The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model

Cell adhesion and invasion are the fundamental processes of bacterial pathogenicity that govern their probable transmission pathways. The gastrointestinal mucosa, which is lined with epithelial cells, is the primary route used by the foodborne pathogen to reach systemic organs and tissues. This muco...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Food Research
Main Author: Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rynnye Lyan Resources 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140971134&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.6%285%29.812&partnerID=40&md5=cb0482025119604e8bf638e0a78d5a30
id 2-s2.0-85140971134
spelling 2-s2.0-85140971134
Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
2022
Food Research
6
5
10.26656/fr.2017.6(5).812
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140971134&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.6%285%29.812&partnerID=40&md5=cb0482025119604e8bf638e0a78d5a30
Cell adhesion and invasion are the fundamental processes of bacterial pathogenicity that govern their probable transmission pathways. The gastrointestinal mucosa, which is lined with epithelial cells, is the primary route used by the foodborne pathogen to reach systemic organs and tissues. This mucosa is protected by a layer of continually secreted mucus, which is thought to be the initial line of defence against pathogen invasion. Studies on the adhesion and invasion ability of foodborne pathogens using Caco-2 monoculture have been comprehensively reported. This cell line, however, is classified as non-mucus-producing cells. Since the mechanism of adhesion and invasion is largely depending on the presence of mucus, the use of this cell line to study how foodborne pathogens cross the intestinal barrier has raised concerns as the establishment of the typical components that define the intestine is not established. Therefore, HT29 (low-mucus producing) and its sub-population HT29-MTX (high-mucus producing) monoculture cells have been chosen in various investigations to study the role of mucus in bacterial adhesion and invasion. However, employing monoculture as a model to study how foodborne pathogens cross the intestinal barrier faces significant challenges in mimicking the complexity of intact three-dimensional (3D) in vivo conditions. To address this issue, 3D co-culture models of the human intestine have been established as an alternative to the monoculture epithelial cells, allowing more accurate prediction of adhesion/invasion mechanisms. Thus, this article reviewed the role of mucus in adhesion/invasion studies of foodborne pathogens and discusses how the employment of diverse in vitro models impacts the properties of host-pathogen interactions. © 2022 The Authors. Published by Rynnye Lyan Resources.
Rynnye Lyan Resources
25502166
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
spellingShingle Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
author_facet Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
author_sort Hasbullah N.I.; Syed Mohamad S.A.; Hasan N.A.; Ahmad N.; Johari N.A.; Abd Manap M.N.; Mohd Amin M.C.I.
title The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
title_short The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
title_full The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
title_fullStr The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
title_full_unstemmed The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
title_sort The role of mucus in adhesion and invasion of foodborne pathogens: challenges in current human intestinal model
publishDate 2022
container_title Food Research
container_volume 6
container_issue 5
doi_str_mv 10.26656/fr.2017.6(5).812
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140971134&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.6%285%29.812&partnerID=40&md5=cb0482025119604e8bf638e0a78d5a30
description Cell adhesion and invasion are the fundamental processes of bacterial pathogenicity that govern their probable transmission pathways. The gastrointestinal mucosa, which is lined with epithelial cells, is the primary route used by the foodborne pathogen to reach systemic organs and tissues. This mucosa is protected by a layer of continually secreted mucus, which is thought to be the initial line of defence against pathogen invasion. Studies on the adhesion and invasion ability of foodborne pathogens using Caco-2 monoculture have been comprehensively reported. This cell line, however, is classified as non-mucus-producing cells. Since the mechanism of adhesion and invasion is largely depending on the presence of mucus, the use of this cell line to study how foodborne pathogens cross the intestinal barrier has raised concerns as the establishment of the typical components that define the intestine is not established. Therefore, HT29 (low-mucus producing) and its sub-population HT29-MTX (high-mucus producing) monoculture cells have been chosen in various investigations to study the role of mucus in bacterial adhesion and invasion. However, employing monoculture as a model to study how foodborne pathogens cross the intestinal barrier faces significant challenges in mimicking the complexity of intact three-dimensional (3D) in vivo conditions. To address this issue, 3D co-culture models of the human intestine have been established as an alternative to the monoculture epithelial cells, allowing more accurate prediction of adhesion/invasion mechanisms. Thus, this article reviewed the role of mucus in adhesion/invasion studies of foodborne pathogens and discusses how the employment of diverse in vitro models impacts the properties of host-pathogen interactions. © 2022 The Authors. Published by Rynnye Lyan Resources.
publisher Rynnye Lyan Resources
issn 25502166
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1820775454548688896