Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium SPI-1 and SPI-2 shape the transcriptional landscape of epithelial cells in a human intestinal organoid model system

2020 
The intestinal epithelium is a primary interface for engagement of the host response by foodborne pathogens, like Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (STm). While interaction of STm with the mammalian host has been well studied in vitro in transformed epithelial cell lines or in the complex intestinal environment in vivo, few tractable models recapitulate key features of the intestinal epithelium. Human intestinal organoids (HIOs) contain a polarized epithelium with functionally differentiated cell subtypes, including enterocytes and goblet cells. HIOs contain luminal space that supports bacterial replication and are more amenable to experimental manipulation than animals while more reflective of physiological epithelial responses. Here we use the HIO model to define transcriptional responses of the host epithelium to STm infection, also determining host pathways dependent on Salmonella Pathogenicity Island-1 (SPI-1) and -2 (SPI-2) encoded Type 3 secretion systems (T3SS). Consistent with prior findings, we find that STm strongly stimulates pro-inflammatory gene expression. Infection-induced cytokine gene expression was rapid, transient and largely independent of SPI-1 T3SS-mediated invasion, likely due to continued luminal stimulation. Notably, STm infection led to significant down-regulation of host genes associated with cell cycle and DNA repair, an effect that required SPI-1 and SPI-2 T3SS. The transcriptional profile of cell cycle-associated target genes implicates multiple miRNAs as likely mediators of STm-dependent cell cycle suppression. These findings from Salmonella-infected HIOs delineate common and distinct contributions of SPI-1 and SPI-2 T3SSs in inducing early host responses during enteric infection and reveal host cell cycle as a potential target during STm intracellular infection.
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