We describe an in-house designed in vitro flow chamber model, which allows the investigation of bacterial adherence to graft tissues.
Various valved conduits and stent-mounted valves are used for right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) valve replacement in patients with congenital heart disease. When using prosthetic materials however, these grafts are susceptible to bacterial infections and various host responses.
Identification of bacterial and host factors that play a vital role in endovascular adherence of microorganisms is of importance to better understand the pathophysiology of the onset of infections such as infective endocarditis (IE) and to develop preventive strategies. Therefore, the development of competent models to investigate bacterial adhesion under physiological shear conditions is necessary. Here, we describe the use of a newly designed in vitro perfusion chamber based on parallel plates that allows the study of bacterial adherence to different components of graft tissues such as exposed extracellular matrix, endothelial cells and inert areas. This method combined with colony-forming unit (CFU) counting is adequate to evaluate the propensity of graft materials towards bacterial adhesion under flow. Further on, the flow chamber system might be used to investigate the role of blood components in bacterial adhesion under shear conditions. We demonstrated that the source of tissue, their surface morphology and bacterial species specificity are not the major determining factors in bacterial adherence to graft tissues by using our in-house designed in vitro perfusion model.
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) employs a variety of virulence strategies to circumvent the host immune defense system colonizing biological or non-biological surfaces implanted in the human circulation, which leads to severe intravascular infections such as sepsis and IE1,2,3,4,5. IE remains an important treatment associated complication in patients after implantation of prosthetic heart valves while individual factors contributing to the onset of IEare not yet fully understood6,7. Under flow conditions, bacteria encounter shear forces, which they need to overcome in order to adhere to the vessel wall8. Models, which allow studying the interplay between bacteria and prosthetic valve tissue or endothelium under flow, are of interest as they reflect the in vivo situation more.
Several specific mechanisms facilitate bacterial adherence to endothelial cells (ECs) and to the exposed subendothelial matrix (ECM) leading to tissue colonization and maturation of vegetations, being essential early steps in IE9. Various staphylococcal surface proteins or MSCRAMMs (microbial surface components recognizing adhesive matrix molecules) have been described as mediators of adhesion to host cells and to ECM proteins by interacting with molecules such as fibronectin, fibrinogen, collagen and von Willebrand factor (VWF)8,10,11. However, in view of intra-molecular folding of some virulence factors, mostly studied in static conditions, many of these interactions may have different relevance in endovascular infections in circulating blood.
Therefore, we present an in-house designed in vitro parallel-plate flow chamber model, which allows the assessment of bacterial adherence to different components of ECM and ECs in the context of tissue grafts implanted in the RVOT position. The overall purpose of the method described in this work is to study mechanisms of interaction between bacteria and underlying endovascular tissues in flow conditions, which are closely related to the in vivo environment of bloodstream pathogens such as S. aureus. This novel approach focuses on the susceptibility of graft tissue surfaces to bacterial adherence to identify potential risk factors for the development of IE.
1. Preparing Graft Tissues for In Vitro Studies
Note: Three types of tissues were used: Bovine Pericardium patch (BP), Cryopreserved Homograft (CH) and Bovine Jugular Vein grafts (BJV). In case of BJV conduit and CH (tissue processed by the European Homograft Bank (EHB) and stored in liquid nitrogen prior to use), both the wall and valvular leaflets were used. BP patch and BJV conduit were purchased from the manufacturers. Prior to use, thaw the CH following the EHB instructions12.
2. Preparing Bacteria for Perfusion Experiments
Note: Three bacterial isolates were used: S. aureus Cowan (ATCC 12598), S. epidermidis ATCC 149900 and S. sanguinis NCTC 7864. S. aureus and S. epidermidis were grown at 37 °C in tryptic soy broth (TSB) and S. sanguinis was grown at 37 °C with 5% CO2 in brain heart infusion broth (BHI).
3. In vitro Perfusion Experiments using a Parallel-Plate Flow Chamber
4. Fluorescence Microscopy of Adhered Bacteria to Graft Tissues upon Perfusion
To better understand the mechanisms behind IE development, this model enables the evaluation of bacterial and tissue associated factors present in the in vivo situation of infection onset.
In detail, the novel in vitro approach allows to quantify bacterial adhesion in flow conditions to different graft tissues by perfusing fluorescently labeled bacteria over the tissues exerting the shear stresses in the physiological range of 3 – 10 dyne/cm2 for the RVOT. In this work, we used a flow rate of 4 mL/min that corresponded to 3 dyne/cm2. Taking into consideration the channel height of 0.3 mm across all tissue patches, the distance between the mounted graft and the medium inlet of about 39 mm, the perfusion chamber (shown in Figure 1) guarantees fully developed laminar flow (Re = 3.89 is significantly lower than 2000; the entrance length = 0.05 mm is significantly smaller than the distance `inlet-graft`, parameters necessary for assuming appropriate flow pattern).
