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1.
Potentially fatal physiologic and metabolic derangements can occur in response to bacterial infection in animals and man. Recently it has been shown that alterations in the levels of circulating cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-alpha occur shortly after bacterial challenge. To understand better the role of IL-6 in inflammation, we investigated the effects of in vivo anti-mouse IL-6 antibody treatment in a mouse model of septic shock. Rat anti-mouse IL-6 neutralizing mAb was produced from splenocytes of an animal immunized with mouse rIL-6. This mAb, MP5-20F3, was a very potent and specific antagonist of mouse IL-6 in vitro bioactivity, demonstrated using the NFS60 myelomonocytic and KD83 plasmacytoma target cell lines, and also immunoprecipitated radiolabeled IL-6. Anti-IL-6 mAb pretreatment of mice subsequently challenged with lethal doses of i.p. Escherichia coli or i.v. TNF-alpha protected mice from death caused by these treatments. Pretreatment of E. coli-challenged mice with anti-IL-6 led to an increase in serum TNF bioactivity, in comparison to isotype control antibody, implicating IL-6 as a negative modulator of TNF in vivo. Anti-TNF-alpha treatment of mice challenged i.p. with live E. coli resulted in a 70% decrease in serum IL-6 levels, determined by immunoenzymetric assay, compared to control antibody, thereby supporting a role for TNF-alpha as a positive regulator of IL-6 levels. We conclude that IL-6 is a mediator in lethal E. coli infection, and suggest that antagonists of IL-6 may be beneficial therapeutically in life-threatening bacterial infection.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The effects of recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL-2) administered prophylactically on the death of CBA/J mice challenged with Klebsiella pneumoniae 27 intraperitoneally were examined. rIL-2 administered subcutaneously at 20 micrograms per mouse for 7 days enhanced survival after a lethal challenge. The injection of anti-asialo GM1 antibody did not influence the effect of rIL-2. In mice given rIL-2, the number of peritoneal macrophages increased, and the infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) into the peritoneal cavity after the bacterial challenge was enhanced. In addition, adoptive transfer of sera and peritoneal exudate cells (PEC), consisting of an approximately equal number of macrophages and PMN, obtained from mice given rIL-2 enhanced resistance to a K. pneumoniae infection, compared with adoptive transfer of sera and PEC obtained from mice not given rIL-2. These results indicate that rIL-2 protects mice from a lethal challenge with K. pneumoniae, and suggest that the protective effect is due to an increase in the number of phagocytic cells and in the cooperative activity of the sera and the phagocytic cells.  相似文献   

4.
The production of TNF-alpha, IL-1, and IL-6 was measured in mice after bolus i.v. Escherichia coli O111 LPS injections and during bacteremia induced either by bolus i.v. or by i.p. challenges of live E. coli O111. High but transient TNF-alpha peaks were observed after bolus i.v. LPS or bacterial challenges. In contrast, the levels during lethal peritonitis increased progressively to values 50- to 100-fold lower than the peak values observed after i.v. injections, and remained sustained until death. Whereas after i.v. challenge with 1000 LD50 of LPS, anti-TNF-alpha antibody fully protected mice from death and reduced serum IL-1 and IL-6 levels, anti-TNF-alpha antibody did not improve the survival of mice nor reduced serum IL-1 and IL-6 levels after i.p. bacterial challenge. In contrast to anti-TNF-alpha antibodies, anti-LPS antibodies were protective in the peritonitis model. Protection was accompanied by a striking reduction of bacterial numbers and of TNF-alpha, IL-1, and IL-6 levels in the serum, but the levels of these cytokines were only marginally affected in the peritoneal lavage fluid. This latter observation demonstrates that the local peritoneal cytokines did not diffuse readily into the circulation, thus suggesting that at least part of the circulating cytokines are produced systemically. In conclusion, the striking differences between cytokine profiles as well as the divergent efficacy of anti-TNF-alpha antibody after i.v. bolus and after i.p. challenges suggest that TNF-alpha may not be as important in the pathogenesis of lethal peritonitis than after lethal acute bacteremia.  相似文献   

