Polysaccharide-mediated protection against abscess formation in experimental intra-abdominal sepsis

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Abstract

Abscess formation is a major complication of intra-abdominal sepsis that causes significant morbidity and mortality. In such cases, Bacteroides fragilis is the predominant anaerobic isolate. In a rat model of intra- abdominal sepsis, the capsular polysaccharide complex (CPC) from B. fragilis promotes abscess formation and when administered sub-cutaneously, protects against this host response by a T cell-dependent immune mechanism. In the present study, the polysaccharide A (PS A) component of CPC protected animals against challenge with live heterologous bacterial species (mixtures of anaerobes and facultative organisms) that are most commonly isolated from intra-abdominal abscesses in humans. Protection against heterologous bacterial challenge was transferred by T cells. Administration of PS A shortly before or even after challenge with B. fragilis protected against this host response. In experiments designed to simulate fecal contamination of the human peritoneal cavity, PS A protected animals against abscess formation induced by a rat cecal contents inoculum. The surprisingly broad protective activity of PS A indicates that this molecule is likely suppressing a nonspecific host tissue reaction that forms in response to a variety of abscess-inducing organisms and that it might he useful in preventing abscess formation associated with intra-abdominal sepsis in the clinical setting.

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Tzianabos, A. O., Kasper, D. L., Cisneros, R. L., Smith, R. S., & Onderdonk, A. B. (1995). Polysaccharide-mediated protection against abscess formation in experimental intra-abdominal sepsis. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 96(6), 2727–2731. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI118340

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