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1.
Oomycete pathogens of plants and animals are related to marine algae and have evolved mechanisms to avoid or suppress host defences independently of other groups of pathogens, such as bacteria and fungi. They cause many destructive diseases affecting crops, forests and aquaculture. The development of genomic resources has led to a dramatic increase in our knowledge of the effectors used by these pathogens to suppress host defences. In particular, a huge, rapidly diverging superfamily of effectors with 100–600 members per genome has been identified. Proteins in this family use the N-terminal motifs RxLR and dEER to cross the host plasma cell membrane autonomously. Once inside the host cell, the proteins suppress host defence signalling. The importance of this effector family is underlined by the fact that plants have evolved intracellular defence receptors to detect the effectors and trigger a rapid counter-attack. The mechanisms by which the effector enter host cells, and by which they suppress host defences, remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

2.
Severe dengue virus infections usually occur in individuals who have preexisting anti-dengue virus antibodies. Mast cells are known to play an important role in host defense against several pathogens, but their role in viral infection has not yet been elucidated. The effects of dengue virus infection on the production of chemokines by human mast cells were examined. Elevated levels of secreted RANTES, MIP-1alpha, and MIP-1beta, but not IL-8 or ENA-78, were observed following infection of KU812 or HMC-1 human mast cell-basophil lines. In some cases a >200-fold increase in RANTES production was observed. Cord blood-derived cultured human mast cells treated with dengue virus in the presence of subneutralizing concentrations of dengue virus-specific antibody also demonstrated significantly (P < 0.05) increased RANTES production, under conditions which did not induce significant degranulation. Chemokine responses were not observed when mast cells were treated with UV-inactivated dengue virus in the presence or absence of human dengue virus-specific antibody. Neither antibody-enhanced dengue virus infection of the highly permissive U937 monocytic cell line nor adenovirus infection of mast cells induced a RANTES, MIP-1alpha, or MIP-1beta response, demonstrating a selective mast cell response to dengue virus. These results suggest a role for mast cells in the initiation of chemokine-dependent host responses to dengue virus infection.  相似文献   

3.
When a cell dies in vivo, the event does not go unnoticed. The host has evolved mechanisms to detect the death of cells and rapidly investigate the nature of their demise. If cell death is a result of natural causes - that is, it is part of normal physiological processes - then there is little threat to the organism. In this situation, little else is done other than to remove the corpse. However, if cells have died as the consequence of some violence or disease, then both defence and repair mechanisms are mobilized in the host. The importance of these processes to host defence and disease pathogenesis has only been appreciated relatively recently. This article reviews our current knowledge of these processes.  相似文献   

4.
Gram negative bacterial infection is a leading cause of fatality and is attributed, at least in part, to the bacteria's capacity to persist in the host in spite of appropriate antibiotic therapy. It has been suggested that bacteria evade antibiotics by hiding within host cells. We sought to investigate this important aspect of infections in mast cells, which are inflammatory cells found in close proximity to the host-environment interface and which have recently been reported to play a crucial role in the early innate immune response to bacteria. We examined mast cell interactions with FimH-expressing E. coli, one of the major opportunistic pathogens of humans. We determined that in serum free conditions, these bacteria were able to trigger mast cell uptake without loss of bacterial viability. CD48, a mannose containing GPI (glycosylphosphatidylinositol)-linked molecule was found to be the receptor of FimH-expressing E. coli in mouse mast cells. We found that the internalization via CD48 was blocked by filipin, a cholesterol binding drug known to disrupt cholesterol/glycolipid-enriched microdomains and the bacteria-encasing vacuoles were rich in cholesterol inside cells. Interestingly, we found that mast cells subsequently expelled majority of the intracellular bacteria in 24 hours. This expulsion process was blocked by lovastatin/cyclodextrin treatment, which is known to inhibit cellular trafficking of cholesterol/glycolipid-enriched microdomains. Thus, the bacterial entry into and expulsion from mast cells were critically dependent on cholesterol/glycolipid-enriched microdomains, which represents a novel mode of tussle between the pathogen and the mast cell occurring in opsonin deficient sites in the body or even at other sites in naive or immunocompromised hosts which have low systemic levels of E. coli specific antibody.  相似文献   