5.
IL-1R-deficient mice (IL-1R(-/-)) and their wild-type controls (IL-1R(+/+)) were i.v. inoculated with 1 x 10(7) or 10(6) Staphylococcus aureus per mouse to mimic bacterial sepsis and septic arthritis. The disease outcome was severely worsened in the IL-1R(-/-) mice as compared with IL-1R(+/+) mice. Indeed, 3 days after inoculation of 10(7) S. aureus per mouse 84% of IL-1R(-/-) mice displayed clinical signs of septicemia as compared with none of the IL-1R(+/+) mice. On day 9 after inoculation with 10(6) S. aureus per mouse 75% of the IL-1R(-/-) mice were dead as compared with none of the IL-1R(+/+) mice. Also, the number of staphylococci in circulation was 25- to 30-fold increased in IL-1R(-/-) mice as compared with IL-1R(+/+) mice, the most probable reason for the outcome. The frequency and severity of septic arthritis were significantly increased in IL-1R(-/-) mice, as compared with IL-1R(+/+) mice, following i.v. inoculation of staphylococci. This was probably due to an increased accumulation of bacteria in the joints of IL-1R(-/-) mice as compared with their wild-type controls. Interestingly, while serum levels of IL-18 in IL-1R(-/-) mice were significantly lower than in IL-1R(+/+) mice 24 h after inoculation of S. aureus, both IL-18 and IL-1beta were significantly increased in IL-1R(-/-) vs IL-1R(+/+) mice 4 days after the bacterial inoculation. In conclusion, IL-1R signaling plays a crucial role in host protection during systemic S. aureus infection as seen by the fatal outcome of S. aureus sepsis and arthritis in IL-1R-deficient mice.  相似文献   

6.
C57BL/cnb mice were found to be protected against a lethal combination of recombinant murine (m) TNF and GalN by pretreatment with several cytokines. At certain doses, rmTNF and human (h) TNF protected completely. The clearest protection was induced by rIL-1: all four rIL-1 species (both m and h, as well as alpha and beta) protected when given 12 h before the challenge. LPS and rmIFN-gamma protected weakly, whereas rmIL-6 and rhIL-6 did not protect at all. Also adrenocorticotropic hormone, dexamethasone, or dexamethasone in combination with rhIL-6 could not protect. A single IL-1 injection also completely protected mice against a lethal dose of mTNF in the absence of GalN sensitization. The desensitization by IL-1 cannot be explained by a faster clearance of the challenge TNF. In addition, we demonstrate that the IL-1-induced desensitization was only observed when a functioning liver was present, that IL-1-pretreated animals did not show decreased numbers of hepatocyte TNF receptors, and that the amount of TNF-induced IL-6 was not reduced.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Innate cellular production of IFN-gamma is suppressed after repeated exposure to LPS, whereas CpG-containing DNA potentiates IFN-gamma production. We compared the modulatory effects of LPS and CpG on specific cellular and cytokine responses necessary for NK-cell dependent IFN-gamma synthesis. C3H/HeN mice pretreated with LPS for 2 days generated 5-fold less circulating IL-12 p70 and IFN-gamma in response to subsequent LPS challenge than did challenged control mice. In contrast, CpG-pretreated mice produced 10-fold more circulating IFN-gamma without similar changes in IL-12 p70 levels, but with 10-fold increases in serum IL-18 relative to LPS-challenged control or endotoxin-tolerant mice. The role of IL-18 in CpG-induced immune potentiation was studied in splenocyte cultures from control, LPS-conditioned, or CpG-conditioned mice. These cultures produced similar amounts of IFN-gamma in response to rIL-12 and rIL-18. However, only CpG-conditioned cells produced IFN-gamma when cultured with LPS or CpG, and production was ablated in the presence of anti-IL-18R Ab. Anti-IL-18R Ab also reduced in vivo IFN-gamma production by >2-fold in CpG-pretreated mice. Finally, combined pretreatment of mice with LPS and CpG suppressed the production of circulating IFN-gamma, IL-12 p70, and IL-18 after subsequent LPS challenge. We conclude that CpG potentiates innate IFN-gamma production from NK cells by increasing IL-18 availability, but that the suppressive effects of LPS on innate cellular immunity dominate during combined LPS and CpG pretreatment. Multiple Toll-like receptor engagement in vivo during infection can result in functional polarization of innate immunity dominated by a specific Toll-like receptor response.  相似文献   

