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1.
The repertoires of CD1- and MHC-restricted T cells are complementary, permitting the immune recognition of both lipid and peptide Ags, respectively. To compare the breadth of the CD1-restricted and MHC-restricted T cell repertoires, we evaluated T cell responses against lipid and peptide Ags of mycobacteria in leprosy, comparing tuberculoid patients, who are able to restrict the pathogen, and lepromatous patients, who have disseminated infection. The striking finding was that in lepromatous leprosy, T cells did not efficiently recognize lipid Ags from the leprosy pathogen, Mycobacterium leprae, or the related species, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, yet were able to efficiently recognize peptide Ags from M. tuberculosis, but not M. leprae. To identify a mechanism for T cell unresponsiveness against mycobacterial lipid Ags in lepromatous patients, we used T cell clones to probe the species specificity of the Ags recognized. We found that the majority of M. leprae-reactive CD1-restricted T cell clones (92%) were cross-reactive for multiple mycobacterial species, whereas the majority of M. leprae-reactive MHC-restricted T cells were species specific (66%), with a limited number of T cell clones cross-reactive (34%) with M. tuberculosis. In comparison with the MHC class II-restricted T cell repertoire, the CD1-restricted T cell repertoire is limited to recognition of cross-reactive Ags, imparting a distinct role in the host response to immunologically related pathogens.  相似文献   

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3.
Group 1 CD1 molecules have been shown to present lipid and glycolipid Ags of mycobacteria to human T cells. However, a suitable animal model for the investigation of this component of antimycobacterial immunity has not yet been established. Previously, we found that guinea pigs express multiple isoforms of group 1 CD1 proteins that are homologous to human CD1b and CD1c. In this study, we show that CD1-restricted T cell responses can be generated in guinea pigs following immunization with lipid Ags from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Splenic T cells from lipid Ag-immunized guinea pigs showed strong proliferative responses to total lipid Ags and partially purified glycolipid fractions from M. tuberculosis. These lipid Ag-reactive T cells were enriched in CD4-negative T cell fractions and showed cytotoxic activity against CD1-expressing guinea pig bone marrow-derived dendritic cells pulsed with M. tuberculosis lipid Ags. Using guinea pig cell lines transfected with individual CD1 isoforms as target cells in cytotoxic T cell assays, we found that guinea pig CD1b and CD1c molecules presented M. tuberculosis glycolipid Ags to T cells raised by mycobacterial lipid immunization. These results were confirmed using a T cell line derived from M. tuberculosis lipid Ag-immunized guinea pigs, which also showed CD1-restricted responses and cytolytic activity. Our results demonstrate that CD1-restricted responses against microbial glycolipid Ags can be generated in vivo by specific immunization and provide support for the use of the guinea pig as a relevant small animal model for the study of CD1-restricted immune responses to mycobacterial pathogens.  相似文献   

4.
Mycobacterium kansasii has emerged as an important nontuberculous mycobacterium pathogen, whose incidence and prevalence have been increasing in the last decade. M. kansasii can cause pulmonary tuberculosis clinically and radiographically indistinguishable from that caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. Unlike the widely-studied M. tuberculosis, little is known about the innate immune response against M. kansasii infection. Although inflammasome activation plays an important role in host defense against bacterial infection, its role against atypical mycobacteria remains poorly understood. In this report, the role of inflammasome activity in THP-1 macrophages against M. kansasii infection was studied. Results indicated that viable, but not heat-killed, M. kansasii induced caspase-1-dependent IL-1β secretion in macrophages. The underlying mechanism was found to be through activation of an inflammasome containing the NLR (Nod-like receptor) family member NLRP3 and the adaptor protein ASC (apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD). Further, potassium efflux, lysosomal acidification, ROS production and cathepsin B release played a role in M. kansasii-induced inflammasome activation. Finally, the secreted IL-1β derived from caspase-1 activation was shown to restrict intracellular M. kansasii. These findings demonstrate a biological role for the NLRP3 inflammasome in host defense against M. kansasii.  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies have implicated a family of mammalian Toll-like receptors (TLR) in the activation of macrophages by Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial products. We have previously shown that different TLR proteins mediate cellular activation by the distinct CD14 ligands Gram-negative bacterial LPS and mycobacterial glycolipid lipoarabinomannan (LAM). Here we show that viable Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacilli activated both Chinese hamster ovary cells and murine macrophages that overexpressed either TLR2 or TLR4. This contrasted with Gram-positive bacteria and Mycobacterium avium, which activated cells via TLR2 but not TLR4. Both virulent and attenuated strains of M. tuberculosis could activate the cells in a TLR-dependent manner. Neither membrane-bound nor soluble CD14 was required for bacilli to activate cells in a TLR-dependent manner. We also assessed whether LAM was the mycobacterial cell wall component responsible for TLR-dependent cellular activation by M. tuberculosis. We found that TLR2, but not TLR4, could confer responsiveness to LAM isolated from rapidly growing mycobacteria. In contrast, LAM isolated from M. tuberculosis or Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin failed to induce TLR-dependent activation. Lastly, both soluble and cell wall-associated mycobacterial factors were capable of mediating activation via distinct TLR proteins. A soluble heat-stable and protease-resistant factor was found to mediate TLR2-dependent activation, whereas a heat-sensitive cell-associated mycobacterial factor mediated TLR4-dependent activation. Together, our data demonstrate that Toll-like receptors can mediate cellular activation by M. tuberculosis via CD14-independent ligands that are distinct from the mycobacterial cell wall glycolipid LAM.  相似文献   

