scholarly journals Pseudomonas aeruginosa LasB Subverts Alveolar Macrophage Activity by Interfering With Bacterial Killing Through Downregulation of Innate Immune Defense, Reactive Oxygen Species Generation, and Complement Activation

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabien Bastaert ◽  
Saadé Kheir ◽  
Vinciane Saint-Criq ◽  
Bérengère Villeret ◽  
Pham My-Chan Dang ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (14) ◽  
pp. 16150-16158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Jiang ◽  
Fangjie E ◽  
Jingxiao Tian ◽  
Jiangtao Yang ◽  
Jiangyan Zhang ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 273-273
Author(s):  
Robert A. Campbell ◽  
Mark Cody ◽  
Yasuhiro Kosaka ◽  
Heather D Campbell ◽  
Christian Yost

Abstract BACKGROUND: Neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) are extracellular lattices of decondensed chromatin associated with anti-microbial proteins and degradative enzymes released by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) to trap and kill invading microbes. Dysregulated NET formation, however, contributes to inflammatory tissue damage. We have identified a novel NET-inhibitory peptide, neonatal NET-Inhibitory Factor (nNIF), present in the fetal circulation. nNIF is formed as a carboxy-terminus cleavage fragment of alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT), an abundant, circulating protease inhibitor with homologs in human and mouse blood. However, the exact mechanisms by which nNIF is generated in fetal and neonatal blood remains unknown. OBJECTIVE: High temperature requirement A 1 (HTRA1) is expressed in the placenta during fetal development and inhibits AAT. We hypothesized that placentally expressed HTRA1, a serine protease, regulates the formation of NET-inhibitory peptides, such as nNIF, through cleavage of AAT. DESIGN/METHODS: Term and preterm placenta were lysed and probed for HTRA1 expression. HTRA1 and AAT plasma expression from term and preterm infants and adults were determined by ELISA. Recombinant, bioactive HTRA1 or placenta-eluted HTRA1 were incubated with AAT and the generation of carboxy-terminus fragments of AAT was assessed using western blotting and mass spectrometry. Fragments of AAT generated by HTRA1 were incubated with LPS-stimulated PMNs and NET formation was examined qualitatively using live cell imaging and quantitatively using a high throughput fluorescence assay. The effect of the HTRA-AAT cleavage fragment on reactive oxygen species generation, neutrophil chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and bacterial killing was measured using flow cytometry, a modified Boyden chamber asssay, neutrophil labeled Escherichia coli uptake assay, and a bacterial killing assay with a pathogenic strain of Escherichia coli, respectively. Finally, NET formation was evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively in murine PMNs isolated from neonatal WT and HTRA1-/- pups between 1-3, 4-6 and 7-10 days after birth to determine when PMNs become NET-competent. RESULTS: Term and preterm infant placentas express HTRA1, and we detected significantly (p<0.05) higher levels of HTRA1 in plasma from term (465.1±71.8 µg/mL) and preterm (385.9±71.3 µg/mL) infant cord blood compared to adults (58.6±11.6 µg/mL). Recombinant, bioactive HTRA1 and placenta-derived HTRA1 incubated with AAT generate a 4kD AAT fragment based on western blot and mass spectrometry similar to the nNIF fragment found in cord blood from term and preterm infants. Pre-incubation of this fragment with LPS-stimulated PMNs significantly inhibits NET formation (p<0.05). The cleavage fragment from HTRA1-AAT, however, has no effect on reactive oxygen species generation, chemotaxis, or phagocytosis. However, incubation of this fragment with LPS-stimulated PMNs significantly (p<0.05) reduces NET-associated bacterial killing by 62% compared to a scrambled HTRA-AAT control peptide. In addition, the HTRA1-AAT fragment significantly (p<0.05) reduces nuclear decondensation by 93% compared to LPS-stimulated PMN, suggesting this fragment inhibits PAD4 activation similar to other NIFs previously examined. Neonatal murine plasma contains a 4kD AAT fragment which inhibits NET formation by adult mouse PMNs, indicating that nNIF generation is conserved in mice. Neonatal PMNs stimulated with LPS exhibit delayed NET formation following birth with PMNs becoming NET-competent by day 8 of life. However, neonatal PMNs from pups born from HTRA1-/- deficient mice generate significantly (p<0.05) more NETs between day 4-6 of life compared to WT controls, suggesting that HTRA1 regulates NET formation through nNIF production. CONCLUSIONS: Placental HTRA1 interacts with AAT to generate a carboxy-terminus cleavage fragment of AAT with identical NET-inhibitory properties to nNIF. Our data strongly indicate that placental HTRA1 generates nNIF in the fetal circulation. We speculate that nNIF participates in the required tolerance to new microbial antigens encountered during the transition to extrauterine life. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 216-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikael Rhen