5.
Immune reactions to enteric nematodes, in which mast cells are thought to play an important role, are abrogated following corticosteroid treatment of host animals. This is probably due, at least in part, to inhibition of cytokine production by T cells. It has proved difficult to block worm expulsion in mice with corticosteroids. We have therefore examined the effects of corticosteroids on mast cell numbers and concentrations of the mast cell granule-specific serine protease Mouse Intestinal Mast Cell Protease (MIMCP) in the intestines of mice infected with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Mucosal mast cell (MMC) numbers and concentrations of MIMCP were unaltered by steroid treatment. This is in marked contrast to Nippostrongylus-infected rats which showed decreases in both mast cell numbers and concentrations of the rat mucosal mast cell protease RMCP II after steroid treatment. This suggests that differentiated murine MMC are less dependent on T cells than those of the rat.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Plant pathogens deliver a variety of virulence factors to host cells to suppress basal defence responses and create suitable environments for their propagation. Plants have in turn evolved disease resistance genes whose products detect the virulence factors as a signal of invasion and activate effective defence responses. Understanding how a virulence effector contributes to virulence on susceptible hosts but becomes an avirulence factor that triggers defence responses on resistance hosts has been a major focus in plant research. Recent studies have shown that a growing list of pathogen-encoded effectors functions as proteases that are secreted into plant cells to modify host proteins. In addition, several plant proteases have been found to function in activation of the defence mechanism. These findings reveal that post-translational modification of host proteins through proteolytic processing is a widely used mechanism in regulating the plant defence response.  相似文献   

8.
Mast cells have been suggested to be major effector cells in the immune response to infection with helminths. It is now clear, however, that mast cells are heterogeneous and have a diversity of important functions. In this review, Timothy Lee, Mark Swieter and Dean Befus point out that much of the confusion about the role of mast cells in immunity stems from methods and interpretations which are inadequate for the diversity of roles played by these cells in host responses to parasites. Classical histochemistry may fail to reveal active mast cells, and studies using chemical antagonists are difficult to interpret until we know more about the action of the drugs. The authors show that current research is extending our knowledge of mast cell heterogeneity, and helping to define the powerful array of mediators that they can use to orchestrate the immune response to helminth infections.  相似文献   

9.
Several protozoan parasites evade the host's immune defence because most of their development takes place inside specific host cells. Only a few of these protozoa live within the host cell cytosol. Most parasites are sequestered within membrane-bound compartments, collectively called ‘vacuoles’. Recent advances in the cell biology of intracellular parasites have revealed fundamental differences in the strategies whereby such organisms gain entry into their respective host cells. These differences have important implications for host-parasite interaction and for nutrient acquisition by the parasite. Leishmania spp. take advantage of the phagocytic properties of their host cells and presumably contribute little to the uptake process. In contrast, apicomplexan parasites have developed highly specialised organelles, called micronemes and rhoptries, to actively invade a variety of nucleated cells and, in the case of Plasmodium falciparum, human erythrocytes. Following invasion, parasites use a multitude of strategies to protect themselves from the defence mechanisms of the parasitized cells. In addition, they induce novel pathways within the infected cell that allow a most efficient nutrient acquisition both from the host cell cytoplasm and from the extracellular environment. Parasite-induced changes of host cells are most apparent in erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium spp. Mammalian erythrocytes are deficient in de novo protein and lipid biosynthesis and, consequently, pathways which allow the transport of macromolecules and small solutes are established by metabolic activities of the parasite. Research into the cell biology of intracellular parasitism has identified fascinating phenomena some of which we are beginning to understand at a molecular level. They are fascinating because they allow insights into a very intimate interaction between two eukaryotic cells of entirely different phylogenetic origins.  相似文献   

