Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Bacterial Immune Suppression in Chronic Wounds
The Core Concept: Enterococcus faecalis (E. faecalis) is a highly resilient bacterium that suppresses the body’s initial immune defenses in wounds by releasing large amounts of lactic acid. This localized acidification deactivates key immune cells, allowing E. faecalis and other co-infecting microbes to establish persistent, hard-to-treat infections.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike bacteria that simply resist antibiotics, E. faecalis actively sabotages the host immune system through a targeted, two-step mechanism. The secreted lactic acid enters macrophages via the MCT-1 lactate transporter and simultaneously binds to the GPR81 lactate-sensing surface receptor. Engaging both pathways effectively shuts down the macrophage's downstream inflammatory response by preventing the activation of NF-κB, a critical intracellular immune alarm signal.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Microenvironmental Acidification: The use of bacterial lactic acid to actively lower wound pH and alter the local tissue environment.
- Macrophage Deactivation: The direct targeting and suppression of the primary immune cells responsible for initiating the clearance of pathogens.
- Receptor-Mediated Silencing: The specific engagement of MCT-1 and GPR81 pathways to block intracellular immune signaling.
- NF-κB Inhibition: The molecular silencing of the host's fundamental "danger" alarm network.
- Polymicrobial Facilitation: The cascade effect wherein the dampened localized immunity creates an opportunistic environment for secondary pathogens, such as Escherichia coli, to rapidly colonize and proliferate.
.jpg)
.jpg)