6.
Innate resistance against Mycobacterium tuberculosis is thought to depend critically on engagement of pattern recognition receptors on macrophages. However, the relative contribution of these receptors for containing M. tuberculosis infection has remained unexplored in vivo. To address this issue, we infected mice defective in CD14, TLR2, or TLR4 with M. tuberculosis by aerosol. Following infection with 100 mycobacteria, either mutant strain was as resistant as congenic control mice. Granuloma formation, macrophage activation, and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines in response to low-dose aerosol infection were identical in mutant and control mice. However, high-dose aerosol challenge with 2000 CFU M. tuberculosis revealed TLR2-, but not TLR4-defective mice to be more susceptible than control mice. In conclusion, while TLR2 signaling contributes to innate resistance against M. tuberculosis in borderline situations, its function, and that of CD14 and TLR4, in initiating protective responses against naturally low-dose airborne infection is redundant.  相似文献   

7.
CD14 and apoptosis   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
In addition to its role as a mediator of innate pro-inflammatory responses following bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) binding, the 55kDa glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-linked macrophage plasma membrane glycoprotein CD14 is now also known to play a role in phagocytic clearance of apoptotic cells. Although apoptotic cell-associated ligand(s) for CD14 await definition, initial findings suggest that ligand binding occurs close to, or at the same site as, LPS binding. Significantly, in contrast to LPS clearance and in keeping with the non-phlogistic nature of apoptosis, CD14-dependent engulfment of apoptotic cells fails to elicit pro-inflammatory cytokine release from macrophages. Therefore CD14 may be regarded as an innate immune receptor both for microbial products—after binding which activates inflammatory responses—and for self components, which either fail to induce, or alternatively actively suppress, inflammatory responses. Here we review current knowledge of the structure and functions of CD14, its ligands, its possible modes of signal transduction and its place in the panoply of macrophage molecules implicated in apoptotic-cell clearance.  相似文献   

8.
Fullerene nanomaterials inhibit the allergic response   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Fullerenes are a class of novel carbon allotropes that may have practical applications in biotechnology and medicine. Human mast cells (MC) and peripheral blood basophils are critical cells involved in the initiation and propagation of several inflammatory conditions, mainly type I hypersensitivity. We report an unanticipated role of fullerenes as a negative regulator of allergic mediator release that suppresses Ag-driven type I hypersensitivity. Human MC and peripheral blood basophils exhibited a significant inhibition of IgE dependent mediator release when preincubated with C(60) fullerenes. Protein microarray demonstrated that inhibition of mediator release involves profound reductions in the activation of signaling molecules involved in mediator release and oxidative stress. Follow-up studies demonstrated that the tyrosine phosphorylation of Syk was dramatically inhibited in Ag-challenged cells first incubated with fullerenes. In addition, fullerene preincubation significantly inhibited IgE-induced elevation in cytoplasmic reactive oxygen species levels. Furthermore, fullerenes prevented the in vivo release of histamine and drop in core body temperature in vivo using a MC-dependent model of anaphylaxis. These findings identify a new biological function for fullerenes and may represent a novel way to control MC-dependent diseases including asthma, inflammatory arthritis, heart disease, and multiple sclerosis.  相似文献   