9.
Intra-abdominal infection in patients following major visceral surgery is associated with high mortality. Using a macrophage depletion technique, we demonstrate that in murine septic peritonitis, Kupffer cells are a major source of systemic IL-10 levels. Kupffer cell-depleted mice were highly susceptible to the lethal effects of septic peritonitis and exhibited an increased bacterial load. Kupffer cell-depleted mice were protected by the administration of an IL-10-Fc fusion protein. Loss of Kupffer cell-derived IL-10 was associated with a weak increase in serum IL-12 levels, whereas TNF, IL-1alpha, and IL-18 levels were not significantly elevated, suggesting that the loss of Kupffer cell-derived IL-10 did not result in a toxic cytokine release syndrome. Instead, loss of Kupffer cell-derived IL-10 was associated with a reduced splenocyte production of IFN-gamma that is required for immune protection in murine septic peritonitis. Therefore, the results suggest that the protective function of IL-10 in septic peritonitis may not be restricted to the anti-inflammatory activities of IL-10.  相似文献   

10.
Unmethylated CpG dinucleotides in bacterial DNA or synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) are known as potent activators of the immune system and inducers of several Th1-associated immunomodulatory cytokines. We therefore investigated whether such a CpG-containing ODN (CpG ODN) given mucosally in the female genital tract could enhance innate immunity and protect against genital herpes infection. Groups of C57BL/6 mice were treated intravaginally with either CpG ODN or a non-CpG ODN control in the absence of any antigen either 2 days before or 4 h after an intravaginal challenge with a normally lethal dose of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2). Mice treated with CpG ODN exhibited significantly decreased titers of HSV-2 in their vaginal fluids compared with non-CpG ODN-treated mice. Furthermore, CpG ODN pretreatment significantly protected against development of disease and death compared to non-CpG ODN pretreatment. Most strikingly, CpG ODN conferred protection against disease and death even when given after the viral challenge. The CpG ODN-induced protection was associated with a rapid production of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma), interleukin-12 (IL-12), IL-18, and RANTES in the genital tract mucosa following CpG ODN treatment. The observed protection appeared to be dependent on IFN-gamma, IL-12, IL-18, and T cells, as CpG ODN pretreatment did not confer any significant protection in mice deficient in IFN-gamma, IL-12, IL-18, or T cells. Further, a complete protective immunity to reinfection was elicited in CpG ODN-treated, HSV-2-challenged mice, suggesting a role for mucosally administered CpG ODN in inducing the development of an acquired immune response in addition to its potent stimulation of innate immunity.  相似文献   

11.
Human rIL-1 alpha and -1 beta are shown to increase significantly the CFU-culture activity in the spleen as well as at other sites after i.v. or i.p. administration. IL-1 can also significantly increase survival and can "rescue" a number of animals if administered either before or after lethal doses of cyclophosphamide or gamma-irradiation. The protective and reconstitutive activities of the rIL-1 are shown to correlate with increased CFU-culture frequency and total number, as well as increased cellularity in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, suggesting that this is one of their mechanisms of action. The sequence and timing of administration of human rIL-1 is critical for the protection or rescue of animals receiving DNA-damaging agents; maximal activity is achieved when IL-1 is given 20 h before insult or 48 h after alkylating agent administration. Minimal therapeutic activity is observed with IL-1 as a single agent for the treatment of metastatic disease compared with other biologic response modifiers including IFN-gamma.  相似文献   

12.
We have developed small peptide mimetics of IFN-gamma that can bypass the poxvirus virulence factor B8R protein, which binds to intact IFN-gamma and prevents its interaction with receptor extracellular domain. Thus, these peptides inhibit vaccinia virus replication in cell culture where intact IFN-gamma is ineffective. We demonstrate here that the mouse IFN-gamma-mimetic peptide, IFN-gamma(95-132), protects C57BL/6 mice against overwhelming lethal vaccinia virus infection. The mimetic peptide was synthesized with an attached lipophilic group for penetration of cell plasma membrane. Injection of mimetic i.p. before and at the time of intranasal (10(6) PFU) or i.p. (10(7) PFU) challenge with virus resulted in complete protection at 200 microg of mimetic and 40-60% protection at 5 microg of mimetic. Initiation of treatment of mice with IFN-gamma mimetic up to 2 days postinfection resulted in complete protection against death, whereas initiation of treatment at 6 days postinfection resulted in 40% protection. Administration of mimetic by the oral route also completely protected mice against the intranasal route of a lethal dose of vaccinia virus challenge. In addition to its direct antiviral effect, the mimetic also possessed adjuvant effects in boosting humoral and cellular immunity to vaccinia virus. The combination of antiviral and adjuvant effects by the IFN mimetic probably plays a role in its potent anti-vaccinia virus properties. These results suggest an effective therapeutic against ongoing, lethal poxvirus infections that taps into innate and adaptive host defenses.  相似文献   

