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Review
. 2023 May 18:13:1200478.
doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2023.1200478. eCollection 2023.

Conceptual model to inform Legionella-amoebae control, including the roles of extracellular vesicles in engineered water system infections

Affiliations
Review

Conceptual model to inform Legionella-amoebae control, including the roles of extracellular vesicles in engineered water system infections

Nicholas John Ashbolt. Front Cell Infect Microbiol. .

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs or exosomes) are well described for bacterial pathogens associated with our gastrointestinal system, and more recently as a novel mechanism for environmental persistence, dissemination and infection for human enteric viruses. However, the roles played by EVs in the ancient arms race that continues between amoebae and one of their prey, Legionella pneumophila, is poorly understood. At best we know of intracellular vesicles of amoebae containing a mix of bacterial prey species, which also provides an enhanced niche for bacteriophage infection/spread. Free-living amoeba-associated pathogens have recently been recognized to have enhanced resistance to disinfection and environmental stressors, adding to previously understood (but for relatively few species of) bacteria sequestered within amoebal cysts. However, the focus of the current work is to review the likely impacts of large numbers of respiratory-sized EVs containing numerous L. pneumophila cells studied in pure and biofilm systems with mixed prey species. These encapsulated pathogens are orders of magnitude more resistant to disinfection than free cells, and our engineered systems with residual disinfectants could promote evolution of resistance (including AMR), enhanced virulence and EV release. All these are key features for evolution within a dead-end human pathogen post lung infection. Traditional single-hit pathogen infection models used to estimate the probability of infection/disease and critical environmental concentrations via quantitative microbial risk assessments may also need to change. In short, recognizing that EV-packaged cells are highly virulent units for transmission of legionellae, which may also modulate/avoid human host immune responses. Key data gaps are raised and a previous conceptual model expanded upon to clarify where biofilm EVs could play a role promoting risk as well as inform a more wholistic management program to proactively control legionellosis.

Keywords: QMRA; disinfection resistance; engineered water systems; environmental persistence; monitoring.

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Conflict of interest statement

The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Conceptual model for explosive growth of Legionella in engineered water system biofilms. (Adapted from Shaheen et al. (2019), FLP - free-living protozoa [primarily amoebae and ciliates] grow on biofilm constituents, ultimately limited to feeding on less-preferred amoeba-resisting bacterial, such as L. pneumophila, leading to explosive growth and release in extracellular amoebal vesicles [EVs] that may enhance downstream amoebal predation over less preferred free bacteria – so increasing proliferation of pathogens.).

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