The roles of Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 and TLR4 in the host inflammatory response to infection caused by Chlamydia trachomatis have not been elucidated. We examined production of TNF-α and IL-6 in wild-type TLR2 knockout (KO), and TLR4 KO murine peritoneal macrophages infected with the mouse pneumonitis strain of C. trachomatis. Furthermore, we compared the outcomes of genital tract infection in control, TLR2 KO, and TLR4 KO mice. Macrophages lacking TLR2 produced significantly less TNF-α and IL6 in response to active infection. In contrast, macrophages from TLR4 KO mice consistently produced higher TNF-α and IL-6 responses than those from normal mice on in vitro infection. Infected TLR2-deficient fibroblasts had less mRNA for IL-1, IL-6, and macrophage-inflammatory protein-2, but TLR4-deficient cells had increased mRNA levels for these cytokines compared with controls, suggesting that ligation of TLR4 by whole chlamydiae may down-modulate signaling by other TLRs. In TLR2 KO mice, although the course of genital tract infection was not different from that of controls, significantly lower levels of TNF-α and macrophage-inflammatory protein-2 were detected in genital tract secretions during the first week of infection, and there was a significant reduction in oviduct and mesosalpinx pathology at late time points. TLR4 KO mice responded to in vivo infection similarly to wild-type controls and developed similar pathology. TLR2 is an important mediator in the innate immune response to C. trachomatis infection and appears to play a role in both early production of inflammatory mediators and development of chronic inflammatory pathology.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), infects one third of the world's population. Among these infections, clinical isolates belonging to the W-Beijing appear to be emerging, representing about 50% of Mtb isolates in East Asia, and about 13% of all Mtb isolates worldwide. In animal models, infection with W-Beijing strain, Mtb HN878, is considered “hypervirulent” as it results in increased mortality and causes exacerbated immunopathology in infected animals. We had previously shown the Interleukin (IL) -17 pathway is dispensable for primary immunity against infection with the lab adapted Mtb H37Rv strain. However, it is not known whether IL-17 has any role to play in protective immunity against infection with clinical Mtb isolates. We report here that lab adapted Mtb strains, such as H37Rv, or less virulent Mtb clinical isolates, such as Mtb CDC1551, do not require IL-17 for protective immunity against infection while infection with Mtb HN878 requires IL-17 for early protective immunity. Unexpectedly, Mtb HN878 induces robust production of IL-1β through a TLR-2-dependent mechanism, which supports potent IL-17 responses. We also show that the role for IL-17 in mediating protective immunity against Mtb HN878 is through IL-17 Receptor signaling in non-hematopoietic cells, mediating the induction of the chemokine, CXCL-13, which is required for localization of T cells within lung lymphoid follicles. Correct T cell localization within lymphoid follicles in the lung is required for maximal macrophage activation and Mtb control. Since IL-17 has a critical role in vaccine-induced immunity against TB, our results have far reaching implications for the design of vaccines and therapies to prevent and treat emerging Mtb strains. In addition, our data changes the existing paradigm that IL-17 is dispensable for primary immunity against Mtb infection, and instead suggests a differential role for IL-17 in early protective immunity against emerging Mtb strains.
The bare lymphocyte syndrome (BLS) is characterized by the absence of MHC class II transcription and humoral- and cellular-mediated immune responses to foreign antigens. Three of the four BLS genetic complementation groups have defects in the activity of the MHC class II transcription factor RFX. We have purified the RFX complex and sequenced its three subunits. The sequence of the smallest subunit describes a novel gene, termed RFX-B. RFX-B complements the predominant BLS complementation group (group B) and was found to be mutant in cell lines from this BLS group. The protein has no known DNA-binding domain but does contain three ankyrin repeats that are likely to be important in protein-protein interactions.
