| Literature DB >> 28066442 |
Hortensia Zelaya1, Susana Alvarez2, Haruki Kitazawa3, Julio Villena4.
Abstract
Influenza virus (IFV) is a major respiratory pathogen of global importance, and the cause of a high degree of morbidity and mortality, especially in high-risk populations such as infants, elderly, and immunocompromised hosts. Given its high capacity to change antigenically, acquired immunity is often not effective to limit IFV infection and therefore vaccination must be constantly redesigned to achieve effective protection. Improvement of respiratory and systemic innate immune mechanisms has been proposed to reduce the incidence and severity of IFV disease. In the last decade, several research works have demonstrated that microbes with the capacity to modulate the mucosal immune system (immunobiotics) are a potential alternative to beneficially modulate the outcome of IFV infection. This review provides an update of the current status on the modulation of respiratory immunity by orally and nasally administered immunobiotics, and their beneficial impact on IFV clearance and inflammatory-mediated lung tissue damage. In particular, we describe the research of our group that investigated the influence of immunobiotics on inflammation-coagulation interactions during IFV infection. Studies have clearly demonstrated that hostile inflammation is accompanied by dysfunctional coagulation in respiratory IFV disease, and our investigations have proved that some immunobiotic strains are able to reduce viral disease severity through their capacity to modulate the immune-coagulative responses in the respiratory tract.Entities:
Keywords: coagulation; immunobiotics; inflammation; influenza virus; respiratory immunity
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066442 PMCID: PMC5179578 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Signaling pathways activated by the recognition of influenza virus-associated molecular patterns by pattern-recognition receptors expressed in respiratory epithelial cells and immune cells.
Figure 2Innate immune response against influenza virus in the respiratory mucosa mediated by the recognition of viral-associated molecular patterns by pattern-recognition receptors expressed in respiratory epithelial cells. Beneficial effects of immunobiotics administration on the resistance and immune response against Influenza Virus in the respiratory mucosa.
Effect of immunobiotics on influenza virus (IFV) infection in mice models.
| Immunobiotic strain | Viability | Administration protocol | Challenge | Mice | Immunobiotic effects | Effect on IFV infection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-viable | Oral | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old male BALB/c | Improved the production of anti-IFV IgG antibodies in serum | Reduced viral titers, improved survival rate, and decreased severity of symptoms | ( | |
| Non-viable | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old female BALB/c | Improved levels of respiratory IgA and IgG specific antibodies | Reduced IFV titers | ( | ||
| Viable | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six to eight-week-old female BALB/c | Improved levels of IFV-specific IgA in the respiratory tract | Reduced body weight loss and decreased alterations of physical conditions | ( | ||
| Non-viable | Oral | IFV (H3N2) strain X-31 | Seven-week-old female BALB/c | Improved the production of IgA in the respiratory tract | Reduced body weight loss and decreased mortality | ( | |
| Non-viable | Oral | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Fifteen-week-old female BALB/c | Improved systemic and respiratory NK cell activity and production of interferon (IFN)-γ and TNF-α by respiratory lymphocytes | Reduced IFV titers | ( | |
| Viable | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Neonatal and infant mice | Improved systemic and respiratory NK cell activity and production of IFN-γ and TNF-α by respiratory lymphocytes | Reduced IFV titers, decreased accumulated symptom rate, and decreased mortality | ( | ||
| Viable | Ten milligrams of lyophilized bacteria in 200 µl of saline was administered orally per day during 14 days before IFV challenge. Treatment was continued for 5 days after infection | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Five-week-old female BALB/c | Improved NK cell activity and production of IFN-γ | Reduced virus titers and diminished lung pathological changes | ( | |
| Viable | Ten milligrams of lyophilized bacteria in 200 µl of saline was administered orally per day during 14 days before IFV challenge. Treatment was continued for 5 days after infection | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Five-week-old female BALB/c | Improved NK cell activity and production of IFN-γ | Reduced virus titers and diminished lung pathological changes | ( | |
| Non-viable | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old female BALB/c | Beneficially modulated NK cells activity and improved Th1 response | Reduced virus titers and diminished lung pathological changes | ( | ||
| Viable | Oral administration of 2 × 109 cells per mouse per day during 14 days before IFV challenge. Treatment was continued for 2 days after infection | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old female BALB/c | Increased respiratory NK cell activity and IFN-γ production | Improved clinical symptoms, reduced mortality, and decreased virus titers | ( | |
| Non-viable | Nasal administration of 20 or 200 µg per mouse per day during 3 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Ten to eleven-week-old female BALB/c | Increased levels of IL-12, IFN-γ, and TNF-α in mediastinal lymphoid nodes and lungs | Decreased virus titers and increased survival rates | ( | |
| Non-viable | Nasal administration of 20 or 200 µg per mouse per day during 3 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Eight to twelve-week-old female BALB/c | Increased IL-12, IFN-α, and NK cell activity in the respiratory tract. Increased levels of IL-12 and IFN-γ in mediastinal lymphoid nodes | Decreased virus titers and increased survival rates | ( | |
| Viable | Nasal administration of 200 µg per mouse per day during 3 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Seven-week-old female BALB/c | Increased respiratory NK cell activity | Reduced IFV titers, decreased accumulated symptom rate, and increased survival rates | ( | |
