PATHOGENESIS OF NON-TYPEABLE HAEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE INFECTIONS IN
CHRONIC SUPPURATIVE LUNG DISEASE
Abstract
The respiratory tract antimicrobial defense system is a multilayered
defense mechanism that relies upon mucociliary clearance and components
of both the innate and adaptive immune systems to protect the lungs from
inhaled or aspirated microorganisms. One of these potential pathogens,
non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae ( NTHi), adopts
several, multifaceted redundant strategies to successfully colonize the
lower airways and establish a persistent infection. NTHi can
impair mucociliary clearance, express multiple multi-functional adhesins
for various cell types within the respiratory tract and evade host
defenses by surviving within and between cells, forming biofilms,
increasing antigenic drift, secreting proteases and antioxidants, and by
host-pathogen cross-talk, impair macrophage and neutrophil function.
NTHi is recognized as an important pathogen in several chronic
lower respiratory disorders, such as protracted bacterial bronchitis,
bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis and primary ciliary dyskinesia. The
persistence of NTHi in human airways, including its capacity to
form biofilms, results in chronic infection and inflammation, which can
ultimately injure airway wall structures. The complex nature of the
molecular pathogenetic mechanisms employed by NTHi is
incompletely understood but improved understanding of its pathobiology
will be important for developing effective therapies and vaccines,
especially given the marked genetic heterogeneity of NTHi and its
possession of phase-variable genes. Currently, no vaccine candidates are
ready for large phase III clinical trials.