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1.
The effect of recombinant murine interferon-gamma (rIFN-gamma) as single stimulus for the activation of antibacterial activity of macrophages was investigated on the basis of the rate of intracellular killing of Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella typhimurium by normal and rIFN gamma-activated peritoneal macrophages of CBA and C57BL/10 mice, which differ in natural resistance to infection by these bacteria. Eighteen hours after i.p. injection of 10 to 1 X 10(4) U rIFN-gamma, resident and exudate peritoneal macrophages which had phagocytosed L. monocytogenes or S. typhimurium in vivo, killed both species in vitro just as efficiently as did resident macrophages of normal mice. Similar results were obtained after 18 hr of in vitro incubation of resident or exudate peritoneal macrophages with 0.1 to 1 X 10(4) U/ml rIFN-gamma. Consistent with the in vitro findings, two i.v. injections of 5 X 10(4) U rIFN-gamma did not affect the rate of in vivo proliferation of L. monocytogenes or S. typhimurium in the spleens of mice during the first 2 days after i.v. injection of the bacteria. Compared with the effect on the controls, two i.p. injections of 5 X 10(2) to 5 X 10(4) U rIFN-gamma did not decrease the numbers of viable S. typhimurium in either the peritoneal cell suspension or the spleen 24 hr after i.p. injection of the bacteria. Checking the state of activation of rIFN-gamma-activated macrophages on the basis of two commonly used criteria for macrophage activation showed that rIFN-gamma-activated macrophages inhibited the intracellular replication of Toxoplasma gondii and displayed enhanced O2 consumption and H2O2 release after stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate compared with macrophages from normal CBA and C57BL/10 mice. The present findings show that as single activating stimulus, rIFN-gamma is not capable of activating the antibacterial effector functions of peritoneal macrophages against facultative intracellular pathogens such as L. monocytogenes and S. typhimurium.  相似文献   

2.
The aly is a unique spontaneous autosomal recessive mutation in mice that causes a systemic defect of lymph nodes and Peyer's patches and disorganized splenic and thymic structures with immunodeficiency. Our previous study demonstrated that resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production are attenuated in the mutant mice. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of decrease in antilisterial resistance and IFN-gamma production in aly mice. Interleukin (IL)-12 production in response to heat-killed L. monocytogenes (HK-LM) was decreased but IL-10 production was increased in aly/aly macrophage cultures, compared with those in aly/+ macrophages. Nonadherent cells and macrophages obtained from the spleens of naive aly/+ mice and aly/aly mice were reconstituted and stimulated with HK-LM. IFN-gamma production was markedly decreased when macrophages derived from aly/aly mice were used. IFN-gamma production in aly/aly spleen cell cultures was recovered in the presence of anti-IL-10 monoclonal antibody (mAb) or recombinant IL-12. When aly/+ mice and aly/aly mice were injected with mAb against IL-10 or IL-12 p40, antilisterial resistance was inhibited by injection of anti-IL-12 p40 mAb, while anti-IL-10 mAb treatment augmented the resistance. Administration of anti-IFN-gamma mAb attenuated antilisterial resistance in aly/+ mice but not in aly/aly mice. The present results suggest that downregulation of IL-12 and upregulation of IL-10 in macrophages might be involved in the decrease in antilisterial resistance and IFN-gamma production in aly/aly mice in addition to the structural defect in lymphoid organs. Moreover, the results predict that an IL-12-dependent and IFN-gamma-independent mechanism may be also involved in the decrease in antilisterial resistance in aly/aly mice.  相似文献   

