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1.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) are noninvasive bacterial pathogens that infect their hosts' intestinal epithelium, causing severe diarrheal disease. These infections also cause intestinal inflammation, although the mechanisms underlying the inflammatory response, as well as its potential role in host defense, are unclear. Since these bacteria are gram-negative, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), the innate receptor for bacterial lipopolysaccharide may contribute to the host response; however, the role of TLR4 in the gastrointestinal tract is poorly understood, and its impact has yet to be tested against this family of enteric bacterial pathogens. Since EPEC and EHEC are human specific, we infected mice with Citrobacter rodentium, a mouse-adapted attaching and effacing (A/E) bacterium that infects colonic epithelial cells, causing colitis and epithelial hyperplasia, using a similar array of virulence proteins as EPEC and EHEC. We demonstrated that C. rodentium activates TLR4 and rapidly induced NF-kappaB nuclear translocation in host cells in a partially TLR4-dependent manner. Infection of TLR4-deficient mice revealed that TLR4-dependent responses mediate much of the inflammation and tissue pathology seen during infection, including the induction of the chemokines MIP-2 and MCP-1, as well as the recruitment of macrophages and neutrophils into the infected intestine. Surprisingly, spread of C. rodentium through the colon was delayed in TLR4-deficient mice, whereas the duration of the infection was unaffected, indicating that TLR4-mediated responses against this A/E pathogen are not host protective and are ultimately maladaptive to the host, contributing to both the morbidity and the pathology seen during infection.  相似文献   

2.
The enteric pathogen Toxoplasma gondii is controlled by a vigorous innate T helper 1 (Th1) cell response in the murine model. We demonstrated that after oral infection, the parasite rapidly recruited inflammatory monocytes [Gr1(+) (Ly6C(+), Ly6G(-)) F4/80(+)CD11b(+)CD11c(-)], which established a vital defensive perimeter within the villi of the ileum in the small intestine. Mice deficient of the chemokine receptor CCR2 or the ligand CCL2 failed to recruit Gr1(+) inflammatory monocytes, whereas dendritic cells and resident tissue macrophages remained unaltered. The selective lack of Gr1(+) inflammatory monocytes resulted in an inability of mice to control replication of the parasite, high influx of neutrophils, extensive intestinal necrosis, and rapid death. Adoptive transfer of sorted Gr1(+) inflammatory monocytes demonstrated their ability to home to the ileum in infected animals and protect Ccr2(-/-) mice, which were otherwise highly susceptible to oral toxoplasmosis. Collectively, these findings illustrate the critical importance of inflammatory monocytes as a first line of defense in controlling intestinal pathogens.  相似文献   

3.
The objective of these studies was to determine the role of macrophage inflammatory protein 1alpha/CCL3 in pulmonary host defense during Klebsiella pneumoniae infection. Following intratracheal inoculation, 7-day survival of CCL3(-/-) mice was less than 10%, compared to 60% for CCL3(+/+) mice. Survival of CCR5(-/-) mice was equivalent to that of controls, indicating that the enhanced susceptibility of CCL3(-/-) mice to K. pneumoniae is mediated via another CCL3 receptor, presumably CCR1. At day 3, CFU burden in the lungs of CCL3(-/-) mice was 800-fold higher than in CCL3(+/+) mice, demonstrating that CCL3 is critical for control of bacterial growth in the lung. Surprisingly, CCL3(-/-) mice had no differences in the recruitment of monocytes/macrophages and even showed enhanced neutrophil recruitment at days 1, 2, and 3 postinfection, compared to CCL3(+/+) mice. Therefore, the defect in clearance was not due to insufficient recruitment of leukocytes. No significant differences in cytokine levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), interleukin 12, gamma interferon, or tumor necrosis factor alpha in lung lavages were found between CCL3(+/+) and CCL3(-/-) mice. CCL3(-/-) alveolar macrophages were found to have significantly lower phagocytic activity toward K. pneumoniae than CCL3(+/+) alveolar macrophages. These findings demonstrate that CCL3 production is critical for activation of alveolar macrophages to control the pulmonary growth of the gram-negative bacterium K. pneumoniae.  相似文献   

