Modelling early events in Francisella tularensis pathogenesis

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Abstract

Computational models can provide valuable insights into the mechanisms of infection and be used as investigative tools to support development of medical treatments. We develop a stochastic, within-host, computational model of the infection process in the BALB/c mouse, following inhalational exposure to Francisella tularensis SCHU S4. The model is mechanistic and governed by a small number of experimentally verifiable parameters. Given an initial dose, the model generates bacterial load profiles corresponding to those produced experimentally, with a doubling time of approximately 5 hours during the first 48 hours of infection. Analytical approximations for the mean number of bacteria in phagosomes and cytosols for the first twenty-four hours post-infection are derived and used to verify the stochastic model. In our description of the dynamics of macrophage infection, the number of bacteria released per rupturing macrophage is a geometrically-distributed random variable. When combined with doubling time, this provides a distribution for the time taken for infected macrophages to rupture and release their intracellular bacteria. The mean and variance of these distributions are determined by model parameters with a precise biological interpretation, providing new mechanistic insights into the determinants of immune and bacterial kinetics. Insights into the dynamics of macrophage suppression and activation gained by the model can be used to explore the potential benefits of interventions that stimulate macrophage activation.

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Gillard, J., Laws, T. R., Lythe, G., & Molina-París, C. (2014). Modelling early events in Francisella tularensis pathogenesis. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, 4(NOV). https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2014.00169

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