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a virulent intracellular pathogen that survives in macrophages even in the presence of an intact adaptive immune response. Type I IFNs have been shown to exacerbate tuberculosis in mice and to be associated with disease progression in infected humans. Nevertheless, the mechanisms by which type I IFNs regulate the host response to M. tuberculosis infection are poorly understood. In this study, we show that M. tuberculosis induces an IFN-related gene expression signature in infected primary human macrophages, which is dependent on host type I IFN signaling as well as the mycobacterial virulence factor, region of difference-1. We further demonstrate that type I IFNs selectively limit the production of IL-1β, a critical mediator of immunity to M. tuberculosis. This regulation occurs at the level of IL1B mRNA expression, rather than caspase-1 activation or autocrine IL-1 amplification and appears to be preferentially used by virulent mycobacteria since avirulent M. bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) fails to trigger significant expression of type I IFNs or release of mature IL-1β protein. The latter property is associated with decreased caspase-1-dependent IL-1β maturation in the BCG-infected macrophages. Interestingly, human monocytes in contrast to macrophages produce comparable levels of IL-1β in response to either M. tuberculosis or BCG. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that virulent and avirulent mycobacteria employ distinct pathways for regulating IL-1β production in human macrophages and reveal that in the case of M. tuberculosis infection the induction of type I IFNs is a major mechanism used for this purpose.  相似文献   

11.
The phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) and the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) are two major signaling molecules involved in growth and activation of mast cells (MC) and basophils (BA). We examined the effects of the dual PI3-kinase/mTOR blocker NVP-BEZ235 on growth of normal and neoplastic BA and MC as well as immunoglobulin E (IgE)-dependent cell activation. Growth of MC and BA were determined by measuring (3)H-thymidine uptake and apoptosis. Cell activation was determined in histamine release experiments and by measuring upregulation of CD63 and CD203c after challenging with IgE plus anti-IgE or allergen. We found that NVP-BEZ235 exerts profound inhibitory effects on growth of primary and cloned neoplastic MC. In the MC leukemia cell line HMC-1, NVP-BEZ235 showed similar IC(50) values in the HMC-1.1 subclone lacking KIT D816V (0.025 μM) and the HMC-1.2 subclone expressing KIT D816V (0.005 μM). Moreover, NVP-BEZ235 was found to exert strong growth-inhibitory effects on neoplastic MC in a xenotransplant-mouse model employing NMR1-Foxn1(nu) mice. NVP-BEZ235 also exerted inhibitory effects on cytokine-dependent differentiation of normal BA and MC, but did not induce growth inhibition or apoptosis in mature MC or normal bone marrow cells. Finally, NVP-BEZ235 was found to inhibit IgE-dependent histamine release in BA and MC (IC(50) 0.5-1 μM) as well as anti-IgE-induced upregulation of CD203c in BA and IgE-dependent upregulation of CD63 in MC. In summary, NVP-BEZ235 produces growth-inhibitory effects in immature neoplastic MC and inhibits IgE-dependent activation of mature BA and MC. Whether these potentially beneficial drug effects have clinical implications is currently under investigation.  相似文献   

12.
We have shown that several lipids can modulate the macrophage innate immune response against mycobacteria and enhance their killing. Since NF-κB is required for mycobacterial killing, we tested the ability of lipids to activate NF-κB in uninfected macrophages and those infected with mycobacteria. In uninfected cells, sphingomyelin (SM), phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP) and arachidonic acid (AA) enhanced NF-κB activation and the cell surface expression of CD69, a macrophage activation marker regulated by NF-κB. Sphingosine (Sph), sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), diacylglycerol (DAG), eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and phosphatidyl choline (PC) failed to activate either NF-κB or CD69. Ceramide (Cer) activated CD69 expression without activating NF-κB. In Mycobacterium smegmatis- infected cells, NF-κB was transiently activated in a manner that was enhanced by SM, PIP and AA. In contrast Mycobacterium avium mostly repressed NF-κB activation and only SM and AA could induce its partial activation. While lipids that activate NF-κB in uninfected cells tend to kill mycobacteria in macrophages Sph and S1P failed to activate NF-κB under most conditions but nevertheless enhanced killing of M. smegmatis , M. avium and M. tuberculosis H37Rv. Our results argue that both NF-κB-dependent and -independent mechanisms are involved in macrophage killing of mycobacteria and that both mechanisms can be enhanced by selected lipids.  相似文献   