4.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli and enterohemorrhagic E. coli cause an inflammatory colitis in human patients characterized by neutrophil infiltration, proinflammatory cytokine expression, and crypt hyperplasia. Citrobacter rodentium causes a similar colitis in mice and serves as a model for enteropathogenic E. coli infection in humans. C. rodentium induces systemic T-cell-dependent antibody production that facilitates clearance of the bacteria and protects the host from reinfection. The role of innate immune cells in infectious colitis, however, is less well understood. In this study, we have determined the role of mast cells in the inflammatory response and disease induced by C. rodentium. Mice deficient in mast cells exhibit more severe colonic histopathology and have a higher mortality rate following infection with C. rodentium than do wild-type animals. Despite unimpaired neutrophil recruitment and lymphocyte activation, mast cell-deficient mice have a disseminated infection evident in crucial organ systems that contributes to sepsis. Importantly, mast cells also have the capacity to directly kill C. rodentium. Together, these results suggest that mast cells protect the host from systemic infection by reducing the bacterial load and preventing dissemination of the bacterium from the colon.  相似文献   

5.
Muramyl peptides are the building blocks of bacterial peptidoglycan, and their biological functions in mammals have been extensively studied. In particular, muramyl peptides trigger inflammation, contribute to host defense against microbial infections, and modulate the adaptive immune response to antigens. These bacterial molecules are detected by nucleotide oligomerization domain 1 (Nod1) and Nod2, and recent evidence suggests that muramyl dipeptide also activates NLRP3 and NLRP1 inflammasomes. Here, we investigated the role of Rip2, the adaptor for Nod1- and Nod2-dependent signaling, in multiple aspects of the host response to muramyl peptides in vivo, such as inflammatory cytokine secretion, activation and recruitment of macrophages and neutrophils to the site of injection, systemic activation of myeloid, T and B cells in the spleen, adjuvanticity and capacity to polarize the adaptive response to ovalbumin. Our results demonstrate that Rip2 was crucial for all the biological functions studied. We also identified CD11c(int) CD11b(+) inflammatory dendritic cells as a major myeloid cell population responding to Nod stimulation in vivo. Together, our results highlight the importance of Rip2 for Nod-dependent induction of innate and adaptive immunity.  相似文献   

6.
《Mucosal immunology》2014,7(5):1094-1105
The ability of the colon to generate an immune response to pathogens, such as the model pathogen Trichuris muris, is a fundamental and critical defense mechanism. Resistance to T. muris infection is associated with the rapid recruitment of dendritic cells (DCs) to the colonic epithelium via epithelial chemokine production. However, the epithelial–pathogen interactions that drive chemokine production are not known. We addressed the role of the cytosolic pattern recognition receptor Nod2. In response to infection, there was a rapid influx of CD103+CD11c+ DCs into the colonic epithelium in wild-type (WT) mice, whereas this was absent in Nod2−/− animals. In vitro chemotaxis assays and in vivo experiments using bone marrow chimeras of WT mice reconstituted with Nod2−/− bone marrow and infected with T. muris demonstrated that the migratory function of Nod2−/− DCs was normal. Investigation of colonic epithelial cell (CEC) innate responses revealed a significant reduction in epithelial production of the chemokines CCL2 and CCL5 but not CCL20 by Nod2-deficient CECs. Collectively, these data demonstrate the importance of Nod2 in CEC responses to infection and the requirement for functional Nod2 in initiating host epithelial chemokine-mediated responses and subsequent DC recruitment and T-cell responses following infection.  相似文献   

