Journal
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 196, Issue 7, Pages 1080-1087Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1086/521194
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Background. Early exposure of infants and long-term immunity suggest that colonization with Moraxella catarrhalis is more frequent than is determined by routine culture. We characterized a reservoir of M. catarrhalis in pharyngeal lymphoid tissue. Methods. Tissue from 40 patients ( median age, 7.1 years) undergoing elective tonsillectomy and/or adenoidectomy was analyzed for the presence of M. catarrhalis by culture, real-time DNA and RNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR), immunohistochemical analysis (IHC), and fluorescent in situ hybridization ( FISH). Histologic sections were double stained for M. catarrhalis and immune cell markers, to characterize the tissue distribution of the organism. Intracellular bacteria were identified using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Results. Twenty-nine (91%) of 32 adenoids and 17 (85%) of 20 tonsils were colonized with M. catarrhalis. Detection rates for culture, DNA PCR, RNA PCR, IHC, and FISH were 7 (13%) of 52, 10 (19%) of 52, 21 (41%) of 51, 30 (61%) of 49, and 42 (88%) of 48, respectively (). Histologic analysis identified M. catarrhalis in P !.001 crypts, intraepithelially, subepithelially, and ( using CLSM) intracellularly. M. catarrhalis colocalized with macrophages and B cells in lymphoid follicles. Conclusions. Colonization by M. catarrhalis is more frequent than is determined by surface culture, because the organism resides both within and beneath the epithelium and invades host cells.
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