13.
The role of endogenous IL-4 in resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection was investigated by in vivo administration of an anti-IL-4 mAb (11B11). Mice treated with 0.01 to 0.4 mg of anti-IL-4 mAb before L. monocytogenes challenge demonstrated a significantly reduced peak bacterial burden in their livers and spleens and accelerated bacterial clearance from these organs. In addition, histopathologic damage to the liver was reduced. Maximal protection was achieved by i.p. injection of 0.1 mg of anti-IL-4 mAb 2 or 24 h before L. monocytogenes challenge; treatment with anti-IL-4 mAb after injection of L. monocytogenes had no effect on antilisterial resistance. Anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control Listeria-infected mice exhibited similar patterns of IFN-gamma, IL-2, and IL-4 mRNA, as determined by polymerase chain reaction amplification of RNA extracted from spleen cells. In both anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control mice, IFN-gamma, IL-2, and IL-4 mRNA were produced within 4 h after challenge. Cytokine mRNA levels were similar for anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control mice, except for the greater amount of IFN-gamma mRNA in the anti-IL-4 mAb-treated mice at 4 h after L. monocytogenes challenge. IFN-gamma and IL-2 mRNA levels were sustained for at least 5 days, whereas IL-4 mRNA was undetectable by 3 days after challenge. There were no significant differences in the amounts of IL-4 and IFN-gamma detected in culture supernatants of spleen cells from anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control Listeria-infected mice. These results suggest that endogenous IL-4, a cytokine thought to be produced principally by Th2 cells, has a deleterious effect on host defense against the facultative intracellular pathogen L. monocytogenes. Administration of an anti-IL-4 mAb increases antilisterial resistance without causing a detectable shift to a Th1 type of cytokine response.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of IL-18 to IL-18Rα induces both proinflammatory and protective functions during infection, depending on the context in which it occurs. IL-18 is highly expressed in the liver of wild-type (WT) C57BL/6 mice following lethal infection with highly virulent Ixodes ovatus ehrlichia (IOE), an obligate intracellular bacterium that causes acute fatal toxic shock-like syndrome. In this study, we found that IOE infection of IL-18Rα(-/-) mice resulted in significantly less host cell apoptosis, decreased hepatic leukocyte recruitment, enhanced bacterial clearance, and prolonged survival compared with infected WT mice, suggesting a pathogenic role for IL-18/IL-18Rα in Ehrlichia-induced toxic shock. Although lack of IL-18R decreased the magnitude of IFN-γ producing type-1 immune response, enhanced resistance of IL-18Rα(-/-) mice against Ehrlichia correlated with increased proinflammatory cytokines at sites of infection, decreased systemic IL-10 production, increased frequency of protective NKT cells producing TNF-α and IFN-γ, and decreased frequency of pathogenic TNF-α-producing CD8(+) T cells. Adoptive transfer of immune WT CD8(+) T cells increased bacterial burden in IL-18Rα(-/-) mice following IOE infection. Furthermore, rIL-18 treatment of WT mice infected with mildly virulent Ehrlichia muris impaired bacterial clearance and enhanced liver injury. Finally, lack of IL-18R signal reduced dendritic cell maturation and their TNF-α production, suggesting that IL-18 might promote the adaptive pathogenic immune responses against Ehrlichia by influencing T cell priming functions of dendritic cells. Together, these results suggested that the presence or absence of IL-18R signals governs the pathogenic versus protective immunity in a model of Ehrlichia-induced immunopathology.  相似文献   