7.
《Mucosal immunology》2016,9(2):515-526
Psychological stressors are known to affect colonic diseases but the mechanisms by which this occurs, and whether probiotics can prevent stressor effects, are not understood. Because inflammatory monocytes that traffic into the colon can exacerbate colitis, we tested whether CCL2, a chemokine involved in monocyte recruitment, was necessary for stressor-induced exacerbation of infectious colitis. Mice were exposed to a social disruption stressor that entails repeated social defeat. During stressor exposure, mice were orally challenged with Citrobacter rodentium to induce a colonic inflammatory response. Exposure to the stressor during challenge resulted in significantly higher colonic pathogen levels, translocation to the spleen, increases in colonic macrophages, and increases in inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. The stressor-enhanced severity of C. rodentium-induced colitis was not evident in CCL2−/− mice, indicating the effects of the stressor are CCL2-dependent. In addition, we tested whether probiotic intervention could attenuate stressor-enhanced infectious colitis by reducing monocyte/macrophage accumulation. Treating mice with probiotic Lactobacillus reuteri reduced CCL2 mRNA levels in the colon and attenuated stressor-enhanced infectious colitis. These data demonstrate that probiotic L. reuteri can prevent the exacerbating effects of stressor exposure on pathogen-induced colitis, and suggest that one mechanism by which this occurs is through downregulation of the chemokine CCL2.  相似文献   

8.
The bacterial pathogen Citrobacter rodentium belongs to a family of gastrointestinal pathogens that includes enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli and is the causative agent of transmissible colonic hyperplasia in mice. The molecular mechanisms used by these pathogens to colonize host epithelial surfaces and form attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions have undergone intense study. In contrast, little is known about the host's immune response to these infections and its importance in tissue pathology and bacterial clearance. To address these issues, wild-type mice and mice lacking T and B lymphocytes (RAG1 knockout [KO]) were infected with C. rodentium. By day 10 postinfection (p.i.), both wild-type and RAG1 KO mice developed colitis and crypt hyperplasia, and these responses became more exaggerated in wild-type mice over the next 2 weeks, as they cleared the infection. By day 24 p.i., bacterial clearance was complete, and the colitis had subsided; however, crypt heights remained increased. In contrast, inflammatory and crypt hyperplastic responses in the RAG1 KO mice were transient, subsiding after 2 weeks. By day 24 p.i., RAG1 KO mice showed no signs of bacterial clearance and infection was often fatal. Surprisingly, despite remaining heavily infected, tissues from RAG1 KO mice surviving the acute colitis showed few signs of disease. These results thus emphasize the important contribution of the host immune response during infection by A/E bacterial pathogens. While T and/or B lymphocytes are essential for host defense against C. rodentium, they also mediate much of the tissue pathology and disease symptoms that occur during infection.  相似文献   

9.
10.
11.
《Mucosal immunology》2013,6(1):45-55
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is the leading cause of corneal blindness in the developed world due to reactivation of infectious virus and the subsequent immune response. The innate response that facilitates viral control in the cornea is currently unknown. In the present study using a mouse chimera model, we found that a bone marrow component is crucial in inhibiting viral replication and identified inflammatory monocytes (F4/80+ Gr1+) as the responsible cell. CCL2 was critical for recruiting inflammatory monocytes, and a loss of this chemokine in CCL2−/− mice resulted in a loss of viral containment and inflammatory monocyte recruitment. To confirm these results, clodronate depletion of inflammatory monocytes resulted in elevated viral titers. Furthermore, siRNA targeting the innate sensor p204/IFI-16 resulted in a loss of CCL2 production. In conclusion, CCL2 expression driven by IFI-16 recognition of HSV-1 facilitates the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes into the cornea proper to control viral replication.  相似文献   