3.
Clearance of infection with intracellular pathogens in mice involves interferon-regulated GTPases of the IRG protein family. Experiments with mice genetically deficient in members of this family such as Irgm1(LRG-47), Irgm3(IGTP), and Irgd(IRG-47) has revealed a critical role in microbial clearance, especially for Toxoplasma gondii. The in vivo role of another member of this family, Irga6 (IIGP, IIGP1) has been studied in less detail. We investigated the susceptibility of two independently generated mouse strains deficient in Irga6 to in vivo infection with T. gondii, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Leishmania mexicana, L. major, Listeria monocytogenes, Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Plasmodium berghei. Compared with wild-type mice, mice deficient in Irga6 showed increased susceptibility to oral and intraperitoneal infection with T. gondii but not to infection with the other organisms. Surprisingly, infection of Irga6-deficient mice with the related apicomplexan parasite, P. berghei, did not result in increased replication in the liver stage and no Irga6 (or any other IRG protein) was detected at the parasitophorous vacuole membrane in IFN-γ-induced wild-type cells infected with P. berghei in vitro. Susceptibility to infection with T. gondii was associated with increased mortality and reduced time to death, increased numbers of inflammatory foci in the brains and elevated parasite loads in brains of infected Irga6-deficient mice. In vitro, Irga6-deficient macrophages and fibroblasts stimulated with IFN-γ were defective in controlling parasite replication. Taken together, our results implicate Irga6 in the control of infection with T. gondii and further highlight the importance of the IRG system for resistance to this pathogen.  相似文献   

4.
In order to study pregnancy-induced changes in cell-mediated immunity to Listeria monocytogenes, acquired resistance and T cell functions in pregnant mice were compared with those in nonpregnant mice after immunization with viable listerial cells. Impaired generation of acquired resistance was evident in pregnant mice from the impaired elimination of bacteria and poor survival after secondary challenge. Delayed footpad reactivity to listerial antigen was also lower in the pregnant mice. When immune spleen cells were examined for their ability to produce macrophage activating factor in vitro, culture supernatants from pregnant-mouse spleen cells with listerial antigen showed far less ability to render macrophages cytostatic for P815 mastocytoma cells. To elucidate further the impairment of listeria-immune T cell generation in pregnant mice, a local transfer experiment was carried out. When a given number of immune spleen cells was transferred locally into the footpads of naive mice, both delayed footpad reaction and local protection were much lower in the pregnant mice. This local transferability of the reactions was abrogated after treatment of cells with anti-Thy 1 antibody plus complement. These findings indicate that pregnancy impairs the generation of specific T cells capable of contributing to acquired resistance to L. monocytogenes. Possible mechanisms for this impairment and the relationship to macrophage functions are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Infection with Toxoplasma gondii in the acute phase results in nonspecific suppression of immunologic function in mice and humans. The present study examined the effects of a physical stressor, i.e., cold stress (CS), on macrophage function (nitrite production, parasite survival) and splenic blastogenesis in the acute phase of murine T. gondii infection. In our stress paradigm, female BALB/c mice were placed in cold water (1 +/- 0.5 C), 5 min each day for 8 days. Nitrite production and parasite survival were measured in cultured peritoneal macrophages obtained from mice subjected to CS after in vivo activation with interferon-gamma/lipopolysaccharide (CS + ACT), and in vitro infection with T. gondii tachyzoites. Peritoneal macrophages from CS + ACT mice showed decreased nitrite production compared to control but activated cells (ACT). Spleen cell proliferation to in vitro stimulation with the mitogens concanavalin A (Con A) and anti-CD3, and Toxoplasma lysate antigen (TLA) was measured in splenocytes obtained from BALB/c mice during the acute phase of infection with T. gondii. Mice subjected to CS and infection (CS + INF) had maximum splenocyte proliferation on days 8 and 15 followed by a subsequent decline on day 28 postinoculation (PI). In contrast, infected mice not subjected to stress (INF) showed decreased splenocyte proliferation on days 8 and 15 followed by an increase on day 28 PI. The rate of mortality was decreased in the CS + INF compared to the INF group during acute infection. These results suggest that CS may alter the pathogenesis of T. gondii infection by modulating acute-phase responses, provoking a state of transient disequilibrium between the host and parasite.  相似文献   

