Literature DB >> 16365440

Helminth-primed dendritic cells alter the host response to enteric bacterial infection.

Chien-Chang Chen1, Steve Louie, Beth A McCormick, W Allan Walker, Hai Ning Shi.   

Abstract

To examine whether intestinal helminth infection may be a risk factor for enteric bacterial infection, a murine model was established using the intestinal helminth Heligomosomoides polygyrus and a murine pathogen Citrobacter rodentium, which causes infectious colitis. Using this model we recently have shown that coinfection with the Th2-inducing H. polygyrus and C. rodentium promotes bacterial-associated disease and colitis. In this study, we expand our previous observations and examine the hypothesis that dendritic cells (DC) stimulated by helminth infection may play an important role in the regulation of the intestinal immune response to concurrent C. rodentium infection as well as in the modulation of the bacterial pathogenesis. We show that H. polygyrus infection induces DC activation and IL-10 expression, and that adoptive transfer of parasite-primed DC significantly impairs host protection to C. rodentium infection, resulting in an enhanced bacterial infection and in the development of a more severe colonic injury. Furthermore, we demonstrate that adoptive transfer of parasite-primed IL-10-deficient DCs fails to result in the development of a significantly enhanced C. rodentium-mediated colitis. Similarly, when the DC IL-10 response was neutralized by anti-IL-10 mAb treatment in mice that received parasite-primed DC, no deleterious effect of the parasite-primed DC on the host intestinal response to C. rodentium was detected. Thus, our results provide evidence to indicate that the H. polygyrus-dependent modulation of the host response to concurrent C. rodentium infection involves IL-10-producing DCs.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16365440      PMCID: PMC4144328          DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.176.1.472

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  57 in total

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  39 in total

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4.  Coinfection with an intestinal helminth impairs host innate immunity against Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and exacerbates intestinal inflammation in mice.

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Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2014-06-30       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 5.  Modulation of dendritic cell responses by parasites: a common strategy to survive.

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6.  Duodenal helminth infection alters barrier function of the colonic epithelium via adaptive immune activation.

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8.  Development of fatal colitis in FVB mice infected with Citrobacter rodentium.

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