic compartment (blood, spleen, lung) bacterial concentrations were much lower (means 1.0 × 106, 4.0 × 105 and 2.0 × 105 CFU/ml, respectively), and an increasing bacterial titer was observed with each successive 10-fold increase of bacterial inoculum concentration.
×
Mice with pneumococcal meningitis showed increased plasma levels of KC at 6 hours (Figure 3; median 62 versus 213 pg/ml, P = 0.004) and 30 hours (median 62 versus 2031 pg/ml, P < 0.0001) compared to saline inoculated mice. Furthermore, at 30 hours IL-6 (median 2 versus 202 pg/ml, P < 0.001), MIP-2 (median 5 versus 63 pg/ml, P = 0.002) and IFN-γ (median 3 versus 16 pg/ml, P = 0.002) were elevated in plasma of S. pneumoniae compared to sham inoculated mice. IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-10, IL-12p70, IL-17, RANTES, TNF-α, IL-18 and IL-33 were not significantly altered in the plasma of mice with pneumococcal meningitis compared to sham controls.
×
In brain homogenates, mice with pneumococcal meningitis compared to saline inoculated mice showed elevated levels of KC and MIP-2 at both 6 hours (Figure 3; KC median 60 versus 393 pg/ml, P < 0.0001; MIP-2 median 45 versus 159 pg/ml, P = 0.003) and 30 hours (KC median 60 versus 18116 pg/ml, P < 0.0001; MIP-2 median 45 versus 10637 pg/ml, P < 0.0001) time points. IL-6 (median 20 versus 795 pg/ml, P < 0.0001), IL-1β (median 165 versus 939 pg/ml, P = 0.014), and RANTES (median 15 versus 1823 pg/ml, P < 0.0001) were increased at 30 hours post infection in mice inoculated with pneumococcal meningitis as compared to saline inoculated mice. IL-2, IL-4, IL-10, IL-12p70, IL-17, IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-18 and IL-33 were not altered in brain homogenates of mice with pneumococcal meningitis compared to sham controls. In CSF of mice with pneumococcal meningitis compared to saline inoculated mice, IL-6 (median 26 versus 2772 pg/ml, P = < 0.001), KC (median 84 versus 8369 pg/ml, P = 0.002), MIP-2 (median 63 versus 5542 pg/ml, P = 0.002) and RANTES (median 21 versus 309 pg/ml, P = 0.005) are elevated 30 hours post infection.
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Histopathology at 6 hours after infection showed high levels of meningeal inflammation in both peripheral and ventricular CSF compartments, but none of the mice had parenchymal lymphocytic infiltration, hemorrhages, microglial activation, or hippocampal apoptosis (Figure 4A). However, 30 hours after inoculation 3 of the 6 mice showed parenchymal lymphocytic infiltration and pockets of bacteria were seen in 2 of 6 mice, located in the perivascular spaces of the penetrating vasculature (Figure 4b). At 30 hours, 5 of 6 mice had one or more parenchymal, mainly cortical, hemorrhages. Three mice demonstrated subarachnoidal hemorrhages. Extensive diffuse microglial activation was observed mice 30 hours after infection and at end stage-stage of disease at all inoculation doses (Figure 4C), although no quantitative analyses were performed. Neuronal apoptosis in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus was scored independently by two investigators with a kappa of 0.75. A significant increase in hippocampus neuronal apoptosis was observed at 30 hours post infection and was significantly higher than saline infected mice (0.6 vs. 2.8 cells, P < 0.001; Figure 5).
×
×
Discussion
We developed a murine model of pneumococcal meningitis in which the histopathological and inflammatory features as well as observed complications resemble clinical and pathological findings in humans following bacterial meningitis [1, 20]. The most important features of this model lie in the possibility of combining a relatively low dose of inoculum and long period of disease progression, allowing for a reproducible setting to examine clinical features as well as sufficient time to develop the histopathological features seen in a human setting.
In previous murine models, pneumococcal meningitis was established by either 1) direct bacterial inoculation into the CNS, which generally very short survival times and thus limited use for the study of inflammation processes, or 2) intranasal or intraperitoneal inoculation routes, which more closely models the longer physiological inflammatory mechanisms [12]. Unfortunately, mice inoculated via the intranasal or intraperitoneal route often died as the result of sepsis or pneumonia, and only 50% actually developed meningitis [17].
In this model the comparison of clinical score progression between mice with different inoculation doses lead to the following conclusions: first, although the pre-symptomatic period was dose dependent (onset of symptoms were later at lower doses of bacterial inoculation), the duration of the symptomatic period was approximately 11.5 hours and similar between groups. This dose-dependent delayed onset provides a model in which direct inoculation in the CNS results in nearly 100% of mice developing meningitis, combined with a prolonged pre-symptomatic period in which various inflammatory mechanisms may be studied. Second, the clinical features contributing to deterioration were largely similar between the 4 different inoculation groups. For example, at the beginning of the symptomatic period (clinical score > 10) the most important contributing factors of clinical deterioration in all four inoculation groups were weight loss, diminished activity and deficits during neurological examination. At the final clinical assessment during the survival experiment, the most important additional factors of clinical deterioration in all 4 groups were the time to turn to upright position and increasing respiratory problems.