15.
Type I IL-1 receptor blockade exacerbates murine listeriosis.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
It was found that IL-1 is produced in livers and spleens of mice shortly after the i.v. injection of a sublethal or lethal Listeria monocytogenes inoculum. In sublethally infected mice, IL-1 was present in infected livers and spleens by the end of the first day of infection. Thereafter, the amounts of IL-1 in these organs increased and decreased in concordance with bacterial numbers. IL-1 was not present in the peripheral circulation of mice during sublethal listeriosis, but was present in the blood late in lethal infection. Evidence showing that IL-1 plays a role in antibacterial resistance early in listeriosis was obtained through the use of 35F5 mAb that binds to the murine type I IL-1R and functions to block IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta actions. Blockade of the type I IL-1R by the 35F5 mAb results in greatly enhanced bacterial growth in the livers and spleens of mice that had received a sublethal Listeria inoculum. Consistent with the exacerbation of listeriosis caused by 35F5 mAb, but in contrast to the effect of 35F5 mAb in other murine models, 35F5 mAb-treated mice exhibit markedly elevated levels of IL-6 in their circulation and infected organs.  相似文献   

16.
To evaluate vaccine efficacy in protecting against coxsackievirus A16 (CA16), which causes human hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD), we established the first neonatal mouse model. In this article, we report data concerning CA16-induced pathological changes, and we demonstrate that anti-CA16 antibody can protect mice against lethal challenge and that the neonatal mouse model could be used to evaluate vaccine efficacy. To establish a mouse model, a BJCA08/CA16 strain (at 260 50% lethal doses [LD50]) was isolated from a patient and used to intracerebrally (i.c.) inoculate neonatal mice. The infection resulted in wasting, hind-limb paralysis, and even death. Pathological examination and immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining indicated that BJCA08 had a strong tropism to muscle and caused severe necrosis in skeletal and cardiac muscles. We then found that BJCA08 pretreated with goat anti-G10/CA16 serum could significantly lose its lethal effect in neonatal mice. When the anti-G10 serum was intraperitoneally (i.p.) injected into the neonatal mice and, within 1 h, the same mice were intracerebrally inoculated with BJCA08, there was significant passive immunization protection. In a separate experiment, female mice were immunized with formaldehyde-inactivated G10/CA16 and BJCA08/CA16 and then allowed to mate 1 h after the first immunization. We found that there was significant protection against BJCA08 for neonatal mice born to the immunized dams. These data demonstrated that anti-CA16 antibody may block virus invasion and protect mice against lethal challenge, and that the neonatal mouse model was a viable tool for evaluating vaccine efficacy.  相似文献   

17.
Mice exposed to sublethal endotoxemia develop short-term endotoxin tolerance, a state characterized by decreased monokine production and enhanced protection against endotoxic lethality. We confirmed that TNF-alpha production is markedly impaired in endotoxin-tolerant mice and additionally found 2- to 6-fold decreases in serum IFN-gamma in these animals following endotoxin challenge. The IFN-gamma deficiency of endotoxin tolerance correlated with 8-fold decreases in the bioactive p40/p35 heterodimeric form of IL-12. In contrast, total circulating IL-12 p40 was reduced by only 30-50%. Endotoxin-tolerant mice were less responsive to IL-12 than control mice, as evidenced by 3-fold lower levels of IFN-gamma inducible in vivo when rIL-12 was administered at the time of endotoxin challenge. Similarly, spleen cell cultures of endotoxin-tolerant mice produced 3-fold less IFN-gamma in the presence of optimal concentrations of both IL-12 and IL-18. Finally, levels of IL-12R beta 2 subunit mRNA and the percent composition of NK lymphocytes in the spleen were both decreased in endotoxin-tolerant mice relative to controls. We conclude that endotoxin-tolerant mice are profoundly impaired in their ability to produce IFN-gamma in response to endotoxin and that this is associated with acquired defects in both the production of circulating IL-12 heterodimer response and the response to IL-12 by NK cells.  相似文献   

