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Intranasal administration of Burkholderia cepacia promotes progressive acute inflammatory changes in experimental BALB/c mice

Selvaraj, R.; Thippeswamy, A.; Ramappa, C.; Inupanurthi, S. M.; Muthuvel, A.; Abdul Rahim, A.; Rajendra Bhujbal, S.; Durairajan, S. S. K.; Rudrapathy, P.; Pitchaipillai, S. G.; Sivadoss, R.; Suvaiyarasan, S.; Pati Pandey, R.; Muthusami, S.; Nachiappa Ganesh, R.; Calivarathan, L.; Esaki Muthu, S.

2026-05-27 microbiology
10.64898/2026.05.26.727932 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Burkholderia cepacia (B. cepacia) is an opportunistic pathogen with versatile virulence mechanisms. The pathogenesis of B.cepacia in the immunocompetent host following intranasal exposure largely remains ambiguous. Male BALB/c mice were intranasally inoculated with B. cepacia strain 20209 (1x10{square} CFU) and evaluated on days 3, 7, 14, and 21 post-infection. Histopathology of lung, liver, spleen, and kidney tissues were performed using H&E and PAS staining. Plasma cytokines were quantified using commercial multiplex assays and ELISA. Matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) activity was assessed via gelatin zymography and metabolomic profiling by high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Histopathological analysis revealed organ-specific pathological indices such as interstitial pneumonitis, bronchitis, leukocyte infiltration, hepatic inflammation, as well as splenic hyperplasia. Similarly, MMP-2 activity revealed time-dependent modulation, reflecting dynamic proteolytic responses. Plasma and tissue IL-18 and IL-1{beta} levels demonstrated a temporal regulation, with IL-18 peaking on day 7 post-infection, while IL-1{beta} showed a biphasic expression peaking on day 3 and 14. Untargeted metabolomics revealed differential expression of lipid metabolism, and energy pathways, with higher expression of phospholipids and sphingolipids. Together, our study portrayed a physiologically relevant intranasal BALB/c model that captures both localized and systemic inflammatory responses to B. cepacia. Our findings highlight organ-specific pathologic progression and sustained inflammation providing key insights into host-pathogen interactions.

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