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TNF-α, IL-1 and IL-6 are considered to be the early response proinflammatory cytokines that are upregulated early in during pneumococcal meningitis [13]. Surprisingly, TNF-α was not elevated at any time-point in our model. Previous animal models demonstrated that TNF-α was mainly increased during the first 6 to 24 hours of the immune response [21, 22]. However, human studies show increased CSF levels of TNF-α but only early in the course of the disease [23, 24]. This discrepancy may be explained by the lack of measurements that were performed between 6 and 30 hours after infection. IL-1β, which in humans is increased in the first 18 hours of infection [25], was also markedly increased in brain homogenates, but not in blood in our mice 30 hours after infection. The IL-6 concentrations did significantly increase CSF, brain homogenate and plasma 30 hours after infection. This is consistent with other infection models, in which IL-6, a cytokine displaying both pro- and anti-inflammatory properties [26], has been shown to be upregulated early during infection. In previous pneumococcal meningitis models IL-6 was shown to be involved in CSF leukocyte recruitment and possibly in the regulation of blood brain barrier disruption [27]. The anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, which has been shown to downregulate TNF-α, IL-6 and KC was not measurably increased at any time point [28].
Of the chemokines, the functional murine IL-8 homologue KC/CXCL1 and MIP-2/CXCL2 were both markedly increased in CSF, brain homogenate and blood at 30 hours after infection. Furthermore, early upregulation of KC and MIP-2 was also observed as early as 6 hours in brain homogenate, but not in plasma, where only KC was significantly increased. In humans, IL-8 has been shown to be elevated in CSF during pneumococcal meningitis [29], yet in a rabbit meningitis model it was systemic IL-8 that appeared to regulate CSF pleiocytosis [30]. MIP-2, which is produced by astrocytes and microglial cells, but also by monocytes and macrophages, has been shown in vitro to be a chemoattractant for monocytes and neutrophils recruitment [29].
Brain histopathology in our model resemble the human situation in pneumococcal meningitis, We found meningeal and parenchymal infiltration, (micro)hemorrhages, perivascular lymphocitic cuffing and perivascular bacterial overgrowth, the beginning of abscess formation, microglial activation, and neuronal apoptosis in the dentate hippocampal gyrus. Parenchymal (micro)hemorrhages were frequently observed (83%) and varied in size and location. These results reflect findings in a recent autopsy series in which microhemorrhages were found in 10 of 16 (67%) patients who died of pneumococcal meningitis [10]. In the clinical setting clinical setting only 1-9% of all patients are documented to have intracranial hemorrhagic complications [4], which is likely to be an underestimation of the actual number of hemorrhages as only radiological evidence was included. In our model no cortical necrosis was observed at any time point, including in mice that died in the survival studies. Cerebral infarctions occur in approximately 30% of patients with pneumococcal meningitis [5, 20, 31], and cortical necrosis has been modeled successfully in several rat and infant mouse meningitis models [18, 22]. Possible reasons for the absence of necrosis may lie in the duration from inoculation until sacrifice, the choice of animal, age of the mice used, and antibiotic treatments used in other models. The underlying mechanisms for both ischemic stroke and hemorrhages remain unclear, though human CSF studies have suggested dysregulation of local coagulation cascade, complement activation, and diffuse cerebral intravascular coagulopathy [10, 13, 32].
The observations of microglial activation at 30 hours after infection reflect in vitro findings in which microglial cells are activated after exposure to S. pneumoniae [33]. Similarly, the delayed activation of microglial cells supports the results of a previous study in a rabbit model of pneumococcal meningitis in which increased levels of the microglial derived immunomodulatory protein activin A was found at 12 hours after inoculation [34]. Microglia represent a specific subset of cells related to monocytes and dendritic cells and form the initial line of defense of brain parenchyma against damage, injury and infection and become activated in a toll-like receptor dependent fashion upon pneumococcal exposure [35, 36]. Upon activation, microglia produce large amounts of proinflammatory cytokines, as well as reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates, thereby possibly playing both neuroprotective and neurotoxic roles [13, 37‐39]. The role of microglia during pneumococcal meningitis is largely unknown at present, but interest has been fueled by the observation that microglial activation in vitro is limited by corticosteroids treatment [40], which has become the standard adjuvant therapy in the treatment of bacterial meningitis in many countries [2, 41].
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Neuronal apoptosis was first observed in the human autopsy studies of patients who died of bacterial meningitis and was situated in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus [9]. Cognitive impairments and more specifically learning difficulties have been attributed to hippocampal apoptosis which has been modeled in mice, rats and rabbits [18, 42, 43]. Furthermore, the adjuvant treatment of corticosteroids has been suggested as a possible factor aggravating hippocampal apoptosis and reducing learning capacity [42, 44]. The process of apoptosis most likely occurs in an early caspase independent and a late caspase dependent mechanism [45]. In this model we were able to detect the late stage caspase-3 dependent apoptosis at 30 hours post infection, providing an additional outcome parameter for further pathophysiological and therapeutic investigations.
Conclusions
The value of this mouse model is that it provides an experimental setting of pneumococcal meningitis which is highly reproducible, and provides several of the most valuable outcome parameters such as bacterial titers, meningeal and parenchymal infiltration, cytokine profiles, microglial activation, neuronal apoptosis in the hippocampus, perivascular infiltration and (micro) hemorrhages. We feel that the integration of these pathological features, which are characteristic of what is observed in human autopsy studies into a single model, is a valuable tool in the further investigation of both pathophysiological and therapeutic intervention studies.
Acknowledgements
This study has been funded by grants from the European Research Council (ERC Starting Grant [Proposal/Contract no. 281156] to D. van de Beek), Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw; NWO-Veni grant 2006 [Proposal/Contract no. 916.76.023], NWO-Vidi grant 2010 [Proposal/Contract no. 016.116.358] to D. van de Beek), the Academic Medical Center (AMC Fellowship 2008 to D. van de Beek).
Open Access
This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0
), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
BM-K and MG equally participated in the planning and conducting of all the herein mentioned experiments, as well as the writing of the manuscript. DT aided in the histological analyses. TP and DB conceived of the study, participated in design and execution and evaluation of the various experiments. DB provided funding and aided in the drafting of this manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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