Upon its mucosal transmission, HIV type 1 (HIV-1) rapidly targets genital antigen-presenting Langerhans cells (LCs), which subsequently transfer infectious virus to CD4
T cells. We previously ...described an inhibitory neuroimmune cross talk, whereby calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a neuropeptide secreted by peripheral pain-sensing nociceptor neurons innervating all mucosal epithelia and associating with LCs, strongly inhibits HIV-1 transfer. As nociceptors secret CGRP following the activation of their Ca
ion channel transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1), and as we reported that LCs secret low levels of CGRP, we investigated whether LCs express functional TRPV1. We found that human LCs expressed mRNA and protein of TRPV1, which was functional and induced Ca
influx following activation with TRPV1 agonists, including capsaicin (CP). The treatment of LCs with TRPV1 agonists also increased CGRP secretion, reaching its anti-HIV-1 inhibitory concentrations. Accordingly, CP pretreatment significantly inhibited LCs-mediated HIV-1 transfer to CD4
T cells, which was abrogated by both TRPV1 and CGRP receptor antagonists. Like CGRP, CP-induced inhibition of HIV-1 transfer was mediated via increased CCL3 secretion and HIV-1 degradation. CP also inhibited direct CD4
T cells HIV-1 infection, but in CGRP-independent manners. Finally, pretreatment of inner foreskin tissue explants with CP markedly increased CGRP and CCL3 secretion, and upon subsequent polarized exposure to HIV-1, inhibited an increase in LC-T cell conjugate formation and consequently T cell infection. Our results reveal that TRPV1 activation in human LCs and CD4
T cells inhibits mucosal HIV-1 infection, via CGRP-dependent/independent mechanisms. Formulations containing TRPV1 agonists, already approved for pain relief, could hence be useful against HIV-1.
The purinergic P2X7 receptor (P2X7R) is a sensor of extracellular ATP, a damage-associated molecule that is released from necrotic cells and that induces pro-inflammatory cytokine production and cell ...death. To investigate whether the innate immune response to damage signals could contribute to the development of pulmonary necrotic lesions in severe forms of tuberculosis, disease progression was examined in C57BL/6 and P2X7R-/- mice that were intratracheally infected with highly virulent mycobacterial strains (Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain 1471 of the Beijing genotype family and Mycobacterium bovis strain MP287/03). The low-dose infection of C57BL/6 mice with bacteria of these strains caused the rapid development of extensive granulomatous pneumonia with necrotic areas, intense bacillus dissemination and anticipated animal death. In contrast, in P2X7R-/- mice, the lung pathology presented with moderate infiltrates of mononuclear leukocytes without visible signs of necrosis; the disease attenuation was accompanied by a delay in mortality. In vitro, the hypervirulent mycobacteria grew rapidly inside macrophages and induced death by a P2X7R-dependent mechanism that facilitated the release of bacilli. Furthermore, these bacteria were resistant to the protective mechanisms elicited in macrophages following extracellular ATP stimulation. Based on this study, we propose that the rapid intracellular growth of hypervirulent mycobacteria results in massive macrophage damage. The ATP released by damaged cells engages P2X7R and accelerates the necrotic death of infected macrophages and the release of bacilli. This vicious cycle exacerbates pneumonia and lung necrosis by promoting widespread cell destruction and bacillus dissemination. These findings suggest the use of drugs that have been designed to inhibit the P2X7R as a new therapeutic approach to treat the aggressive forms of tuberculosis.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
Cellular necrosis during Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection promotes both immunopathology and bacterial dissemination. Glutathione peroxidase-4 (Gpx4) is an enzyme that plays a critical role ...in preventing iron-dependent lipid peroxidation-mediated cell death (ferroptosis), a process previously implicated in the necrotic pathology seen in Mtb-infected mice. Here, we document altered GPX4 expression, glutathione levels, and lipid peroxidation in patients with active tuberculosis and assess the role of this pathway in mice genetically deficient in or overexpressing Gpx4. We found that Gpx4-deficient mice infected with Mtb display substantially increased lung necrosis and bacterial burdens, while transgenic mice overexpressing the enzyme show decreased bacterial loads and necrosis. Moreover, Gpx4-deficient macrophages exhibited enhanced necrosis upon Mtb infection in vitro, an outcome suppressed by the lipid peroxidation inhibitor, ferrostatin-1. These findings provide support for the role of ferroptosis in Mtb-induced necrosis and implicate the Gpx4/GSH axis as a target for host-directed therapy of tuberculosis.