10.
11.
IL-17 and IL-23 are known to be absolutely central to psoriasis pathogenesis because drugs targeting either cytokine are highly effective treatments for this disease. The efficacy of these drugs has been attributed to blocking the function of IL-17-producing T cells and their IL-23-induced expansion. However, we demonstrate that mast cells and neutrophils, not T cells, are the predominant cell types that contain IL-17 in human skin. IL-17(+) mast cells and neutrophils are found at higher densities than IL-17(+) T cells in psoriasis lesions and frequently release IL-17 in the process of forming specialized structures called extracellular traps. Furthermore, we find that IL-23 and IL-1β can induce mast cell extracellular trap formation and degranulation of human mast cells. Release of IL-17 from innate immune cells may be central to the pathogenesis of psoriasis, representing a fundamental mechanism by which the IL-23-IL-17 axis mediates host defense and autoimmunity.  相似文献   

12.
Microsporidia are a large group of fungal‐related obligate intracellular parasites. They are responsible for infections in humans as well as in agriculturally and environmentally important animals. Although microsporidia are abundant in nature, many of the molecular mechanisms employed during infection have remained enigmatic. In this review, we highlight recent work showing how microsporidia invade, proliferate and exit from host cells. During invasion, microsporidia use spore wall and polar tube proteins to interact with host receptors and adhere to the host cell surface. In turn, the host has multiple defence mechanisms to prevent and eliminate these infections. Microsporidia encode numerous transporters and steal host nutrients to facilitate proliferation within host cells. They also encode many secreted proteins which may modulate host metabolism and inhibit host cell defence mechanisms. Spores exit the host in a non‐lytic manner that is dependent on host actin and endocytic recycling proteins. Together, this work provides a fuller picture of the mechanisms that these fascinating organisms use to infect their hosts.  相似文献   

13.
Mast cells have classically been implicated in the triggering of allergic and anaphylactic reactions. However, recent findings have elucidated the ability of these cells to selectively release a variety of cytokines leading to bacterial clearance through neutrophil and dendritic cell mobilization, and suggest an important role in innate host defenses. Our laboratory has established a primary bone marrow derived mast cell-macrophage co-culture system and found that mast cells mediated a significant inhibition of Francisella tularensis live vaccine strain (LVS) uptake and replication within macrophages through contact and the secreted product interleukin-4 (IL-4). In this study, we utilized P815 mast cells and J774 macrophages to further investigate whether mast cell activation by non-FcεR driven signals could produce IL-4 and control intramacrophage LVS replication. P815 supernatants collected upon activation by the mast cell activating peptide MP7, as well as P815 cells co-cultured with J774 macrophages, exhibited marked inhibition of bacterial uptake and replication, which correlated with the production of IL-4. The inhibition noted in vitro was titratable and preserved at ratios relevant to cellular infiltration events following pulmonary challenge. Collectively, our data suggest that both primary mast cell and P815 mast cell (lacking FcεR) secreted IL-4 can control intramacrophage Francisella replication.  相似文献   

14.
In contrast to the roles played by monocytes/macrophages, neutrophils and lymphocytes, the presence and functions of basophils, mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells, eosinophils and rodlet cells in teleosts are areas of controversy. The tissue distribution of mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells in species from a certain genus shows a characteristic pattern, and this pattern is usually also present at the family level. Functionally, the mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells of teleosts show close similarity to the mast cells of mammals. Acute tissue damage is causing mast cell/eosinophilic granule cell degranulation and release of mediators of inflammation, whereas an increase in the number of these cells is often found in chronically inflamed tissues. The mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells of teleosts show marked diversity in their staining properties, with both basophilic and acidophilic components in their granules. In some fish families, e.g. the labrids, the eosinophilic component is dominating, whereas in the pike the granules are strongly basophilic and show the metachromatic staining characteristics found in the granules of mast cells, but being more akin to the granules of the mucosal than to those of the connective tissue type of mast cells of mammals. With respect to rodlet cells, a cell type hitherto clearly demonstrated only in teleosts, a characteristic distribution pattern seems to be established in certain families. In other families rodlet cells are absent in some individuals and present in different tissues in others. However, there is a close relation between the presence of helminths or other noxious agents and the presence of rodlet cells. Massive aggregations of such cells can be seen in affected epithelia of gills or the intestinal tract, and in individuals of species from some fish families they also occur in association with mesothelial and endothelial tissues. The rodlet cell may represent a type of eosinophilic granulocyte that populates the tissues at its immature stage and mature in response to the appropriate stimuli, in a way similar to that of mast cell precursors. Present evidence points to a functional role for the rodlet cells of teleosts in host defence against parasites.  相似文献   

