Understanding the pathophysiology of GBS UTI in diabetes

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $171,742 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Diabetic individuals are more susceptible to urinary tract infections (UTI). Specifically, the risk of UTI caused by Gram positive Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B Streptococcus, GBS) is significantly increased in diabetic individuals. In addition, diabetes also facilitates the progression of GBS-UTI to severe and potentially deadly outcomes such as pyelonephritis, bacteremia, and sepsis. We hypothesize that “the diabetic urinary microenvironment facilitates infection of the urinary tract 1) by augmenting virulence of uropathogenic bacteria and 2) by suppressing host immune defenses.” To address this hypothesis, we have proposed targeted exploratory studies, in alignment with the scope of R21 mechanism, to elucidate GBS factors and host urinary immune defenses central to GBS-UTI pathogenesis in two mechanistically distinct murine models of hyperglycemia: 1) STZ-induced type 1 diabetes and 2) db/db, a genetic model of type 2 diabetes. Previous research has characterized myriad GBS virulence factors such as surface adhesins, pore forming toxins, and gene regulators facilitating GBS survival and virulence in the urinary tract. Studies using mouse model of ascending UTI have also revealed distinctive urinary immune responses induced by GBS-UTI. However, two important knowledge gaps exist in our understanding of GBS-UTI pathogenesis in diabetes: 1) the pleiotropic effects of host diabetic urinary microenvironment on GBS physiology are undefined and 2) specific host mechanisms responsible for increased urinary GBS burden observed in diabetic mice are not fully deciphered. To fill these knowledge gaps we propose: Specific Aim 1 Identify and characterize specific GBS factors important for uropathogenesis in diabetic mice. We will compare RNA-sequencing profiles of GBS isolated from diabetic and non-diabetic urinary tracts to identify differentially transcribed virulence, regulatory and metabolic gene expression networks. The experiments proposed in SA1 are founded on our published results that in vitro exposure to moderate glycosuria significantly increases GBS virulence. Specific Aim 2 Evaluate pathophysiology of GBS-UTI in type 1 and type 2 diabetic mice. In this aim we will induce ascending UTI by inoculating GBS into STZ-type 1 and db/db type 2 diabetic mice and their non- diabetic littermates and examine differences in disease parameters such as bacterial burden, cytokine production, immune cell infiltration and histopathology of the urinary tract. The experiments in SA2 are founded on supporting data that at 24h after intravesicular inoculation with GBS, db/db diabetic mice exhibit significantly higher bacterial burden in bladder and kidneys and increased dissemination to spleen. In addition to heralding significant advances in the field of GBS-UTI, our results will pave the way for research into the effects of diabetes on the pathogenesis of other uropathogens, identifying novel host/pathogen targets against which small molecular inhibit...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10495253
Project number
5R21AI165939-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA AT LAFAYETTE
Principal Investigator
Ritwij Kulkarni
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$171,742
Award type
5
Project period
2021-09-24 → 2025-08-31