Literature DB >> 22227965

Hypercholesterolemic LDL receptor-deficient mice mount a neutrophilic response to tuberculosis despite the timely expression of protective immunity.

Gregory W Martens1, Therese Vallerskog, Hardy Kornfeld.   

Abstract

The prevalence of hypercholesterolemia is rising in industrialized and developing countries. We reported previously that host defense against Mtb was impaired by hypercholesterolemia in ApoE(-/-) mice, raising the possibility that people with HC could be more vulnerable to TB. The present study examined whether TB immunity was similarly impaired in a different hypercholesterolemic model, LDL-R(-/-) mice, which developed comparable elevation of total serum cholesterol as ApoE(-/-)mice when fed HC or LC diets. Like ApoE(-/-) mice, LDL-R(-/-) mice had an exaggerated lung inflammatory response to Mtb with increased tissue necrosis. Inflammation, foamy macrophage formation, and tissue necrosis in LDL-R(-/-) mice increased with the degree of hypercholesterolemia. Unlike ApoE(-/-) mice, LDL-R(-/-) mice fed a HC diet mounted a timely and protective adaptive immune response that restricted mycobacterial replication comparably with WT mice. Thus, ApoE(-/-) and LDL-R(-/-) mice share a cholesterol-dependent hyperinflammatory TB phenotype but do not share the impairment of adaptive immunity found in ApoE(-/-) mice. The impact of hypercholesterolemia on TB immunity is more complex than appreciated by total cholesterol alone, possibly reflecting the different functional effect of specific lipoprotein particles.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22227965      PMCID: PMC3360472          DOI: 10.1189/jlb.0311164

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Leukoc Biol        ISSN: 0741-5400            Impact factor:   4.962


  36 in total

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