13.
Autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice can be prevented by application of Ags derived from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the form of bacillus Calmette-Guérin or CFA. Disease protection by CFA is associated with a reduction in the numbers of pathogenic β-cell specific, self-reactive CTLs, a phenomenon dependent on the presence and function of NK cells. However, the mechanisms by which NK cells are activated and recruited by heat-killed M. tuberculosis within CFA are unclear. In this study, we report that CFA-mediated NK cell activation and mobilization is dependent on CD1d expression. The administration of M. tuberculosis from CFA results in rapid NKT cell activation and IFN-γ secretion both in vitro and in vivo. CFA-induced NKT cell activation is intact in MyD88(-/-) mice suggesting that the mechanism is independent of TLR signaling. Furthermore, CD1d expression was found to be essential for both M. tuberculosis-triggered NKT cell activation and CFA-mediated protection of NOD mice from diabetes. Collectively, these findings reveal hitherto previously unidentified roles for NKT cells in the adjuvant-promoting effects of CFA on innate and adaptive immunity.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Protective immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis involves major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I)- and CD1-restricted CD8 T cells, but the mechanisms underlying antigen delivery to antigen-presenting molecules remain enigmatic. Macrophages, the primary host cells for mycobacteria, are CD1-negative. Here we show that M. tuberculosis phagosomes are secluded from the cytosolic MHC-I processing pathway and that mycobacteria-infected cells lose their antigen-presenting capacity. We also show that mycobacteria induce apoptosis in macrophages, causing the release of apoptotic vesicles that carry mycobacterial antigens to uninfected antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Inhibition of apoptosis reduced transfer of antigens to bystander cells and activation of CD8 T cells. Uninfected dendritic cells, which engulfed extracellular vesicles, were indispensable for subsequent cross-presentation of antigens, through MHC-I and CD1b, to T cells from mycobacteria-sensitized donors. This new 'detour' pathway for presentation of antigens from a phagosome-contained pathogen shows the functional significance of infection-induced apoptosis in the activation of CD8 T cells specific for both protein and glycolipid antigens in tuberculosis.  相似文献   

16.
Intravascular application of goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin E (IgE) was used to stimulate parenchymal mast cells in situ in perfused rabbit lungs. Sustained pulmonary arterial pressure rise was evoked in the absence of lung vascular permeability increase and lung edema formation. Early prostaglandin (PG) D2 and histamine release into the perfusate was documented, accompanied by more sustained liberation of cysteinyl leukotrienes (LT), LTB4, and PGI2. The quantities of these inflammatory mediators displayed the following order: histamine greater than cysteinyl-LT greater than PGI2 greater than LTB4 greater than PGD2. Pressor response and inflammatory mediator release revealed corresponding bell-shaped dose dependencies. Cyclooxygenase inhibition (acetylsalicylic acid) suppressed prostanoid generation, increased LT release, and did not substantially affect pressor response and histamine liberation. BW755 C, a cyclo- and lipoxygenase inhibitor, blocked the release of cysteinyl-LT and markedly reduced the liberation of the other inflammatory mediators as well as the pressor response. The H1-antagonist clemastine caused a moderate reduction of the anti-IgE-provoked pressure rise. We conclude that intravascular anti-IgE challenge in intact lungs provokes the release of an inflammatory mediator profile compatible with in situ lung parenchymal mast cell activation. Pulmonary hypertension represents the predominant vascular response, presumably mediated by cysteinyl-LT and, to a minor extent, histamine liberation.  相似文献   

17.
Pathogenic mycobacteria escape host innate immune responses by surviving within phagosomes of host macrophages and blocking their delivery to lysosomes. Avoiding lysosomal delivery may also be involved in the capacity of living mycobacteria to modulate MHC class I- or II-dependent T cell responses, which may contribute to their pathogenicity in vivo. In this study, we show that the presentation of mycobacterial Ags is independent of the site of intracellular residence inside professional APCs. Infection of mouse macrophages or dendritic cells in vitro with mycobacterial mutants that are unable to escape lysosomal transfer resulted in an identical efficiency of Ag presentation compared with wild-type mycobacteria. Moreover, in vivo, such mutants induced CD4(+) Th1 or CD8(+) CTL responses in mice against various mycobacterial Ags that were comparable to those induced by their wild-type counterparts. These results suggest that the limiting factor for the generation of an adaptive immune response against mycobacteria is not the degree of lysosomal delivery. These findings are important in the rational design of improved vaccines to combat mycobacterial diseases.  相似文献   