The detection of extracellular adenosine triphosphate (eATP) by P2X7 receptor promotes the development of severe tuberculosis. This study shows that adenosine, a byproduct of eATP degradation, ...impairs the CD4+ T-cell response in the lung parenchyma and contributes to disease progression.
Abstract
Background
Tuberculous pneumonia, necrotic granulomatous lesions, and bacterial dissemination characterize severe forms of mycobacterial infection.
Methods
To evaluate the pulmonary CD4+ T-cell response during severe tuberculosis, C57BL/6 mice were infected with approximately 100 bacilli of 3 hypervirulent mycobacterial isolates (Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain Beijing 1471 and Mycobacterium bovis strains B2 and MP287/03) or the H37Rv M tuberculosis strain as reference for mycobacterial virulence. Because high expression of both CD39 and CD73 ectonucleotidases was detected on parenchymal CD4+ T cells, we investigated whether CD4+ T-cell suppression in the context of severe disease was due to the extracellular adenosine accumulation that resulted from tissue damage.
Results
Lowest expression of CD69, which is an activation marker implicated in maintaining cells in tissues, was observed in lungs from mice displaying the most severe pulmonary pathology. Reduced interferon (IFN)γ-producing CD4+ T cells were also found in the lung of these mice. Intranasal administration of the adenosine receptor antagonist caffeine substantially enhanced the frequency and number of parenchymal CD4+ T cells as well as both CD69 expression and IFNγ production.
Conclusions
These results indicate that adenosine, which may be generated by extracellular adenosine triphosphate degradation, impairs the parenchymal CD4+ T-cell response and contributes to the development of severe tuberculosis.
Abstract
Background
The role of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in patients with severe tuberculosis who suffer from uncontrolled pulmonary inflammation caused by hypervirulent mycobacterial ...infection remains unclear.
Methods
This issue was addressed using C57BL/6 mice infected with highly virulent Mycobacterium bovis strain MP287/03.
Results
CD11b+GR1int population increased in the bone marrow, blood and lungs during advanced disease. Pulmonary CD11b+GR1int (Ly6GintLy6Cint) cells showed granularity similar to neutrophils and expressed immature myeloid cell markers. These immature neutrophils harbored intracellular bacilli and were preferentially located in the alveoli. T-cell suppression occurred concomitantly with CD11b+GR1int cell accumulation in the lungs. Furthermore, lung and bone marrow GR1+ cells suppressed both T-cell proliferation and interferon γ production in vitro. Anti-GR1 therapy given when MDSCs infiltrated the lungs prevented expansion and fusion of primary pulmonary lesions and the development of intragranulomatous caseous necrosis, along with increased mouse survival and partial recovery of T-cell function. Lung bacterial load was reduced by anti-GR1 treatment, but mycobacteria released from the depleted cells proliferated extracellularly in the alveoli, forming cords and clumps.
Conclusions
Granulocytic MDSCs massively infiltrate the lungs during infection with hypervirulent mycobacteria, promoting bacterial growth and the development of inflammatory and necrotic lesions, and are promising targets for host-directed therapies.
Granulocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) act as a permissive niche for intracellular mycobacterial growth and spread bacilli throughout lung tissue in advanced MP287/03 infection. Massive death of infected MDSCs is apparently decisive for the development of pulmonary necrotic lesions.