6.
Resistance of mice to infection by Listeria monocytogenes involves a biphasic response. The first phase consists of the first 48 h after infection, during which there is multiplication of Listeria in the liver and spleen of infected mice. In these nonimmune mice, macrophages and polymorphonuclear leukocytes are the effector cells involved in controlling multiplication. In the second phase, cell-mediated immunity develops, beginning on day 2, during which multiplication of Listeria is prevented by macrophages possessing increased microbicidal activity that is mediated through the action of lymphokines released by immunologically committed T lymphocytes. The purpose of the present study was to define a role for natural killer (NK) cells in natural resistance to Listeria during the first 48 h after infection, prior to the development of specific immunity. Splenic NK cell activity was enhanced following a sublethal intravenous injection of viable Listeria as early as 24 h after injection and remained elevated throughout the nonimmune phase of infection. Interestingly, treatment of mice with anti-asialo-GM1 significantly enhanced the ability of mice to clear Listeria from the spleen relative to infected controls possessing intact NK cell populations. This was evidenced by 23-fold fewer bacteria obtained from the spleens of anti-asialo-GM1-treated mice. In addition, Percoll-enriched NK cell populations obtained from 48-hour Listeria-infected mice do not exhibit in vitro listericidal activity. These observations suggest a regulatory role of NK cells in resistance against Listeria and preclude a role for NK cells in direct cytolysis. Perhaps these cells modulate the immune response to Listeria by down-regulating the activity of the immune cells crucial to listerial resistance.  相似文献   

7.
Lipid bodies [lipid droplets (LBs)] are lipid-rich organelles involved in lipid metabolism, signalling and inflammation. Recent findings suggest a role for LBs in host response to infection; however, the potential functions of this organelle in Toxoplasma gondii infection and how it alters macrophage microbicidal capacity during infection are not well understood. Here, we investigated the role of host LBs in T. gondii infection in mouse peritoneal macrophages in vitro. Macrophages cultured with mouse serum (MS) had higher numbers of LBs than those cultured in foetal bovine serum and can function as a model to study the role of LBs during intracellular pathogen infection. LBs were found in association with the parasitophorous vacuole, suggesting that T. gondii may benefit from this lipid source. Moreover, increased numbers of macrophage LBs correlated with high prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production and decreased nitric oxide (NO) synthesis. Accordingly, LB-enriched macrophages cultured with MS were less efficient at controlling T. gondii growth. Treatment of macrophages cultured with MS with indomethacin, an inhibitor of PGE2 production, increased the microbicidal capacity against T. gondii. Collectively, these results suggest that culture with MS caused a decrease in microbicidal activity of macrophages against T. gondii by increasing PGE2 while lowering NO production.  相似文献   

8.
A pregnant mouse model was developed to follow the course of infection after peroral inoculation with six different strains of Listeria monocytogenes and one strain of Listeria innocua. Tissues were sampled and analyzed by microbiologic and histologic methods for 5 days postinoculation. In gnotobiotic pregnant BALB/c mice, L. monocytogenes Scott A (SA), serotype 4b, colonized the gastrointestinal tract, translocated to the livers and spleens of mice by day 1 postinoculation, and multiplied in these tissues until day 4. Infection of the placental tissues occurred by days 3 and 4 and was followed by infection of the fetuses. Little damage of colonic and cecal tissues was evident by histologic examination. Livers and spleens showed a cellular immune response; a similar immune response was not detected in the placentas or fetuses. A rough variant of L. monocytogenes SA which was as virulent as the parent strain in mice when injected intraperitoneally was less virulent perorally and did not consistently infect the fetuses. L. monocytogenes ATCC 19113, serotype 3a, did not colonize the gastrointestinal tract, nor was it isolated from any internal tissue. L. monocytogenes strains of serotypes 1/2a and 1/2b behaved like the SA strain in this mouse model. L. innocua colonized the gastrointestinal tract and translocated to the livers and spleens but did not survive in these organs and rapidly disappeared without infecting placental and fetal tissues. In comparison with gnotobiotic mice, conventional pregnant mice inoculated with L. monocytogenes strains showed less consistent infection. These results suggest that the gnotobiotic pregnant mouse is a useful model for detecting differences in virulence relating to colonization, invasiveness, and uteroplacental infection which cannot be detected by intraperitoneal inoculation of mice.  相似文献   