Salmonella enterica represents an enterobacterial species including numerous serovars that cause infections at, or initiated at, the intestinal epithelium. Many serovars also act as facultative intracellular pathogens with a tropism for phagocytic cells. These bacteria not only survive in phagocytes but also undergo de facto replication therein. Phagocytes, through the activities of phagocyte NADPH-dependent oxidase and inducible nitric oxide synthase, are very proficient in converting molecular oxygen to reactive oxygen (ROS) and nitrogen species (RNS). These compounds represent highly efficient effectors of the innate immune defense. Salmonella is by no means resistant to these effectors, which may stand in contrast to the host niches chosen. To cope with this paradox, these bacteria rely on an array of detoxification and repair systems. Combination these systems allows for a high enough tolerance to ROS and RNS to enable establishment of infection. In addition, salmonella possesses protein factors that have the potential to dampen the infection-associated inflammation, which evidently results in a reduced exposure to ROS and RNS. This review attempts to summarize the activities and strategies by which salmonella tries to cope with ROS and RNS and how the bacterium can make use of these innate defense factors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 1603-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Anne Becker ◽  
Xiang Li ◽  
Aaron Seitz ◽  
Joerg Steinmann ◽  
Anne Koch ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Cystic fibrosis (CF) is dominated by chronic inflammation and infection of the lung resulting in lung destruction and early death of patients. The lungs of CF patients are characterized by a massive accumulation of neutrophils. It requires definition why these massive numbers of neutrophils fail to eliminate typical CF pathogens like Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) in CF lungs. Methods: We determined ceramide, sphingosine and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in neutrophils from wildtype and CF mice and determined the effect of sphingosine and ROS alone or in combination on killing of different P. aeruginosa strains. Results: We demonstrate that wildtype neutrophils are able to kill non-mucoid and mucoid clinical P. aeruginosa strains, while neutrophils from CF mice are insufficient to kill these P. aeruginosa strains, although both types of neutrophils infected with P. aeruginosa produce comparable levels of superoxide. All three analyzed P. aeruginosa strains are resistant to reactive oxygen species. The inability of CF neutrophils to kill P. aeruginosa is caused by a marked decrease of surface sphingosine levels in CF neutrophils. Wildtype neutrophils contain much higher concentrations of surface sphingosine than CF neutrophils. Further, wildtype neutrophils, but not CF neutrophils, release sphingosine, most likely as microparticles, upon infection. Sphingosine kills P. aeruginosa in vitro at low micromolar concentrations. Reconstitution of sphingosine in CF neutrophils restores their ability to kill these pathogens, demonstrating the significance of sphingosine for bacterial killing. Conclusion: The data provide evidence for a new paradigm explaining how neutrophils kill ROS-resistant P. aeruginosa, i.e. by sphingosine that kills P. aeruginosa at low concentrations. This mechanism is defective in CF neutrophils.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hayden H. Ware ◽  
Vikram V. Kulkarni ◽  
Yongxing Wang ◽  
Miguel Leiva Juarez ◽  
Carson T. Kirkpatrick ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPneumonia remains a global health threat, in part due to expanding categories of susceptible individuals and increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistant pathogens. However, therapeutic stimulation of the lungs’ mucosal defenses by inhaled exposure to a synergistic combination of Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists known as Pam2-ODN promotes mouse survival of pneumonia caused by a wide array of pathogens. This inducible resistance to pneumonia relies on intact lung epithelial TLR signaling, and inducible protection against viral pathogens has recently been shown to require increased production of epithelial reactive oxygen species (ROS) from multiple epithelial ROS generators. To determine whether similar mechanisms contribute to inducible antibacterial responses, the current work investigates the role of ROS in therapeutically-stimulated protection against Pseudomonas aerugnosa challenges. Inhaled Pam2-ODN treatment one day before infection prevented hemorrhagic lung cytotoxicity and mouse death in a manner that correlated with reduction in bacterial burden. The bacterial killing effect of Pam2-ODN was recapitulated in isolated mouse and human lung epithelial cells, and the protection correlated with inducible epithelial generation of ROS. Scavenging or targeted blockade of ROS production from either dual oxidase or mitochondrial sources resulted in near complete loss of Pam2-ODN-induced bacterial killing, whereas deficiency of induced antimicrobial peptides had little effect. These findings support a central role for multisource epithelial ROS in inducible resistance against bacterial pathogens and provide mechanistic insights into means to protect vulnerable patients against lethal infections.


2009 ◽  
Vol 77 (11) ◽  
pp. 4983-4989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Violeta Chávez ◽  
Akiko Mohri-Shiomi ◽  
Danielle A. Garsin

ABSTRACT Caenorhabditis elegans was recently developed as a model system to study both pathogen virulence mechanisms and host defense responses. We previously demonstrated that C. elegans produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) in response to exposure to the important gram-positive nosocomial pathogen Enterococcus faecalis. We also presented evidence of oxidative stress and upregulation of stress responses after exposure to the pathogen. As in mammalian systems, this new work shows that production of ROS for innate immune functions occurs via an NADPH oxidase. Specifically, reducing expression of a dual oxidase, Ce-Duox1/BLI-3, causes a decrease in ROS production in response to E. faecalis. We also present evidence that reduction of expression of Ce-Duox1/BLI-3 increases susceptibility to this pathogen, specifically when expression is reduced in the intestine and the hypodermis. Ce-Duox1/BLI-3 was previously characterized as having a role in cuticle cross-linking. Two C. elegans mutants with point mutations in the peroxidase domain that exhibit severe cuticle defects were discovered to be unaffected in ROS production or pathogen susceptibility. These results demonstrate an important biological role for the peroxidase domain in cuticle cross-linking that is unrelated to ROS production. To further demonstrate the protective effects of the pathogen-induced ROS production, we show that antioxidants that scavenge ROS increase the sensitivity of the nematode to the infection, in stark contrast to their longevity-promoting effects under nonpathogenic conditions. In conclusion, we postulate that the generation of ROS by NADPH oxidases in the barrier epithelium is an ancient, highly conserved innate immune defense mechanism.


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