g Interferon (IFN)-inducible guanylate binding proteins (GBPs) mediate cell-autonomous host resistance to bacterial pathogens and promote inflammasome activation. The prevailing model postulates that these two GBP-controlled activities are directly linked through GBP-dependent vacuolar lysis. It was proposed that the rupture of pathogen-containing vacuoles (PVs) by GBPs destroyed the microbial refuge and simultaneously contaminated the host cell cytosol with microbial activators of inflammasomes. Here, we demonstrate that GBP-mediated host resistance and GBP-mediated inflammatory responses can be uncoupled. We show that PVs formed by the rodent pathogen Chlamydia muridarum, so-called inclusions, remain free of GBPs and that C. muridarum is impervious to GBP-mediated restrictions on bacterial growth. Although GBPs neither bind to C. muridarum inclusions nor restrict C. muridarum growth, we find that GBPs promote inflammasome activation in C. muridaruminfected macrophages. We demonstrate that C. muridarum infections induce GBP-dependent pyroptosis through both caspase-11-dependent noncanonical and caspase-1-dependent canonical inflammasomes. Among canonical inflammasomes, we find that C. muridarum and the human pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis activate not only NLRP3 but also AIM2. Our data show that GBPs support fast-kinetics processing and secretion of interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-18 by the NLRP3 inflammasome but are dispensable for the secretion of the same cytokines at later times postinfection. Because IFN-␥ fails to induce IL-1 transcription, GBP-dependent fast-kinetics inflammasome activation can drive the preferential processing of constitutively expressed IL-18 in IFN-␥-primed macrophages in the absence of prior Toll-like receptor stimulation. Together, our results reveal that GBPs control the kinetics of inflammasome activation and thereby shape macrophage responses to Chlamydia infections.
The bare lymphocyte syndrome, a severe combined immunodeficiency due to loss of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II gene expression, is caused by inherited mutations in the genes encoding the heterotrimeric transcription factor RFX (RFX-B, RFX5, and RFXAP) and the class II transactivator CIITA. Mutagenesis of the RFX genes was performed, and the properties of the proteins were analyzed with regard to transactivation, DNA binding, and protein-protein interactions. The results identified specific domains within each of the three RFX subunits that were necessary for RFX complex formation, including the ankyrin repeats of RFX-B. DNA binding was dependent on RFX complex formation, and transactivation was dependent on a region of RFX5. RFX5 was found to interact with CIITA, and this interaction was dependent on a proline-rich domain within RFX5. Thus, these studies have defined the protein domains required for the functional regulation of MHC class II genes.Type II bare lymphocyte syndrome (BLS), an inherited severe combined immunodeficiency in humans, is caused by the inability to transcribe major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II genes (9,15,32). MHC class II genes encode heterodimeric glycoproteins that present antigens to CD4 ϩ T cells to initiate the acquired arm of the immune response. They are also crucial for determining the repertoire of CD4 ϩ T cells during positive and negative selection in the thymus. Patients with BLS typically present in the first year of life with recurrent infections and have reduced levels of CD4 ϩ T cells (9, 11). Their humoral immune response is severely impaired as well, and most patients die before reaching puberty. Patient and experimentally derived cell lines were used to separate the BLS phenotype into four complementation groups: BLS groups A, B, C, and D (3, 46, 54). The genes responsible for each of these groups have been identified and found to encode proteins required for MHC class II gene transcription.MHC class II genes are expressed on the surface of B cells, dendritic cells, macrophages, thymic epithelia, and activated T cells. Additionally, non-antigen-presenting cells can be induced to express MHC class II by exposure to the cytokine gamma interferon (IFN-␥) (8). Aberrant expression of MHC class II genes is associated with autoimmunity, tumor growth, and failure to mount an immune response. The three MHC class II isotypes, HLA-DR, HLA-DP, and HLA-DQ, contain conserved cis-acting elements in their promoters (the W, X1, X2, and Y boxes) that allow their coordinate regulation (reviewed in references 4 and 31). Homologous sequence elements are also found in the HLA-DM, invariant chain, and MHC class I genes. These elements allow the coordinate expression of the different isotypes in antigen-presenting cells and the induction of these genes by IFN-␥. Regulatory factor X (RFX) and the X2 box-binding protein (X2BP), which was identified as the cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) (34), bind to the X1 and X2 boxes, respectively. The Y box, a...
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