12.
Citrobacter rodentium, an attaching-effacing bacterial pathogen, establishes an acute infection of the murine colonic epithelium and induces a mild colitis in immunocompetent mice. This study describes the role of T-cell subsets and B lymphocytes in immunity to C. rodentium. C57Bl/6 mice orally infected with C. rodentium resolved infection within 3 to 4 weeks. Conversely, systemic and colonic tissues of RAG1(-/-) mice orally infected with C. rodentium contained high and sustained pathogen loads, and in the colon this resulted in a severe colitis. C57Bl/6 mice depleted of CD4(+) T cells, but not CD8(+) T cells, were highly susceptible to infection and also developed severe colitis. Mice depleted of CD4(+) T cells also had diminished immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA antibody responses to two C. rodentium virulence-associated determinants, i.e., EspA and intimin, despite having a massively increased pathogen burden. Mice with an intact T-cell compartment, but lacking B cells ( micro MT mice), were highly susceptible to C. rodentium infection. Systemic immunity, but not mucosal immunity, could be restored by adoptive transfer of convalescent immune sera to infected micro MT mice. Adoptive transfer of immune B cells, but not na?ve B cells, provided highly variable immunity to recipient micro MT mice. The results suggest that B-cell-mediated immune responses are central to resolution of a C. rodentium infection but that the mechanism through which this occurs requires further investigation. These data are relevant to understanding immunity to enteric attaching and effacing bacterial pathogens of humans.  相似文献   

13.
Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive intracellular pathogen that causes meningitis and septicemia in immunocompromised individuals and spontaneous abortion in pregnant women. The innate immune response against L. monocytogenes is primarily mediated by neutrophils and monocytes. Interleukin-23 (IL-23) is an important proinflammatory cytokine well known for its role in neutrophil recruitment in various infectious and autoimmune diseases. We have previously shown that IL-23 is required for host resistance against L. monocytogenes and for neutrophil recruitment to the liver, but not the spleen, during infection. Despite efficient neutrophil recruitment to the spleen, IL-23p19 knockout (KO) mice have an increased bacterial burden in this organ, suggesting that IL-23 may regulate the recruitment/function of another cell type to the spleen. In this study, we show that specific depletion of neutrophils abrogated the differences in bacterial burdens in the livers but not the spleens of C57BL/6 (B6) and IL-23p19 KO mice. Interestingly, L. monocytogenes-infected IL-23p19 KO mice had fewer monocytes in the spleen than B6 mice, as well as a reduction in the monocyte-recruiting chemokines CCL2 and CCL7. Additionally, the overall concentrations of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and nitric oxide (NO), as well as the percentages and total numbers of monocytes producing TNF-α and NO, were reduced in IL-23p19 KO mice compared to levels in B6 mice, leading to increased bacterial burdens in the spleens of L. monocytogenes-infected IL-23p19 KO mice. Collectively, our data establish that IL-23 is required for the optimal recruitment of TNF-α- and NO-producing inflammatory monocytes, thus revealing a novel mechanism by which this proinflammatory cytokine provides protection against bacterial infection.  相似文献   

14.
Vaccinologists strive to harness immunity at mucosal sites of pathogen entry. We studied respiratory delivery of an attenuated vaccine against Blastomyces dermatitidis. We created a T cell receptor transgenic mouse responsive to vaccine yeast and found that mucosal vaccination led to poor T cell activation in the draining nodes and differentiation in the lung. Mucosal vaccination subverted lung T cell priming by inducing matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2), which impaired the action of the chemokine CCL7 on egress of CCR2(+) Ly6C(hi) inflammatory monocytes from the bone marrow and their recruitment to the lung. Studies in Mmp2(-/-) mice, or treatment with MMP inhibitor or rCCL7, restored recruitment of Ly6C(hi) monocytes to the lung and CD4(+) T cell priming. Mucosal vaccination against fungi and perhaps other respiratory pathogens may require manipulation of host MMPs in order to alter chemokine signals needed to recruit Ly6C(hi) monocytes and prime T cells at the respiratory mucosa.  相似文献   

