Literature DB >> 24167293

Intracellular Shigella remodels its LPS to dampen the innate immune recognition and evade inflammasome activation.

Ida Paciello1, Alba Silipo, Luigi Lembo-Fazio, Laura Curcurù, Anna Zumsteg, Gaëlle Noël, Valeria Ciancarella, Luisa Sturiale, Antonio Molinaro, Maria Lina Bernardini.   

Abstract

LPS is a potent bacterial effector triggering the activation of the innate immune system following binding with the complex CD14, myeloid differentiation protein 2, and Toll-like receptor 4. The LPS of the enteropathogen Shigella flexneri is a hexa-acylated isoform possessing an optimal inflammatory activity. Symptoms of shigellosis are produced by severe inflammation caused by the invasion process of Shigella in colonic and rectal mucosa. Here we addressed the question of the role played by the Shigella LPS in eliciting a dysregulated inflammatory response of the host. We unveil that (i) Shigella is able to modify the LPS composition, e.g., the lipid A and core domains, during proliferation within epithelial cells; (ii) the LPS of intracellular bacteria (iLPS) and that of bacteria grown in laboratory medium differ in the number of acyl chains in lipid A, with iLPS being the hypoacylated; (iii) the immunopotential of iLPS is dramatically lower than that of bacteria grown in laboratory medium; (iv) both LPS forms mainly signal through the Toll-like receptor 4/myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 pathway; (v) iLPS down-regulates the inflammasome-mediated release of IL-1β in Shigella-infected macrophages; and (vi) iLPS exhibits a reduced capacity to prime polymorfonuclear cells for an oxidative burst. We propose a working model whereby the two forms of LPS might govern different steps of the invasive process of Shigella. In the first phases, the bacteria, decorated with hypoacylated LPS, are able to lower the immune system surveillance, whereas, in the late phases, shigellae harboring immunopotent LPS are fully recognized by the immune system, which can then successfully resolve the infection.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PAMPs/PRRs; enteric pathogen; immune evasion; innate immunity

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24167293      PMCID: PMC3832022          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1303641110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  70 in total

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9.  Human Intestinal Enteroids as a Model System of Shigella Pathogenesis.

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