Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most prevalent organisms isolated from the airways of people with cystic fibrosis (CF), predominantly early in life. Yet its role in the pathology of lung disease is poorly understood. Clinical studies are limited in scope by age and health of participants and in vitro studies are not always able to accurately recapitulate chronic disease characteristics such as the development of small colony variants. Further, animal models also do not fully represent features of clinical disease: in particular, mice are not readily colonized by S. aureus and when infection is established it leads to the formation of abscesses, a phenomenon almost never observed in the human CF lung. Here, we present details of the development of an existing ex vivo pig lung model of CF infection to investigate the growth of S. aureus. We show that S. aureus is able to establish infection and demonstrates clinically significant characteristics including small colony variant phenotype, increased antibiotic tolerance and preferential localisation in mucus. Tissue invasion and the formation of abscesses were not observed, in line with clinical data.
Footnotes
NOTE: Supplementary files containing raw data and R code are not made available with this pre-print, but will be available with the final published version of this manuscript.