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A mathematical model shows macrophages delay Staphylococcus aureus replication, but limitations in microbicidal capacity restrict bacterial clearance

Authors :
Jamil Jubrail
David H. Dockrell
Mike Boots
Helen M. Marriott
Alex Best
Source :
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

S. aureus is a leading cause of bacterial infection. Macrophages, the first line of defence in the human immune response, phagocytose and kill S. aureus but the pathogen can evade these responses. Therefore, the exact role of macrophages is incompletely defined. We develop a mathematical model of macrophage - S. aureus dynamics, built on recent experimental data. We demonstrate that, while macrophages may not clear infection, they significantly delay its growth and potentially buy time for recruitment of further cells. We find that macrophage killing is a major obstacle to controlling infection and ingestion capacity also limits the response. We find bistability such that the infection can be limited at low doses. Our combination of experimental data, mathematical analysis and model fitting provide important insights in to the early stages of S. aureus infections, showing macrophages play an important role limiting bacterial replication but can be overwhelmed with large inocula.

Details

ISSN :
10958541 and 00225193
Volume :
497
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of theoretical biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb9669a2c7eb3b537950f6002867cf81