15.
Mast cell granule composition and tissue location--a close correlation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
This review provides a survey on mast cell heterogeneity, with aspects differing in humans and rodents or which are subject of conflicting evidence being discussed in greater detail. Mast cell subsets have been first defined in rats by their fixation and dye-binding properties, and detailed studies in humans and pigs reveal very similar observations. The dye-binding properties of rat mast cell subsets are causally related to the absence or presence of heparin in their granules. In humans, this relation has not been shown. Rodent mast cell subsets store different chymase-isoforms. In contrast, just a single chymase has been defined in humans, and mast cells are classified by the presence or relative absence of this chymase. Different investigators find quite different proportions of chymase-positive to chymase-negative mast cells. Tryptase(s) are found in most or every human mast cell, but in rodents, they have hitherto been essentially localised to mast cells in connective tissues. Human mast cell subsets may also be defined by their expression of receptors such as C5aR and possibly the beta-chemokine receptor CCR3; the CCR3 expression seems to be related to the human mast cell chymase expression. Ultrastructural studies are helpful to distinguish human mast cell subsets, and allow to distinguish between chronic and acute activation. The phenotypical characteristics may change in association with inflammation or other disease processes. Studies in humans and pigs show changed dye-binding and fixation properties of the granules. Experimental rodent infection models reveal similar changes of chymase isoform expression. Human lung mast cells have been reported to strongly upregulate their chymase content in pulmonary vascular disease. This line of evidence can explain some inconsistent information on mast cell heterogeneity and may help to understand the physiological role of mast cells.  相似文献   

16.
Mast cells play important roles in host defence against pathogens, as well as being a key effector cell in diseases with an allergic basis such as asthma and an increasing list of other chronic inflammatory conditions. Mast cells initiate immune responses through the release of newly synthesised eicosanoids and the secretion of pre-formed mediators such as histamine which they store in specialised granules. Calcium plays a key role in regulating both the synthesis and secretion of mast-cell-derived mediators, with influx across the membrane, in particular, being necessary for degranulation. This raises the possibility that calcium influx through P2X receptors may lead to antigen-independent secretion of histamine and other granule-derived mediators from human mast cells. Here we show that activation of P2X7 receptors with both ATP and BzATP induces robust calcium rises in human mast cells and triggers their degranulation; both effects are blocked by the P2X7 antagonist AZ11645373, or the removal of calcium from the extracellular medium. Activation of P2X1 receptors with αβmeATP also induces calcium influx in human mast cells, which is significantly reduced by both PPADS and NF 449. P2X1 receptor activation, however, does not trigger degranulation. The results indicate that P2X7 receptors may play a significant role in contributing to the unwanted activation of mast cells in chronic inflammatory conditions where extracellular ATP levels are elevated.  相似文献   

17.
More than a decade ago, it was postulated that components derived from trematode parasites block receptors on the defence cells of their snail intermediate hosts, thus preventing host-cell activation and parasite elimination. This phenomenon has still not been investigated extensively. However, recent work concerning the molecular regulation of the molluscan defence response provides a new framework for studies that focus on an extension of this original concept - subversion of host cell signalling by trematode parasites. The hypothesis is that, to facilitate survival and replication in their intermediate hosts, trematode parasites down regulate host defence responses by interfering with key signal-transduction pathways in snail defence cells.  相似文献   