CD4+ T cells are key components of the immune response during lung infections and can mediate protection against tuberculosis (TB) or influenza. However, CD4+ T cells can also promote lung pathology ...during these infections, making it unclear how these cells control such discrepant effects. Using mouse models of hypervirulent TB and influenza, we observe that exaggerated accumulation of parenchymal CD4+ T cells promotes lung damage. Low numbers of lung CD4+ T cells, in contrast, are sufficient to protect against hypervirulent TB. In both situations, lung CD4+ T cell accumulation is mediated by CD4+ T cell-specific expression of the extracellular ATP (eATP) receptor P2RX7. P2RX7 upregulation in lung CD4+ T cells promotes expression of the chemokine receptor CXCR3, favoring parenchymal CD4+ T cell accumulation. Our findings suggest that direct sensing of lung eATP by CD4+ T cells is critical to induce tissue CD4+ T cell accumulation and pathology during lung infections.
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•eATP sensing via P2RX7 promotes lung CD4+ T cell residency in response to infection•P2RX7-induced lung CD4+ T cells lead to tissue pathology and poor host survival•P2RX7 induces lung CD4+ T cell establishment through CXCR3 expression
Santiago-Carvalho et al. demonstrate that, in response to severe lung infections, sensing of extracellular ATP through P2RX7 leads to exacerbated numbers of lung parenchymal CD4+ T cells that promote pathology and impair host survival. Their results suggest a possible explanation for how tissue danger signals can inadvertently support pathogenic lung immune responses.
The risk of developing severe forms of tuberculosis has increased by the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic, lack of effective drugs to eliminate latent infection and the emergence of ...drug-resistant mycobacterial strains. Excessive inflammatory response and tissue damage associated with severe tuberculosis contribute to poor outcome of the disease. Our previous studies using mice deficient in the ATP-gated ionotropic P2X7 receptor suggested this molecule as a promising target for host-directed therapy in severe pulmonary tuberculosis. In this study, we assessed the effects of P2X7 pharmacological blockade on disease severity. First, we observed an increase in
P2RX7
gene expression in the peripheral blood of tuberculosis patients compared to healthy donors. Lung leukocytes of mice infected with hypervirulent mycobacteria also showed increased expression of the P2X7 receptor. P2X7 blockade in mice with advanced tuberculosis recapitulated in many aspects the disease in P2X7-deficient mice. P2X7-directed therapy reduced body weight loss and the development of inflammatory and necrotic lung lesions, as well as delayed mycobacterial growth. Lower TNF-α production by lung cells and a substantial reduction in the lung GR-1
+
myeloid cell population were observed after P2X7 inhibition. The effector CD4
+
T cell population also decreased, but IFN-γ production by lung cells increased. The presence of a large population with characteristics of myeloid dendritic cells, as well as the increase in IL-6 production by lung cells, also indicate a qualitative improvement in the pulmonary immune response due to P2X7 inhibition. These findings support the use of drugs that target the P2X7 receptor as a therapeutic strategy to improve the outcome of pulmonary tuberculosis.
Curine is a natural alkaloid isolated from
Chondrodendron platyphyllum
and it has been reported that this alkaloid has vasodilatory and anti-inflammatory effects. The aim of this study is to analyze ...the cytotoxic effects of curine in cancer cell lines HL-60, K562, and HT-29, and in primary cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Cells were treated with curine (from 3 to 15 µM) for 24 and 48 h. Cell viability was analyzed by the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazole-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) test and flow cytometry with propidium iodide (PI) assay. To assess the type of cell death induced in HL-60, the cell cycle, morphological, and biochemical alterations were analyzed, which were determined by differential staining with acridine orange/ethidium bromide, and annexin V/PI double-labeling and change in mitochondrial membrane potential assays. Curine demonstrated a potent cytotoxic effect on leukemic cell lines (HL-60 and K562). Its cytotoxic effects in HL-60 cells was related to plasma membrane damage and cell cycle arrest at the G1 phase from 43.4 ± 1.0 to 56.7 ± 1.4 % (
p
< 0.05). Curine (15 μM) also increased the apoptotic cells number by around 60 % in HL-60 cells and caused phosphatidylserine externalization, inducing about 57 % of apoptosis. Moreover, this alkaloid provoked 20 % of mitochondrial membrane depolarization. We conclude that curine presented a cytotoxic effect and induced apoptosis in HL-60 cells. Thus, it can be considered a promising pharmacological drug.
