Role of macrophage scavenger receptors in response to Listeria monocytogenes infection in mice |
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Authors: | Ishiguro T Naito M Yamamoto T Hasegawa G Gejyo F Mitsuyama M Suzuki H Kodama T |
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Affiliation: | Second Department of Pathology and Second Department of Internal Medicine, Niigata University School of Medicine, Niigata, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Type I and type II macrophage scavenger receptors (SR-A I/II) recognize a variety of polyanions including bacterial cell-wall products such as lipopolysaccharide, suggesting a role for SR-A I/II in immunity against bacterial infection. SR-A I/II-deficient (MSR-A-/-) mice were more susceptible to infection with listeriolysin-O (LLO)-producing Listeria monocytogenes. After infection, Kupffer cells in wild-type (MSR-A+/+) mice phagocytized larger numbers of Listeria than those in MSR-A-/- mice. The number and the diameter of hepatic granulomas were larger in MSR-A-/- mice than MSR-A+/+ mice. L. monocytogenes replicated at higher levels in the liver of MSR-A-/- mice compared with MSR-A+/+ mice, and macrophages from MSR-A-/- mice showed impaired ability to kill Listeria in vitro. However, macrophages from MSR-A+/+ and MSR-A-/- mice showed similar levels of listericidal activity against isogenic mutant L. monocytogenes with an inactivated LLO gene. The listerial phagocytic activities of MSR-A+/+ macrophages treated with an anti-SR-A I/II antibody (2F8) and MSR-A-/- macrophages were significantly impaired compared with untreated MSR-A+/+ macrophages, indicating that SR-A I/II function as a receptor for L. monocytogenes. Electron microscopy revealed that most L. monocytogenes had been eliminated from the lysosomes of MSR-A+/+ macrophages in vivo and in vitro. In contrast, L. monocytogenes rapidly lysed the phagosomal membrane and escaped to the cytosol in MSR-A-/- macrophages and in MSR-A+/+ macrophages treated with 2F8 before phagosome-lysosome fusion. These findings imply that SR-A I/II plays a crucial role in host defense against listerial infection not only by functioning as a receptor but also by mediating listericidal mechanisms through the regulation of LLO-dependent listerial escape from the macrophages. |
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