Under shear stress conditions, a similar bacterial attachment across the various graft tissues was observed for both S. aureus and S. epidermidis infection (Figure 2 and Figure 3). Although not significant, a trend towards higher adhesion of S. aureus to the CH leaflets was noticeable.
For S. sanguinis a significant reduction of adherence to the BJV wall was found when compared to the BP patch (Figure 4; P < 0.05). When comparing the 3 species of bacteria, S. sanguinis presents significantly lower adhesion to the BJV wall in relation to S. aureus and S. epidermidis (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05 respectively, see the video). In general, we observed a similar bacterial adhesion to all tissues investigated under shear stress.
Our data from CFU counting (Figure 2, Figure 3, Figure 4) are supported by fluorescence microscopy using a high throughput scanner (Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7). Images are presenting pronounced foci of labeled bacteria adhering to graft tissues. Due to this approach, we were able to directly visualize tissues upon perfusion without any post experimental processing for illustration purposes.
Results demonstrate that the source of a graft tissue, surface morphological differences as well as bacterial adhesins are not major determinants of bacterial adherenceto these biological materials.
Figure 1: Image of a newly developed flow chamber system (in-house design by the Department of Biohybrid & Medical Textiles, AME – Helmholtz Institute for Biomedical Engineering, Aachen, Germany). A. The flow chamber (1) mounted flow set of dimensions LxWxH: 125 mm x 55 mm x 18 mm (screws in combination with screw-nuts hold the chamber`s parts together and put pressure via the metal frame on the gaskets to prevent leakage); (2) the upper part of the column; (3) the upper gasket sheet with two holes to fix tubing connectors, which connect the flow chamber with the pump and the fluid reservoir by means of the tubing system; (4) distance between the medium inlet and the tissue (the entrance length); (5) thin foil slide (with an 8 mm circular perforation to allow the exposure of the tissue to the bacterial suspension) (in a recess of the slide there is the space for a rubber gasket B9, to immobilize the tissue piece during the perfusion); (6) the bottom gasket sheet with a dedicated recess to place the tissue graft mounted between the microscope slide and the rubber gasket; (7) the bottom part of the flow chamber; B. The full set-up (8) the thin foil slide; (9) the rubber gasket; (10) eight screws with corresponding (11) eight screw-nuts; (12) the fluid reservoir (400 mL); (13) tubing system; C. Perfusion unit (14) the peristaltic pump; (15) dedicated tubing that withstands the rigors of peristaltic pumping action. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Adhesion of S. aureus Cowan to graft tissues under flow conditions. Fluorescently labeled bacteria were perfused over 5 graft tissues (conduit walls or valvular leaflets) in PBS. Bacteria were detached from infected tissue pieces by sonication. Bacterial adhesion was evaluated by serial dilutions using the CFU counting method and indicated as CFU/cm2. All results are expressed as mean ± SEM (n > 3 for valvular leaflets due to limitation of material; n > 5 for conduit walls). CFU: colony-forming unit; BP: bovine pericardium; BJV: bovine jugular vein; CH: cryopreserved homograft. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Adhesion of S. epidermidis to graft tissues under flow conditions. Fluorescently labeled bacteria were perfused over 5 graft tissues (conduit walls or valvular leaflets) in PBS. Bacteria were detached from infected tissue pieces by sonication. Bacterial adhesion was evaluated by serial dilutions using the CFU counting method and indicated as CFU/cm2. All results are expressed as mean ± SEM (n > 3 for valvular leaflets due to limitation of material; n > 5 for conduit walls). CFU: colony-forming unit; BP: bovine pericardium; BJV: bovine jugular vein; CH: cryopreserved homograft. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Adhesion of S. sanguinis to graft tissues under flow conditions. Fluorescently labeled bacteria were perfused over 5 graft tissues (conduit walls or valvular leaflets) in PBS. Bacteria were detached from infected tissue pieces by sonication. Bacterial adhesion was evaluated by serial dilutions using the CFU counting method and indicated as CFU/cm2. All results are expressed as mean ± SEM (n = 3 for valvular leaflets due to limitation of material; n > 5 for conduit walls). CFU: colony-forming unit; BP: bovine pericardium; BJV: bovine jugular vein; CH: cryopreserved homograft. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). *P < 0.05. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Visualization of S. aureus Cowan adherence to graft tissues by means of fluorescence microscopy. Left to right: BJV conduit wall, BJV leaflet, CH wall and CH leaflet. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Visualization of S. epidermidis adherence to graft tissues using fluorescence microscopy. Left to right: BJV conduit wall, BJV leaflet, CH wall and CH leaflet. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7: Visualization of S. sanguinis adherence to graft tissues using fluorescence microscopy. Left to right: BJV conduit wall, BJV leaflet, CH wall and CH leaflet. This figure has been modified from Veloso et al. (Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 155 (1), 325-332 (2018)). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Recent clinical observations give special awareness to IE as a complication in patients having undergone valve replacement of the RVOT6,13. Dysfunction of the implanted valve in IE is the result of bacterial interaction with the endovascular graft leading to extensive inflammatory and procoagulant reactions1,14. The presented novel in vitro model allowed us to investigate if differences in tissue structures and bacterial factors are likely to modulate the susceptibility to infections of in vivo used grafts15. BJV and CH graft tissue showed similar propensity towards bacterial recruitment in flow conditions. Therefore, data suggest that in general the source of the tissue and its surface structure as well as specific bacterial adhesive proteins per se are not the major determinant factors in initial bacterial adherence.