9.
A pregnant mouse model was developed to follow the course of infection after peroral inoculation with six different strains of Listeria monocytogenes and one strain of Listeria innocua. Tissues were sampled and analyzed by microbiologic and histologic methods for 5 days postinoculation. In gnotobiotic pregnant BALB/c mice, L. monocytogenes Scott A (SA), serotype 4b, colonized the gastrointestinal tract, translocated to the livers and spleens of mice by day 1 postinoculation, and multiplied in these tissues until day 4. Infection of the placental tissues occurred by days 3 and 4 and was followed by infection of the fetuses. Little damage of colonic and cecal tissues was evident by histologic examination. Livers and spleens showed a cellular immune response; a similar immune response was not detected in the placentas or fetuses. A rough variant of L. monocytogenes SA which was as virulent as the parent strain in mice when injected intraperitoneally was less virulent perorally and did not consistently infect the fetuses. L. monocytogenes ATCC 19113, serotype 3a, did not colonize the gastrointestinal tract, nor was it isolated from any internal tissue. L. monocytogenes strains of serotypes 1/2a and 1/2b behaved like the SA strain in this mouse model. L. innocua colonized the gastrointestinal tract and translocated to the livers and spleens but did not survive in these organs and rapidly disappeared without infecting placental and fetal tissues. In comparison with gnotobiotic mice, conventional pregnant mice inoculated with L. monocytogenes strains showed less consistent infection. These results suggest that the gnotobiotic pregnant mouse is a useful model for detecting differences in virulence relating to colonization, invasiveness, and uteroplacental infection which cannot be detected by intraperitoneal inoculation of mice.  相似文献   

10.
Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular pathogen which can escape bactericidal mechanisms and grow within macrophages. The intracellular environment of macrophages is one of the most stressful environments encountered by an invading bacterium during the course of infection. To study the role of the major stress protein, DnaK, of L. monocytogenes in survival under intracellular stress induced by macrophage-phagocytosis as well as under extracellular environmental stresses, we cloned, sequenced, and analyzed the dnaK locus from L. monocytogenes. Then we constructed an insertional mutation in the dnaK gene by homologous recombination and characterized it. Sequencing has revealed that the dnaK locus consists of four open reading frames in the order hrcA-grpE-dnaK-dnaJ. The mutant grows neither at temperatures above 39 degrees C nor under acidic conditions e.g. pH 3.0. Using the macrophage cell line JA-4, the ability of the dnaK mutant to grow intracellularly was examined. Immediately after phagocytosis, the number of viable dnaK mutant bacteria found within macrophages was significantly lower compared to that of intracellular wild type bacteria. However, following a 1-3 h latency period, the mutant multiplied in a similar fashion to the wild type within macrophage cells. A quantitative analysis of intracellular bacteria in macrophage cells by microscope and a binding assay of bacteria to the surface of macrophages by ELISA revealed that the lower number of viable dnaK mutant in macrophages after phagocytosis is due to the low efficiency of phagocytosis resulting from the reduced binding capacity of the dnaK mutant. These results demonstrate that DnaK of L. monocytogenes is essentially required for survival under high temperatures and acidic conditions. Though it does not largely contribute to the survival of L. monocytogenes in macrophage cells, it is essential for efficient phagocytosis. This is the first evidence that DnaK is required for the efficient phagocytosis of a facultative intracellular pathogen with macrophages.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract Pregnant A/J mice were found to be more susceptible to the lethal effect of Listeria monocytogenes bacteria than virgin females. However, during the first four days of post-infection there was no difference in the elimination of Listeria from the spleens of pregnant and virgin mice. This suggests that the increase in the susceptibility of pregnant mice to pathogenic activity of L. monocytogenes was related to the diminution in Listeria -specific cellular reactions. Indeed, we found that non-adherent light density dendritic cells (DCs) from pregnant mice showed a marked reduction in the ability to form clusters with L. monocytogenes immune T lymphocytes and it is known that cell cluster formation between antigen presenting cells (APC) and responding T cells is required for antigen recognition as well as for cell proliferation. DCs from pregnant mice also demonstrated the decrease and an instability in the expression of H-2 class II molecules which play a crucial role in the recognition of exogenous antigens. The abnormalities demonstrated in the function of the light density dendritic cells from the spleens of pregnant mice could compromise cellular reactions to L. monocytogenes bacteria possibly resulting in increased susceptibility of pregnant mice to experimental listeriosis.  相似文献   

