This study describes early intracellular events occurring during the establishment phase of Bacillus anthracis infections. Anthrax infections are initiated by dormant endospores gaining access to the mammalian host and becoming engulfed by regional macrophages (Mφ). During systemic anthrax, late stage events include vegetative growth in the blood to very high titres and the synthesis of the anthrax exotoxin complex, which causes disease symptoms and death. Experiments focus on the early events occurring during the first few hours of the B. anthracis infectious cycle, from endospore germination up to and including release of the vegetative cell from phagocytes. We found that newly vegetative bacilli escape from the phagocytic vesicles of cultured Mφ and replicate within the cytoplasm of these cells. Release from the Mφ occurs 4–6 h after endospore phagocytosis, timing that correlates with anthrax infection of test animals. Genetic analysis from this study indicates that the toxin plasmid pXO1 is required for release from the Mφ, whereas the capsule plasmid pXO2 is not. The transactivator atxA, located on pXO1, is also found to be essential for release, but the toxin genes themselves are not required. This suggests that Mφ release of anthrax bacilli is atxA regulated. The putative ‘escape’ genes may be located on the chromosome and/or on pXO1.
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