15.
The host response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection varies among inbred mouse strains. Mice of the BALB/c strain are resistant to P. aeruginosa lung infection, whereas mice of the DBA/2 strain are susceptible. This phenotypic variation correlates with a difference in the magnitude of the inflammatory response induced early following infection. In order to determine whether the ability of lung phagocytic cells to kill P. aeruginosa plays a role in the host response to the infection, we measured the in vitro bactericidal activity of resident and inflammatory alveolar and interstitial macrophages, using a temperature-sensitive mutant of P. aeruginosa. Lung macrophages obtained from resistant and susceptible animals displayed similar bactericidal activities, suggesting that the ability of phagocytes to kill P. aeruginosa does not play a crucial role in the outcome of infection. The bactericidal activity of lung phagocytes was also assessed in vivo following endobronchial infection with the temperature-sensitive mutant of P. aeruginosa. Resistant mice showed a rapid influx of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) to the bronchoalveolar space which was shortly followed by an efficient clearance of the bacteria. Susceptible mice had a delay in both the inflammatory response to P. aeruginosa and the initiation of bacterial clearance. Susceptible mice have been shown to have a defect in tumor necrosis factor alpha production when infected intratracheally with P. aeruginosa. Intratracheal instillation of tumor necrosis factor alpha to susceptible mice at the time of infection significantly improved the recruitment of PMNs to the site of infection without affecting the process of bacterial clearance. Overall, these results suggest that both recruitment of a high number of PMNs to the lungs and an efficient activation process of the phagocytes are crucial for the prompt clearance of P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

16.
CC chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2)/monocyte chemotactic protein-1, a member of the CC chemokine family, is a chemoattractant for monocytes and T cells through interaction with its receptor CCR2. In the present study, we examined a T helper cell type 1 (Th1)-dependent disease, proteolipid protein-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, in a transgenic mouse line that constitutively expressed low levels of CCL2 in the central nervous system (CNS) under control of the astrocyte-specific glial fibrillary acidic protein promoter. CCL2 transgenic mice developed significantly milder clinical disease than littermate controls. As determined by flow cytometry, mononuclear cell infiltrates in the CNS tissues of CCL2 transgenic and littermate-control mice contained equal numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and the CCL2 transgenic mice showed an enhanced number of CNS-infiltrating monocytes. CNS antigen-specific T cells from CCL2 transgenic mice produced markedly less interferon-gamma. Overexpression of CCL2 in the CNS resulted in decreased interleukin-12 receptor expression by antigen-specific T cells. Collectively, these results indicate that sustained, tissue-specific expression of CCL2 in vivo down-regulates the Th1 autoimmune response, culminating in milder clinical disease.  相似文献   

17.
Inhaled lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induces an inflammatory response that may contribute to the pathogenesis of asthma and other airway diseases. Here we investigate the role of tumour necrosis factor (TNF) receptor-associated factor 1 (TRAF1) in leucocyte recruitment using a model of LPS-induced lung inflammation in mice. TRAF1(-/-) mice are completely deficient in the recruitment of lymphocytes to the lower respiratory tract after inhalation of LPS. Although TRAF1(-/-) mice display normal early accumulation of neutrophils, dendritic cells and monocytes in the alveolar airspace, they have a significantly reduced recruitment of these cells by 24 hr after inhalation of LPS when compared to wild-type (WT) mice. Despite normal expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF, interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-6 after LPS treatment, TRAF1(-/-) mice displayed decreased expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1, CCL17 and CCL20 in the lungs, when compared to LPS-treated WT mice. These results suggest that TRAF1 facilitates LPS-induced leucocyte recruitment into the lung airways by augmenting the expression of chemokines and adhesion molecules. Mice lacking TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) but not TNFR2 show a phenotype similar to the TRAF1(-/-) mice, suggesting that TRAF1 may act downstream of TNFR1. Significantly, we use bone marrow chimeras to demonstrate that expression of TRAF1 by cells resident in the lungs, but not by circulating leucocytes, is necessary for efficient LPS-induced recruitment of leucocytes to the lung airways.  相似文献   