12.
A water-soluble oligosaccharide, N-acetyl chitohexaose (NACOS-6) was able to enhance the protecting effect of BALB/c male mice against Listeria monocytogenes infection, when administered intraperitoneally 24 hr before the challenge with this microbe. Significant decrease in number of microbes within the peritoneal cavity, spleen, and liver from the mice of NACOS-6-administered group was not observed 1 day after the infection but 4 days after the infection. Administration of NACOS-6 enhanced the delayed-type hypersensitivity response against sheep red blood cells (SRBC) or heat-killed L. monocytogenes. Splenic T lymphocytes from mice administered NACOS-6 released macrophage activating factor (MAF). These results suggested that NACOS-6 was also able to elevate the function of cellular immunity. Macrophages treated with a combination of NACOS-6 and the culture supernatant of splenic T lymphocytes from mice administered NACOS-6, "NACOS-6 sup," were found to exert a fairly strong growth-inhibitory effect on L. monocytogenes. Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and interleukin 2 (IL-2) were able to enhance the growth-inhibitory effect on L. monocytogenes by the NACOS-6-treated macrophages.  相似文献   

13.
In order to elucidate the role of T cell subsets in protective immunity against infection with high virulent and low virulent strains of Toxoplasma gondii, monoclonal antibodies specific for T cell subsets were injected into mice before immunization or challenge infection. Treatment of mice with monoclonal antibody to either L3T4+ or Lyt-2+ T cells before they were immunized with Toxoplasma cell homogenate prepared from high virulent RH strain tachyzoites markedly reduced survival after mice were challenged with low virulent bradyzoites of the Beverley strain. Thus, induction of protective immunity against bradyzoites of the Beverley strain requires the presence of both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ T cells. In contrast, mice injected with living bradyzoites of the low virulent Beverley strain after immunization with Toxoplasma cell homogenate acquired protective immunity against high virulent tachyzoites of the RH strain. Lyt-2+ T cells alone appear to be final effector cells for protection against the challenge with high virulent RH strain tachyzoites, since treatment of the bradyzoite-immune mice with anti-Lyt-2 antibody, but not anti-L3T4 antibody, before challenge significantly increased mortality.  相似文献   

14.
Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular pathogen that infects a large diversity of host cells, including macrophages. To avoid the phagosome microbicidal environment, L. monocytogenes secretes a pore-forming toxin (listeriolysin O, LLO) that releases the bacterium into the cytoplasm. We hypothesized that the α-defensins (HNPs) and/or humanized θ-defensin (RC-1) peptides produced by human and non-human primate neutrophils, respectively, cooperate with macrophages to control L. monocytogenes infection. Our results establish that HNP-1 and RC-1 enable macrophages to control L. monocytogenes intracellular growth by inhibiting phagosomal escape, as a consequence, bacteria remain trapped in a LAMP-1-positive phagosome. Importantly, HNP-1 interaction with macrophages and RC-1 interaction with bacteria are required to prevent macrophage infection. In accordance with these results, RC-1 is a more potent anti-listerial peptide than HNP-1 and HNP-1 is acquired by macrophages and trafficked to the phagocytosed bacteria. Finally, HNP-1 and RC-1 antimicrobial activity is complemented by their ability to prevent LLO function through two mechanisms, blocking LLO-dependent perforation of macrophage membranes and the release of LLO from the bacteria. In conclusion, at the site of infection the cooperation between antimicrobial peptides, such as HNP-1, and macrophages likely plays a critical role in the innate immune defence against L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

