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Interdependencies between Toll‐like receptors in Leishmania infection
Authors:Divanshu Shukla  Ashok Patidar  Uddipan Sarma  Prashant Chauhan  Surya Prakash Pandey  Himanshu Singh Chandel  Neelam Bodhale  Soumya Kanti Ghosh  Carlos Alberto Guzman  Thomas Ebensen  Ricardo Silvestre  Arup Sarkar  Bhaskar Saha  Surajit Bhattacharjee
Affiliation:1. National Centre for Cell Science, Pune India ; 2. Jagadis Bose National Science Talent Search, Kolkata India ; 3. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad University of Technology, Kolkata India ; 4. Helmholtz Center for Infectious Diseases, Braunschweig Germany ; 5. ICVS, University of Minho, Braga Portugal ; 6. Trident Academy of Creative Technology, Bhubaneswar India ; 7. Tripura University, Agartala India
Abstract:Multiple pathogen‐associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) on a pathogen''s surface imply their simultaneous recognition by the host cell membrane‐located multiple PAMP‐specific Toll‐like receptors (TLRs). The TLRs on endosomes recognize internalized pathogen‐derived nucleic acids and trigger anti‐pathogen immune responses aimed at eliminating the intracellular pathogen. Whether the TLRs influence each other''s expression and effector responses—termed TLR interdependency—remains unknown. Herein, we first probed the existence of TLR interdependencies and next determined how targeting TLR interdependencies might determine the outcome of Leishmania infection. We observed that TLRs selectively altered expression of their own and of other TLRs revealing novel TLR interdependencies. Leishmania major—an intra‐macrophage parasite inflicting the disease cutaneous leishmaniasis in 88 countries—altered this TLR interdependency unfolding a unique immune evasion mechanism. We targeted this TLR interdependency by selective silencing of rationally chosen TLRs and by stimulation with selective TLR ligands working out a novel phase‐specific treatment regimen. Targeting the TLR interdependency elicited a host‐protective anti‐leishmanial immune response and reduced parasite burden. To test whether this observation could be used as a scientific rationale for treating a potentially fatal Ldonovani infection, which causes visceral leishmaniasis, we targeted the inter‐TLR dependency adopting the same treatment regimen. We observed reduced splenic Leishman–Donovan units accompanied by host‐protective immune response in susceptible BALB/c mice. The TLR interdependency optimizes TLR‐induced immune response by a novel immunoregulatory framework and scientifically rationalizes targeting TLRs in tandem and in sequence for redirecting immune responses against an intracellular pathogen.
Keywords:cytokines, Leishmania major, macrophages, Toll‐  like receptors
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