18.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and the murine pathogen Citrobacter rodentium belong to the attaching and effacing (A/E) family of bacterial pathogens. These noninvasive bacteria infect intestinal enterocytes using a type 3 secretion system (T3SS), leading to diarrheal disease and intestinal inflammation. While flagellin, the secreted product of the EPEC fliC gene, causes the release of interleukin 8 (IL-8) from epithelial cells, it is unclear whether A/E bacteria also trigger epithelial inflammatory responses that are FliC independent. The aims of this study were to characterize the FliC dependence or independence of epithelial inflammatory responses to direct infection by EPEC or C. rodentium. Following infection of Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells by wild-type and DeltafliC EPEC, a rapid activation of several proinflammatory genes, including those encoding IL-8, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, macrophage inflammatory protein 3alpha (MIP3alpha), and beta-defensin 2, occurred in a FliC-dependent manner. These responses were accompanied by mitogen-activated protein kinase activation, as well as the Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5)-dependent activation of NF-kappaB. At later infection time points, a subset of these proinflammatory genes (IL-8 and MIP3alpha) was also induced in cells infected with DeltafliC EPEC. The nonmotile A/E pathogen C. rodentium also triggered similar innate responses through a TLR5-independent but partially NF-kappaB-dependent mechanism. Moreover, the EPEC FliC-independent responses were increased in the absence of the locus of enterocyte effacement-encoded T3SS, suggesting that translocated bacterial effectors suppress rather than cause the FliC-independent inflammatory response. Thus, we demonstrate that infection of intestinal epithelial cells by A/E pathogens can trigger an array of proinflammatory responses from epithelial cells through both FliC-dependent and -independent pathways, expanding our understanding of the innate epithelial response to infection by these pathogens.  相似文献   

19.
A proper innate inflammatory response is essential for prevention of the systemic inflammation associated with sepsis. BTLA is an immune-regulatory receptor demonstrated to be expressed not only on adaptive immune populations and have potent inhibitory effects on CD4(+) T cells but is also expressed on innate cell populations (CD11c(+) and CD11b(+) cells) and has been shown to diminish pathogen clearance following bacterial and parasite infection. The role of BTLA in sepsis and the mechanisms by which BTLA alters pathogen clearance, however, have not been addressed clearly. Here, we show that following acute experimental sepsis induction in mice (CLP), the number of infiltrating BTLA- and HVEM (the ligand for BTLA)-expressing macrophages, inflammatory monocytes, mature and immature DCs, and neutrophils increased in the peritoneum compared with sham surgery, suggesting that a high level of HVEM:BTLA interactions occurs between these cells at the site of septic insult. Given this, we evaluated BTLA(-/-) mice, 24 h post-CLP, and observed a marked increase in the degree of activation on these cell populations, as well as a reduction in peritoneal bacterial burden and IL-10 induction, and most importantly, BTLA(-/-) mice exhibited a higher rate of survival and protection from organ injury when compared with WT mice. Such changes were not restricted to experimental mice, as circulating BTLA+ and HVEM+ monocytes and HVEM+ granulocytes were increased in septic ICU patients, supporting a role for BTLA and/or HVEM as potential, novel diagnostic markers of innate immune response/status and as therapeutic targets of sepsis.  相似文献   

20.
The Nod-like receptor proteins Nod1 and Nod2 participate in innate immune responses against bacteria through intracellular detection of peptidoglycan, a component of bacterial cell wall. Recent evidence has demonstrated that Nod1 stimulates the release of chemokines that attract neutrophils at the site of infection, such as CXCL8/IL-8 in humans, and CXCL1/keratinocyte-derived chemokine and CXCL2/MIP-2 in mice. We aimed to determine whether Nod proteins could trigger the release of CCL5/RANTES, a chemokine known to attract a number of immune cells, but not neutrophils. Our results demonstrate that activation of both Nod1 and Nod2 results in substantial secretion of CCL5 by murine macrophages. Moreover, in vivo, the intraperitoneal injection of murine Nod1 or Nod2 agonists resulted in a rapid secretion of CCL5 into the bloodstream. We also observed that Nod-dependent secretion of CCL5 did not correlate with the induction of the interferon-beta pathway, a major signaling cascade for the activation of CCL5 by viruses. In contrast, we identified a key role of the NF-kappaB pathway in Nod-dependent stimulation of the CCL5 promoter. Together, these results identify a novel target downstream of Nod1 and Nod2, which is likely to play a key role in orchestrating the global Nod-dependent immune defense during bacterial infections.  相似文献   

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