In general, pathways evoking inflammation, tissue damage, platelet and fibrin deposition at the infected endovascular site are activated by multiple players1,16. A major advantage of the developed in vitro model is the opportunity to analyze stepwise the contribution of involved players. Single bacterial factors can be investigated by using bacterial mutant strains or genetically modified bacteria expressing single adhesion proteins on their surface14. By choosing different perfusion media, plasma or blood, the involvement of plasma proteins and blood cells can be evaluated. Further studies will focus on tissue related factors for which tissues will be pre-incubated with for example plasma proteins before mounted in the flow chamber for subsequent perfusion. Since players contributing to the onset of prosthetic valve IE remain unclear, future studies might unravel the potential factors by building up to a more complex experimental setup. Furthermore, this experimental setup inherits the possibility that tissues can be seeded with an EC layer to analyze shear-dependent EC gene expression. The parallel-plate flow chamber also allows perfusion over EC-covered microscope slides due to a flexible inner height of the perfusion chamber. Different coatings of cover slips using various extracellular matrix proteins are also a possible option to assess important interactions with the subendothelial matrix. In addition, pharmacologic inhibitors or functional antibodies can be investigated for their effect in the respective condition in our flow chamber. In summary, various conditions can be studied by increasing complexity.
Inflammatory activation at the infected area of the graft is a crucial, shear-controlled step favoring deposition of activated platelets and monocytes. The impact of shear forces on bacterial adherence to tissue surfaces are of major concern. To address this issue, the novelty of the presented in vitro system focuses on the possibility to mount tissues in a flow chamber. This reinforces the significance of the method beyond existing alternatives, in which usually static interactions between bacteria and underlying tissues have been investigated. Even though shear stress was submitted by shaking or other external forces, it has not been standardized to the same level as we can gain from our uniform flow model.
In vivo, a non-physiologic flow pattern can favor bacterial adhesion as the onset of IE at the valve level of implanted conduits. Shear stress was found to up-regulate endothelial inflammatory parameters such as cytokine secretion and to increase tissue factor mediated coagulation17. The interaction of the underlying tissue used for valve prostheses with bacteria and their influence on EC gene expression under shear stress is important to construct a valve less capable of bacterial adhesion and chronic inflammation.
The basal technical issues of the fabricated chamber allow investigations under standardized conditions in the laminar flow18. To ensure the fully developed laminar flow at the site of the investigated tissue the chamber is constructed to mount the graft in a certain distance from the medium inlet (significantly longer than the computed entrance length, see Results and Figure 1). Using different pumps in the system would allow performing experiments under pulsatile or turbulent flow conditions in the future.
The flexible frame of the chamber prevents the chamber effectively from leaking and the internal height of the frame allows adapting for tissue thickness. The construction of the whole system enables a circulating flow, which is of importance to perform long lasting perfusions with using a respective amount of medium. Based on previous studies our adhesion protocol assumed a bacterial inoculation dose of 107 CFU/mL for a 1 h incubation4,19. By using these settings, adhesion levels were detectable, albeit low enough to be able to observe significant enhancement of bacterial adherence without saturation of the tissue graft surface. Moreover, in this period of time, it was feasible to notice potential differences in binding across strains taken in this study. Shear parameters addressed here were in the physiologic range and optimized for the blood vessels, which were our target in respect to the RVOT.