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious public health problem despite the great scientific advances in the recent decades. We have previously shown that aggressive forms of TB caused by hypervirulent ...strains of
and
are attenuated in mice lacking the P2X7 receptor, an ion channel activated by extracellular ATP. Therefore, P2X7 receptor is a potential target for therapeutic intervention.
, hypervirulent mycobacteria cause macrophage death by a P2X7-dependent mechanism that facilitates bacillus dissemination. However, as P2X7 receptor is expressed in both bone marrow (BM)-derived cells and lung structural cells, several cellular mechanisms can operate
. To investigate whether the presence of P2X7 receptor in BM-derived cells contributes to TB severity, we generated chimeric mice by adoptive transfer of hematopoietic cells from C57BL/6 or P2X7
mice into CD45.1 irradiated mice. After infection with hypervirulent mycobacteria (MP287/03 strain of
), P2X7
>CD45.1 mice recapitulated the TB resistance observed in P2X7
mice. These chimeric mice showed lower lung bacterial load and attenuated pneumonia compared to C57BL/6>CD45.1 mice. Lung necrosis and bacterial dissemination to the spleen and liver were also reduced in P2X7
>CD45.1 mice compared to C57BL/6>CD45.1 mice. Furthermore, an immature-like myeloid cell population showing a Ly6G
phenotype was observed in the lungs of infected C57BL/6 and C57BL/6>CD45.1 mice, whereas P2X7
and P2X7
>CD45.1 mice showed a typical neutrophil (Ly6G
) population. This study clearly demonstrates that P2X7 receptor in BM-derived cells plays a critical role in the progression of severe TB.
Background CD40 ligand (CD40L) deficiency predisposes to opportunistic infections, including those caused by fungi and intracellular bacteria. Studies of CD40L-deficient patients reveal the critical ...role of CD40L-CD40 interaction for the function of T, B, and dendritic cells. However, the consequences of CD40L deficiency on macrophage function remain to be investigated. Objectives We sought to determine the effect of CD40L absence on monocyte-derived macrophage responses. Methods After observing the improvement of refractory disseminated mycobacterial infection in a CD40L-deficient patient by recombinant human IFN-γ (rhIFN-γ) adjuvant therapy, we investigated macrophage functions from CD40L-deficient patients. We analyzed the killing activity, oxidative burst, cytokine production, and in vitro effects of rhIFN-γ and soluble CD40 ligand (sCD40L) treatment on macrophages. In addition, the effect of CD40L absence on the macrophage transcriptome before and after rhIFN-γ treatment was studied. Results Macrophages from CD40L-deficient patients exhibited defective fungicidal activity and reduced oxidative burst, both of which improved in the presence of rhIFN-γ but not sCD40L. In contrast, rhIFN-γ and sCD40L ameliorate impaired production of inflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, rhIFN-γ reversed defective control of Mycobacterium tuberculosis proliferation by patients' macrophages. The absence of CD40L dysregulated the macrophage transcriptome, which was improved by rhIFN-γ. Additionally, rhIFN-γ increased expression levels of pattern recognition receptors, such as Toll-like receptors 1 and 2, dectin 1, and dendritic cell–specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3–grabbing nonintegrin in macrophages from both control subjects and patients. Conclusion Absence of CD40L impairs macrophage development and function. In addition, the improvement of macrophage immune responses by IFN-γ suggests this cytokine as a potential therapeutic option for patients with CD40L deficiency.