15.
We have previously shown that listeria-immunized mice recruit more inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages to the peritoneal cavity after i.p. injection of a sterile irritant than do nonimmune mice. Because the inflammatory phagocytes that were obtained from listeria-immune and nonimmune mice did not differ in their ability to kill Listeria monocytogenes in vitro, this suggested that the rapid recruitment of listericidal inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages may be critically important for resistance to listeriosis. In this study we demonstrate that the transfer of listeria-immune T cells, which enhances recipient resistance to listeriosis, also increases the ability of recipients to mobilize inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages to the peritoneal cavity after the i.p. injection of dead listeria. The transfer of enhanced inflammatory responsiveness was blocked by pretreatment of the transferred cells with anti-Thy-1.2 plus complement, and the magnitude of the inflammatory cell accumulation was dependent on the number of listeria-immune T cells that were injected. Inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages that were obtained from the mice after the transfer of listeria-immune or nonimmune T cells (plus dead listeria) did not differ in their ability to kill L. monocytogenes in vitro. These data suggest that the elicitation of an inflammatory response may be an important event in T cell-mediated resistance to listeriosis.  相似文献   

16.
The production of a hemolytic exotoxin (Hly) termed listeriolysin O (LLO) is a major determinant of the virulence of the Gram-positive bacterium Listeria monocytogenes. As determined by lethal inoculum size, LLO- strains of L. monocytogenes generally are several orders of magnitude less virulent than their LLO+ counterparts. The generation of protective anti-Listeria T cell immunity also has been shown to depend on the LLO phenotype of the bacteria present during primary infection, although the cellular basis of this observation is not known. The experiments described here address the role of LLO in regulation of the expression of class II MHC (Ia) molecules by murine macrophages. Because Ia expression by macrophages and other APC is thought to be a central factor in the generation of T cells specific for bacterial Ag, we have tested the hypothesis that the failure of LLO- strains to elicit anti-Listeria T cell responses might be secondary to an inability of these strains to stimulate increases in macrophage Ia levels. Our results show that the macrophage Ia response after i.p. injection of L. monocytogenes correlates strongly with the LLO phenotype of the bacteria. The presence of LLO+ organisms, even at very small numbers (as few as 10), elicits a striking increase in Ia expression by peritoneal macrophages. In contrast, even at very high numbers (up to 10(6) per mouse), LLO- bacteria fail to stimulate a strong Ia response. We also have analyzed macrophage Ia expression after injection of lysates of Escherichia coli expressing recombinant LLO protein. Similar to the results obtained with LLO+ and LLO- L. monocytogenes, we have observed Ia induction only with LLO+ lysates. Ia induction by this crude recombinant LLO preparation can be inhibited by cholesterol or heat. Furthermore, supernatants derived from cultures of LLO+ (but not LLO-) L. monocytogenes can cause Ia induction when administered via i.p. injection. Taken together, these findings suggest that the failure of macrophages to respond to LLO- organisms with an increase in Ia expression may be a major underlying cause of the failure of these bacteria to induce Listeria-specific protective T cell immunity. Furthermore, we propose that the induction of macrophage Ia expression in response to bacterial toxins such as Hly may represent one component of a set of early, innate immune mechanisms, and that this induction may provide a critical "bridge" to later, acquired, Ag-specific immune processes.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of exogenously administered rIL-1 alpha on elimination of viable listeriae from the liver and spleen during the course of a primary Listeria monocytogenes infection was studied. Similar numbers of L. monocytogenes were recovered from rIL-1 alpha-treated and control mice at up to 24 h after infection; however, by 48 h after infection more than 1 log10 fewer viable L. monocytogenes were recovered from the spleens of rIL-1 alpha-treated mice than from Listeria-infected controls. The difference in bacterial burden between IL-1 alpha-treated and control mice increased with time; by 7 days after infection viable L. monocytogenes had been eliminated from most rIL-1 alpha-treated mice, whereas control mice still harbored 10(4) to 10(5) L. monocytogenes per spleen and liver. Histopathologic examination confirmed that rIL-1 alpha-treated mice suffered considerably less damage to the spleen, liver, lung, and brain than did control mice. To determine whether rIL-1 alpha-mediated protection indirectly by augmenting the release of other cytokines, we determined serum levels of colony-stimulating activity and IFN activity in rIL-1 alpha-treated and control Listeria-infected mice. Treatment with rIL-alpha elicited an early burst of serum colony-stimulating activity as compared with sera from Listeria-infected control mice. These data suggest that exogenous administration of rIL-1 initiates release of colony-stimulating activity, and perhaps other cytokines, that accelerate the protective response of the infected host. Prophylactic augmentation of antimicrobial resistance by administration of rIL-1 alpha may be worthy of further evaluation.  相似文献   