18.
The pathogenesis of tuberculosis (TBC) meningitis is still unknown. As shown by previous studies, human microglia can be the target of mycobacteria, but no data are available about their cellular response to infection. Consequently, we studied the expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-10 in human microglia pure cultures infected with the two variants of Mycobacterium avium (domed-opaque (SmD) and transparent (SmT)) and with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Results showed that microglia was productively infected by mycobacteria which could grow inside the cells. Mycobacteria internalization was more rapid for M. avium, but M. tuberculosis infection turned out to be more efficient due to the incorporation of densely packed bacteria. TNF-alpha expression was not affected by M. avium, whereas an increase followed by a decrease was observed in M. tuberculosis. Both IL-1 and IL-10 cytokine expression was rapidly inhibited by infection with the more virulent bacteria, whereas the non-pathogenic one had almost no effect. Also, the expression of the co-stimulatory molecule CD137, a member of tumor necrosis factor receptor family, was affected by infection with virulent mycobacteria. Our results show that microglia response to mycobacterial infection is modulated in correlation with virulence, mainly toward inhibition of inflammatory response. This observation might be one of the mechanisms by which non-pathogenic mycobacteria are quickly eliminated, explaining one of the bases of virulence.  相似文献   

19.
Mycobacterial shuttle vectors contain dual origins of replication for growth in both Escherichia coli and mycobacteria. One such vector, pSUM36, was re-engineered for high-level protein expression in diverse bacterial species. The modified vector (pSUM-kan-MCS2) enabled green fluorescent protein expression in E. coli, Mycobacterium smegmatis, and M. avium at levels up to 50-fold higher than that detected with the parental vector, which was originally developed with a lacZα promoter. This high-level fluorescent protein expression allowed easy visualization of M. smegmatis and M. avium in infected macrophages. The M. tuberculosis gene esat-6 was cloned in place of the green fluorescence protein gene (gfp) to determine the impact of ESAT-6 on the innate inflammatory response. The modified vector (pSUM-kan-MCS2) yielded high levels of ESAT-6 expression in M. smegmatis. The ability of ESAT-6 to suppress innate inflammatory pathways was assayed with a novel macrophage reporter cell line, designed with an interleukin-6 (IL-6) promoter-driven GFP cassette. This stable cell line fluoresces in response to diverse mycobacterial strains and stimuli, such as lipopolysaccharide. M. smegmatis clones expressing high levels of ESAT-6 failed to attenuate IL-6-driven GFP expression. Pure ESAT-6, produced in E. coli, was insufficient to suppress a strong inflammatory response elicited by M. smegmatis or lipopolysaccharide, with ESAT-6 itself directly activating the IL-6 pathway. In summary, a pSUM-protein expression vector and a mammalian IL-6 reporter cell line provide new tools for understanding the pathogenic mechanisms deployed by various mycobacterial species.  相似文献   

20.
Mast cells (MCs) are recognized to play an important role in bacterial host defense in the murine system. In this study, we studied the interaction of human MCs, isolated from the intestine and purified to homogeneity, with different Escherichia coli and Shigella flexneri strains. We show that alpha-hemolysin (Hly)-producing E. coli strains induce the release of histamine, leukotrienes, and proinflammatory cytokines in intestinal MCs. In contrast, MCs were virtually unresponsive to S. flexneri and several Hly-negative E. coli strains, including the isogenic Hly-deficient mutants of Hly(+) strains. Hly(+) E. coli but not Hly(-) E. coli caused an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) levels. Blocking of extracellular Ca(2+) and of the calmodulin/calcineurin pathway by cyclosporin A inhibited the response to Hly(+) E. coli. Furthermore, inhibition of MAPKs p38 and ERK reduces activation of MCs by Hly(+) E. coli. In addition, using an ex vivo system, we directly record the histamine release by MCs located in the lamina propria after infection with Hly(+) E. coli. Our data indicate that human intestinal mast cells interact with selected Gram-negative bacteria, establish E. coli Hly as a factor regulating MC effector functions, and argue further for a role of human MCs in innate immunity.  相似文献   

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