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An enemy within: Pathogens hide in tissue

3D reconstruction of the spleen
Salmonella survive antibiotic therapy in the white pulp (red) of the spleen. (Image: Biozentrum, University of Basel)

Antibiotics cure many bacterial infections. However, some patients suffer a relapse. A research group at the University of Basel has now discovered why some bacteria can survive antibiotic therapy. The team uncovered where the bacteria hide in the body and how the body's own immune system also plays an important role.

14 December 2021

3D reconstruction of the spleen
Salmonella survive antibiotic therapy in the white pulp (red) of the spleen. (Image: Biozentrum, University of Basel)

Infections such as tuberculosis or typhoid fever are caused by bacteria and can usually be treated well with antibiotics, at least as long as the bacteria are not resistant. However, full eradication of the bacteria cannot always be achieved. In some patients, a few bacteria survive the antibiotic therapy and can cause relapsing disease. For a long time, scientists have been trying to find out why antibiotics fail to kill all the bacteria.

Professor Dirk Bumann’s group at the Biozentrum, University of Basel, has now shown, that it is not – as may be expected – due to dormant and therefore insensitive pathogens. Rather, there are certain areas in the tissue in which typhoid fever-causing Salmonella can survive more or less unaffected by the body’s immune defenses. The researchers published their results in PNAS.

Examining tissue slice by slice

«After antibiotic therapy, only about every 100th bacterium survives», says Dirk Bumann, the study leader. «Tracking down and studying these few Salmonella in tissues is like looking for the needle in the haystack.»

In order to manage this Sisyphean task, the researchers employed so-called serial two-photon tomography, a method used previously in neurobiology to detect the finest nerve fibers in the brain. The scanner device images the tissue surface and then cuts away the uppermost layer. The new surface is scanned again followed by the next cut. In this way the instrument works its way, slice by slice, through the whole tissue. This provides the scientists with a detailed three-dimensional view of the tissue and reveals where the few surviving bacteria are located.

Hidden in the Police Headquarter

In their study, the researches imaged spleens of infected mice. Most Salmonella live in the so-called red pulp of the spleen, the recycling station for red blood cells. «Here, Salmonella are almost totally eliminated during antibiotic treatment», explains Jiagui Li, one of the three first authors of the study.

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