18.
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is the leading cause of neonatal pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis. We have previously shown that in adult mice GBS glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is an extracellular virulence factor that induces production of the immunosuppressive cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) by the host early upon bacterial infection. Here, we investigate whether immunity to neonatal GBS infection could be achieved through maternal vaccination against bacterial GAPDH. Female BALB/c mice were immunized with rGAPDH and the progeny was infected with a lethal inoculum of GBS strains. Neonatal mice born from mothers immunized with rGAPDH were protected against infection with GBS strains, including the ST-17 highly virulent clone. A similar protective effect was observed in newborns passively immunized with anti-rGAPDH IgG antibodies, or F(ab')(2) fragments, indicating that protection achieved with rGAPDH vaccination is independent of opsonophagocytic killing of bacteria. Protection against lethal GBS infection through rGAPDH maternal vaccination was due to neutralization of IL-10 production soon after infection. Consequently, IL-10 deficient (IL-10(-/-)) mice pups were as resistant to GBS infection as pups born from vaccinated mothers. We observed that protection was correlated with increased neutrophil trafficking to infected organs. Thus, anti-rGAPDH or anti-IL-10R treatment of mice pups before GBS infection resulted in increased neutrophil numbers and lower bacterial load in infected organs, as compared to newborn mice treated with the respective control antibodies. We showed that mothers immunized with rGAPDH produce neutralizing antibodies that are sufficient to decrease IL-10 production and induce neutrophil recruitment into infected tissues in newborn mice. These results uncover a novel mechanism for GBS virulence in a neonatal host that could be neutralized by vaccination or immunotherapy. As GBS GAPDH is a structurally conserved enzyme that is metabolically essential for bacterial growth in media containing glucose as the sole carbon source (i.e., the blood), this protein constitutes a powerful candidate for the development of a human vaccine against this pathogen.  相似文献   

19.
Immunization of mice with a vaccine (ts-4) strain of Toxoplasma gondii is known to induce complete protection against subsequent lethal infection. Ts-4-mediated protection has been reported to be primarily dependent on IFN-gamma-producing CD8+ T cells. However, duration of CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity in the ts-4-vaccinated animals is not known. In the present study, the kinetics of the CD8+ T cell response in mice immunized with the ts-4 strain of T. gondii was evaluated. Optimal CD8+ T cell immunity persisted at least 6 mo after vaccination, and mice at this time point continued to overcome lethal challenge with a more virulent strain. However, at 9 mo postimmunization, CD8+ T cell immunity was severely diminished and the mice succumbed to Toxoplasma challenge. Pretreatment of animals, vaccinated 9 mo earlier, with rIL-15 prevented the mortality induced by Toxoplasma challenge. The protective effect of IL-15 treatment was due to a rise in the frequency of Ag-specific CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T cells from IL-15-administered animals showed increased proliferation and IFN-gamma production in response to antigenic restimulation. These findings suggest that rIL-15 can reverse the decline in the long-term CD8+ T cell immune response in mice immunized with vaccine strain of T. gondii.  相似文献   

20.
Bacillus anthracis infects hosts as a spore, germinates, and disseminates in its vegetative form. Production of anthrax lethal and edema toxins following bacterial outgrowth results in host death. Macrophages of inbred mouse strains are either sensitive or resistant to lethal toxin depending on whether they express the lethal toxin responsive or non-responsive alleles of the inflammasome sensor Nlrp1b (Nlrp1b(S/S) or Nlrp1b(R/R), respectively). In this study, Nlrp1b was shown to affect mouse susceptibility to infection. Inbred and congenic mice harboring macrophage-sensitizing Nlrp1b(S/S) alleles (which allow activation of caspase-1 and IL-1β release in response to anthrax lethal toxin challenge) effectively controlled bacterial growth and dissemination when compared to mice having Nlrp1b(R/R) alleles (which cannot activate caspase-1 in response to toxin). Nlrp1b(S)-mediated resistance to infection was not dependent on the route of infection and was observed when bacteria were introduced by either subcutaneous or intravenous routes. Resistance did not occur through alterations in spore germination, as vegetative bacteria were also killed in Nlrp1b(S/S) mice. Resistance to infection required the actions of both caspase-1 and IL-1β as Nlrp1b(S/S) mice deleted of caspase-1 or the IL-1 receptor, or treated with the Il-1 receptor antagonist anakinra, were sensitized to infection. Comparison of circulating neutrophil levels and IL-1β responses in Nlrp1b(S/S),Nlrp1b(R/) (R) and IL-1 receptor knockout mice implicated Nlrp1b and IL-1 signaling in control of neutrophil responses to anthrax infection. Neutrophil depletion experiments verified the importance of this cell type in resistance to B. anthracis infection. These data confirm an inverse relationship between murine macrophage sensitivity to lethal toxin and mouse susceptibility to spore infection, and establish roles for Nlrp1b(S), caspase-1, and IL-1β in countering anthrax infection.  相似文献   

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