| Viable | Sublingual administration of 108 cells per mouse per day during 7 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/FMI/33 | Adult female BALB/c | Improved levels of IgA specific antibodies, IL-12, and decreased levels of TNF-α and IL-6 in lungs. Increased NK cell activity in spleen. Increased CD25 expression by CD4+ and CD8+ in lung and mediastinal lymphoid nodes | Increase of the survival rates and decrease in the lung lesion scores | ( | |
| Non-viable | Intragastric administration of 5–100 mg/kg of mouse per day during 7 days before IFV challenge. Treatment was continued for 7 days after infection | IFV (H1N1) strain A/NWS/47 | Seven-week-old female C57BL/6 | Improved production of type I IFNs | Reduced viral loads in lungs and improved survival | ( | |
| Viable | Oral administration of 108 or 109 cells per mouse per day during 7–21 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Five to seven-week-old male C57BL/6 | Enhanced lung expression of the antiviral genes | Enhanced survival rates, reduced lung viral titers and diminished lung inflammatory damage | ( | |
| Viable | Oral administration of 108 cells per mouse per day during 5 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old male BALB/c | Differentially regulated levels and kinetics of inflammatory cells (neutrophils and macrophages) and cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10, and type I IFNs) | Decreased IFV titers in lungs, lessened pulmonary damage, and increased survival | ( | |
| Viable and non-viable | Nasal administration of 108 cells per mouse per day during 2 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/PR/8/34 | Six-week-old male BALB/c | Differentially regulated levels and kinetics of inflammatory cells (neutrophils and macrophages) and cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10, and type I IFNs) | Decreased IFV titers in lungs, lessened pulmonary damage, and increased survival | ( | |
| Viable and non-viable | Intragastric administration of 8.5 × 1010 cell per kg of mouse per day during 7 or 12 days before IFV challenge | IFV (H1N1) strain A/WSN/33 | Adult male C57BL/6 | Diminished concentrations of proinflammatory factors especially MCP-1 | Reduced mortality, weight loss, and lung viral titers | ( | |
| Non-viable | Oral administration of 1010 cells per mouse per day during 21 days before IFV challenge. Oral treatment was continued for 14 days after infection | IFV (H1N1) pdm strain | Six-week-old female BALB/c | Downregulated expression of the immune related genes | Prolonged mouse survival. No effect on virus titers and no apparent differences in the extent of lung damage | ( | |
Figure 3Activation of the immuno-coagulative response by influenza virus in the respiratory mucosa. Beneficial effects of immunobiotics administration on the immuno-coagulative response triggered by toll-like receptor 3 or Influenza Virus in the respiratory mucosa.
Effect of probiotics on influenza virus (IFV) infection in humans.
| Strain | Viability | Route | Population studied | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viable | Oral (capsule) | Randomized, double-blinded, and placebo-controlled human clinical trial in adults | Coadjuvant capability for anti-IFV vaccine. Lower incidence of influenza-like illness during 5 months after vaccination Increased proportion of NK cells, higher induction of Th1 cytokines and augmented specific T-helper and T-cytotoxic lymphocytes. Increased antigen specific IgA | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (fermented dairy drink Actimel®) | Randomized, multicentre, double-blind, and controlled studies in elderly population over 70 years of age | Coadjuvant capability for anti-influenza vaccine. Improved IFV-specific antibody titers after vaccination | ( | |
| Oral (capsule) | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled pilot study in adults | Coadjuvant capability for anti-IFV vaccine. Increased protective titer 28 days after vaccination for the H3N2 strain | ( | ||
| Non-viable (heat killed) | Oral (capsule) | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled pilot study in adults | Improved levels of interferon (IFN)-β before vaccination | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (capsule and acidified dairy drink) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and parallel-group study in adults | Coadjuvant capability for anti-IFV vaccine. Improved vaccine-specific secretory IgA in saliva. Significant higher levels of vaccine-specific plasma IgG, IgG1, and IgG3 | ( | |
| Viable | Macrophage stimulation | Human primary macrophages | Quantitative different IL-1β and type I IFN gene expression levels in macrophages. Diminished IFV replication and production of viral proteins in macrophages | ( | |
| Non-viable (heat killed) | Oral (tablet) | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled trial in elderly population over 65 years of age | Significant reduction of the incidence rate of the common cold | ( | |
| Non-viable (heat killed) | Oral (jelly) | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled trial in elderly nursing home resident volunteers | Coadjuvant capability for anti-IFV vaccine. Improvement of hemagglutination inhibition titers against all different types of influenza antigens analyzed. Improvement in antibody titers against A/H3N2 | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (supplemented milk) | Randomized, double-blinded, and placebo-controlled in children of 2–6 years of age | Probiotic intervention did not reduce significantly the occurrence of the examined respiratory viruses, but the children that received the | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (fermented drink) | Open-label, parallel-group trial in children of 6–12 years of age | Reduced incidence of IFV infection in schoolchildren | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (added to breast milk or formula) | Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled trial in infants between the first and third days of life | Significant reduction in the incidence of viral respiratory tract infections | ( | |
| Viable | Oral (fermented dairy drink) | Randomized, placebo-controlled, and double-blind trial in adults | Significant decrease in major symptoms of influenza-like illness. IFN-α elicited by A/H1N1 on peripheral blood mononuclear cells prepared from volunteers tended to be higher, and IFN-stimulated gene 15 was significantly higher | ( |