18.
Mitogen-activated protein kinase-activated protein kinase 2 (MK2) is one of several kinases activated through direct phosphorylation by p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. MK2 regulates LPS-induced TNF mRNA translation, and targeted mutation of the MK2 gene renders mice more resistant to D-galactosamine plus LPS-induced liver damage. In the present study, we investigated the role of MK2 in immune defense against Listeria monocytogenes infection. MK2-deficient mice displayed diminished resistance to L. monocytogenes due to impaired control of bacterial growth. The increase in bacterial load in MK2(-/-) mice was associated with normal levels of IL-1 beta, IL-6, and IFN-gamma, whereas TNF production was strongly attenuated. In line, MK2-deficient bone marrow-derived macrophages showed impaired release of TNF, but not of IL-1 beta, in response to various bacterial stimuli in addition to decreased phagocytosis of fluorescence-labeled bacteria. Furthermore, spleen cells from MK2(-/-) mice displayed diminished IFN-gamma synthesis after stimulation with L. monocytogenes. In contrast, MK2 deficiency had no effect on macrophage generation of NO or on oxidative burst activity in response to L. moocytogenes. These results indicate an essential role of MK2 in host defense against intracellular bacteria probably via regulation of TNF and IFN-gamma production required for activation of antibacterial effector mechanisms.  相似文献   

19.
rIFN-gamma conferred remarkable resistance against acute infection with Toxoplasma gondii in T cell-deficient (athymic nude) mice. Mice that received an i.p. injection of rIFN-gamma every other day beginning 24 h before infection for a total of eight doses survived significantly longer than untreated control mice although all of the treated mice died after the lymphokine was discontinued. Mice that received 14 doses of rIFN-gamma survived significantly longer than those that received eight doses of the lymphokine although mice started dying soon after the final (14th) injection of rIFN-gamma and eventually all of the treated mice died. Histologic study revealed that the IFN-gamma treatment prevented proliferation of the organisms in all organs examined, including brain, lung, heart, liver, and spleen. The treatment was effective even when started 1 day after infection. Peritoneal macrophages obtained from mice injected with rIFN-gamma were activated and effectively killed tachyzoites of T. gondii in vitro. TNF activity could not be detected in sera of the infected mice during treatment with rIFN-gamma. Administration of anti-TNF antibody did not affect the protective effect of rIFN-gamma against T. gondii infection. These facts indicate that rIFN-gamma can confer resistance to acute infection with T. gondii without collaboration of lymphokines derived from T cells and TNF. This suggests that rIFN-gamma may be effective for therapy of toxoplasmosis in immunosuppressed patients who have impaired activity of T cell function, especially those with AIDS.  相似文献   

20.
Toxoplasma gondii modifies its host cell to suppress its ability to become activated in response to IFN-γ and TNF-α and to develop intracellular antimicrobial effectors, including NO. Mechanisms used by T. gondii to modulate activation of its infected host cell likely underlie its ability to hijack monocytes and dendritic cells during infection to disseminate to the brain and CNS where it converts to bradyzoites contained in tissue cysts to establish persistent infection. To identify T. gondii genes important for resistance to the effects of host cell activation, we developed an in vitro murine macrophage infection and activation model to identify parasite insertional mutants that have a fitness defect in infected macrophages following activation but normal invasion and replication in naive macrophages. We identified 14 independent T. gondii insertional mutants out of >8000 screened that share a defect in their ability to survive macrophage activation due to macrophage production of reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNIs). These mutants have been designated counter-immune mutants. We successfully used one of these mutants to identify a T. gondii cytoplasmic and conoid-associated protein important for parasite resistance to macrophage RNIs. Deletion of the entire gene or just the region encoding the protein in wild-type parasites recapitulated the RNI-resistance defect in the counter-immune mutant, confirming the role of the protein in resistance to macrophage RNIs.  相似文献   

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