Interleukin-10 Production by T and B Cells Is a Key Factor to Promote Systemic Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Infection in Mice

serovar Typhimurium ( . Typhimurium) is a Gram-negative bacterium that produces disease in numerous hosts. In mice, oral inoculation is followed by intestinal colonization and subsequent systemic dissemination, which leads to severe pathogenesis without the activation of an efficient anti- immune re...

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Published inFrontiers in immunology Vol. 8; p. 889
Main Authors Salazar, Geraldyne A, Peñaloza, Hernán F, Pardo-Roa, Catalina, Schultz, Bárbara M, Muñoz-Durango, Natalia, Gómez, Roberto S, Salazar, Francisco J, Pizarro, Daniela P, Riedel, Claudia A, González, Pablo A, Alvarez-Lobos, Manuel, Kalergis, Alexis M, Bueno, Susan M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 02.08.2017
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Summary:serovar Typhimurium ( . Typhimurium) is a Gram-negative bacterium that produces disease in numerous hosts. In mice, oral inoculation is followed by intestinal colonization and subsequent systemic dissemination, which leads to severe pathogenesis without the activation of an efficient anti- immune response. This feature suggests that the infection caused by . Typhimurium may promote the production of anti-inflammatory molecules by the host that prevent efficient T cell activation and bacterial clearance. In this study, we describe the contribution of immune cells producing the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) to the systemic infection caused by . Typhimurium in mice. We observed that the production of IL-10 was required by . Typhimurium to cause a systemic disease, since mice lacking IL-10 (IL-10 ) were significantly more resistant to die after an infection as compared to wild-type (WT) mice. IL-10 mice had reduced bacterial loads in internal organs and increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines in serum at 5 days of infection. Importantly, WT mice showed high bacterial loads in tissues and no increase of cytokines in serum after 5 days of . Typhimurium infection, except for IL-10. In WT mice, we observed a peak of messenger RNA production in ileum, spleen, and liver after 5 days of infection. Importantly, the adoptive transfer of T or B cells from WT mice restored the susceptibility of IL-10 mice to systemic . Typhimurium infection, suggesting that the generation of regulatory cells is required to sustain a systemic infection by . Typhimurium. These findings support the notion that IL-10 production from lymphoid cells is a key process in the infective cycle of . Typhimurium in mice due to generation of a tolerogenic immune response that prevents bacterial clearance and supports systemic dissemination.
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Reviewed by: José Carlos Alves-Filho, University of São Paulo, Brazil; Silvia Gregori, San Raffaele Hospital (IRCCS), Italy
Edited by: Teizo Yoshimura, Okayama University, Japan
Specialty section: This article was submitted to Cytokines and Soluble Mediators in Immunity, a section of the journal Frontiers in Immunology
ISSN:1664-3224
1664-3224
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2017.00889