18.
Immunogenic features of some malignancies have aroused interest in immunotherapy of cancer. Immunotherapy seems most effective in patients with a small tumour burden, and the focus of immunotherapy trials has, thus, lately been on adjuvant treatment. To enable further development of immunotherapy we need to know more about the mechanisms involved in host defence, especially when the system is influenced by extrinsic factors, that is, immunomodulative agents. T lymphocytes play an important role in the host defence against tumour cells trying to escape from immune surveillance. The mechanisms that regulate the host defence systems are complex, and the influence of extrinsic factors such as immunotherapeutic agents is poorly understood. Most data on lymphocyte subsets in malignant disease originate from melanoma or renal cell carcinoma (RCC) studies, although there are scattered data on lymphocyte subsets also in other malignancies. There are several studies implying that the relative amount of CD4+, CD8+, and natural killer (NK) cells may be important and that, by reducing the tumour burden or by using different therapeutic agents, we can stimulate the host defence. However, only some of these studies imply that these changes can have an impact on clinical outcome and prognosis. The findings of the studies reviewed in this paper are mostly encouraging, but whether the lymphocyte subsets have any value as prognostic markers in patients with malignancies receiving immunotherapy is still unclear. Large randomized immunotherapy trials including an observation arm give an ideal opportunity to recognize those immunological changes that are due to therapy, related to the natural host defence, or whether they have any prognostic value.  相似文献   

19.
动脉粥样硬化,是冠心病的病理基础,被认为是一种慢性炎症性疾病,涉及如巨噬细胞和T淋巴细胞等许多炎性细胞。肥大细胞是一种重要的免疫细胞,其功能主要是在超敏反应方面的作用。有病理学研究表明:肥大细胞在动脉粥样硬化斑块周围表达增加,这表明肥大细胞可能与疾病的进展有关。最近的研究表明,肥大细胞在动脉粥样硬化中确实起着重要的作用。本文通过总结肥大细胞在动脉粥样硬化形成中的作用,为在疾病进程中,通过调节肥大细胞功能来改善动脉粥样硬化的这种治疗方式的可能性提供依据。  相似文献   

20.
Eukaryotic organisms of the plant and animal kingdoms have developed evolutionarily conserved systems of defence against microbial pathogens. These systems depend on the specific recognition of microbial products or structures by molecules of the host innate immune system. The first mammalian molecules shown to be involved in innate immune recognition of, and defence against, microbial pathogens were the Toll-like receptors (TLRs). These proteins are predominantly but not exclusively located in the transmembrane region of host cells. Interestingly, mammalian hosts were subsequently found to also harbour cytosolic proteins with analogous structures and functions to plant defence molecules. The members of this protein family exhibit a tripartite domain structure and are characterized by a central nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD). Moreover, in common with TLRs, most NOD proteins possess a C-terminal leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain, which is required for the sensing of microbial products and structures. Recently, the name 'nucleotide-binding domain and LRR' (NLR) was coined to describe this family of proteins. It is now clear that NLR proteins play key roles in the cytoplasmic recognition of whole bacteria or their products. Moreover, it has been demonstrated in animal studies that NLRs are important for host defence against bacterial infection. This review will particularly focus on two subfamilies of NLR proteins, the NODs and 'NALPs', which specifically recognize bacterial products, including cell wall peptidoglycan and flagellin. We will discuss the downstream signalling events and host cell responses to NLR recognition of such products, as well as the strategies that bacterial pathogens employ to trigger NLR signalling in host cells. Cytosolic recognition of microbial factors by NLR proteins appears to be one mechanism whereby the innate immune system is able to discriminate between pathogenic bacteria ('foe') and commensal ('friendly') members of the host microflora.  相似文献   

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