| Literature DB >> 28459433 |
Thomas Ulas1, Sabine Pirr2, Beate Fehlhaber2, Marie S Bickes2, Torsten G Loof3, Thomas Vogl4, Lara Mellinger2, Anna S Heinemann2, Johanna Burgmann2, Jennifer Schöning2, Sabine Schreek2, Sandra Pfeifer3, Friederike Reuner3, Lena Völlger2, Martin Stanulla5, Maren von Köckritz-Blickwede3, Shirin Glander6, Katarzyna Barczyk-Kahlert4, Constantin S von Kaisenberg7, Judith Friesenhagen2, Lena Fischer-Riepe4, Stefanie Zenker4, Joachim L Schultze1,8, Johannes Roth4, Dorothee Viemann2.
Abstract
The high risk of neonatal death from sepsis is thought to result from impaired responses by innate immune cells; however, the clinical observation of hyperinflammatory courses of neonatal sepsis contradicts this concept. Using transcriptomic, epigenetic and immunological approaches, we demonstrated that high amounts of the perinatal alarmins S100A8 and S100A9 specifically altered MyD88-dependent proinflammatory gene programs. S100 programming prevented hyperinflammatory responses without impairing pathogen defense. TRIF-adaptor-dependent regulatory genes remained unaffected by perinatal S100 programming and responded strongly to lipopolysaccharide, but were barely expressed. Steady-state expression of TRIF-dependent genes increased only gradually during the first year of life in human neonates, shifting immune regulation toward the adult phenotype. Disruption of this critical sequence of transient alarmin programming and subsequent reprogramming of regulatory pathways increased the risk of hyperinflammation and sepsis. Collectively these data suggest that neonates are characterized by a selective, transient microbial unresponsiveness that prevents harmful hyperinflammation in the delicate neonate while allowing for sufficient immunological protection.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28459433 DOI: 10.1038/ni.3745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Immunol ISSN: 1529-2908 Impact factor: 25.606