Further modifications of the method will focus on more efficient consumption of medium during the procedure as well as on simplification of mounting the setup. In addition, a new design including multiple slots for tissue assembly would ease an entire experiment in aspects such as efficiency.
At this stage our method is focused on the end-point results and was not tested for real time applications such as the time course of dynamic events occurring on the tissue surface. Thus, this broader application remains under consideration; however, issues such as tissue autofluorescence, optimization of an appropriate fluorescence microscope protocol as well as adaptations of the chamber need to be addressed. Further on, the method in its current state may be adapted to real-time monitoring of bacterial binding to EC layers on microscope slides by upright fluorescence microscope. Currently, we are able to visualize bacteria and other blood components/cells bound to tissues by confocal microscopy without a need for post experimental tissue processing, which is predisposing for the real-time visualization under flow by inverted fluorescence microscopes.
In this study, the quantification of bacterial adhesion was provided by CFU counting while fluorescence microscopy was a supportive, non-quantitative tool. Due to resolution issues resulting from the lack of an adequate microscope lens, fluorescence imaging turned out to be less reproducible in our hands than serial dilutions. Nevertheless, it is possible to use fluorescence scanning for quantification when suitable objective lens could illuminate the entire graft size of 8 mm in diameter for reliable foci quantification. Using an image processing program (such as ImageJ), absolute fluorescence units might be quantified for investigated tissue specimens and the bacterial adhesion might be expressed for example as a relative signal to the internal control (grafts perfused with non-labeled bacteria).
The major limitation of this experimental setting are the issues associated with in vitro studies in general. Results reached by using this in vitro flow chamber model could be transferred to an animal model for in vivo confirmation.
In conclusion, this in vitro model allows investigation of single bacterial, tissue and shear-based factors contributing to the onset of bacterial adhesion to tissues in a stepwise manner. The hereby enabled knowledge could contribute to the development of more effective prevention and treatment of IE.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This study was sponsored by a grant of the Research Fund KU Leuven (OT/14/097) given to RH. TRV was Postdoctoral Fellow of the FWO Research Foundation – Flanders (Belgium; Grant Number – 12K0916N) and RH is supported by the Clinical Research Fund of UZ Leuven.
Bovine Pericardium (BP) patch, Supple Peri-Guard Pericardium | Synovis Surgical Innovations, USA | PC-0404SN | |
Bovine Jugular Vein conduits (BJV) | Contegra conduit; Medtronic Inc, USA | M333105D001 | |
CH cryopreserved homograft | European Homograft Bank (EHB) | – | |
Acu-Punch | Acuderm Inc, USA | P850 (8 mm); P1050 (10 mm) | |
human Albumin | Flexbumin; Baxter, Belgium | BE171464 LOT:16G12C |
|
Tryptic soy broth (TSB) | Fluka, Steinheim, Germany | 22092-500G | |
Heart infusion broth (BHI) | Fluka | 53286-500G | |
Phosphate buffered saline (PBS). | Gibco | 14190-094 | |
5(6)-Carboxyfluorescein N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (CF) | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 21878-100MG-F | |
Peristaltic pump (MODEL ISM444B) | Ismatec BVP-Z Standard; Cole Parmer, Wertheim, Germany | 631942-2 | |
Sonication bath | VWR Ultrasonic Cleaner; VWR, Radnor, Pa | 142-6044 | 230V/50 -60Hz 60VA; HF45kHz, 30W |
ProLong Gold Antifade Mountant | Invitrogen by ThermoFisher | P36930 | |
InCell Analyzer 2000 (fluorescence scanner) | GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Pittsburgh, Pa | 29027886 | |
Arium Pro VF – ultrapure water – H2O MilliQ | Millipore | 87206462 | |
Microscopic slides – Tissue Culture Chambers (1-well) | Sarstedt | 94.6140.102 | |
1-well on Lumox detachable | Sarstedt | 94.6150.101 | |
Stainless Steel – surgical Blades | Swann-Morton | 311 | |
Tygon Silicone Tubing, 1/8"ID x 1/4"OD | Cole-Parmer | EW-95702-06 | Temperature range: –80 to 200°C Sterilize: With ethylene oxide, gamma irradiation, or autoclave for 30 min, 15 psi of pressure |
PharMed BPT Tubing | Saint-Gobain | AY242012 | Autoclavable 30 min at 121°C |
Tygon LMT-55 Tubing | Saint Gobain Performance Plastics™ | 15312022 | |
Thermostat | BMG BIOMEDIZINTECHNIK | 300-0042 | 230V, 90VA, 50Hz |