| Literature DB >> 28516066 |
Elsa N Bou Ghanem1, James N Lee1, Basma H Joma2, Simin N Meydani3, John M Leong1, Alexander Panda3.
Abstract
Despite the availability of vaccines, Streptococcus pneumoniae remains a leading cause of life-threatening infections, such as pneumonia, bacteremia and meningitis. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) are a key determinant of disease course, because optimal host defense requires an initial robust pulmonary PMN response to control bacterial numbers followed by modulation of this response later in infection. The elderly, who manifest a general decline in immune function and higher basal levels of inflammation, are at increased risk of developing pneumococcal pneumonia. Using an aged mouse infection model, we previously showed that oral supplementation with the alpha-tocopherol form of vitamin E (α-Toc) decreases pulmonary inflammation, in part by modulating neutrophil migration across lung epithelium into alveolar spaces, and reverses the age-associated decline in resistance to pneumococcal pneumonia. The objective of this study was to test the effect of α-Toc on the ability of neutrophils isolated from young (22-35 years) or elderly (65-69 years) individuals to migrate across epithelial cell monolayers in response to S. pneumoniae and to kill complement-opsonized pneumococci. We found that basal levels of pneumococcal-induced transepithelial migration by PMNs from young or elderly donors were indistinguishable, suggesting that the age-associated exacerbation of pulmonary inflammation is not due to intrinsic properties of PMNs of elderly individuals but rather may reflect the inflammatory milieu of the aged lung. Consistent with its anti-inflammatory activity, α-Toc treatment diminished PMN migration regardless of donor age. Unexpectedly, unlike previous studies showing poor killing of antibody-opsonized bacteria, we found that PMNs of elderly donors were more efficient at killing complement-opsonized bacteria ex vivo than their younger counterparts. We also found that the heightened antimicrobial activity in PMNs from older donors correlated with increased activity of neutrophil elastase, a serine protease that is required to kill pneumococci. Notably, incubation with α-Toc increased PMN elastase activity from young donors and boosted their ability to kill complement-opsonized pneumococci. These findings demonstrate that α-Toc is a potent modulator of PMN responses and is a potential nutritional intervention to combat pneumococcal infection.Entities:
Keywords: S. pneumoniae; aging; infection; inflammation; neutrophils; serine proteases; vitamin E
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28516066 PMCID: PMC5413490 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Aging has no impact on PMN transepithelial migration in response to pneumococcal infection. The number of PMNs that migrated from the basolateral to the apical side of polarized H292 epithelial cells in response to (A) pneumococcal infection or (B) fMLP were measured by MPO ELISA (see Materials and Methods). Data from 6 young donors and 8 elderly donors are shown. For each donor the average number of migrated PMNs from three technical replicates is shown. There was no significant difference in migration between age groups by unpaired Student's t-test.
Figure 2α-Toc reduces pnemococcus-induced transepithelial migration of PMNs from both young and elderly donors. PMNs were pre-treated with α-Toc or vehicle control and allowed to migrate across polarized lung epithelial cells in response to (A) fMLP or pneumococcal infection (B). The average number of migrated PMNs for each donor was calculated from three technical replicates per condition. For each donor α-Toc PMN migration index (y-axis) was calculated by dividing the average number of α-Toc pre-treated transmigrated PMNs by the average number of vehicle control treated transmigrated PMNs. Data from 6 young donors and 8 elderly donors are shown. Unpaired Student's t-test revealed no significant difference in the effect of α-Toc on PMN migration between age groups. One sample t-test revealed α-Toc migration index was significantly different from 1 only in the young donors (p < 0.05 denoted by #).
Figure 3Aging is associated with more efficient killing of complement-opsonized pneumococci by PMNs. (A) The percentage of complement-opsonized S. pneumoniae TIGR4 killed upon a 45-min incubation with PMNs isolated from young and elderly donors was determined by comparing surviving CFU to a no PMN control. Shown are the averages of triplicate reactions from 6 young donors and 8 elderly donors within the same experiment. Significance was determined by unpaired student's t-test. (B) Pearson correlation analysis revealed a significant (p < 0.05) correlation between PMN bacterial killing and age, denoted by “*.”
Figure 4Aging is associated with increased PMN neutrophil elastase activity. PMNs from young or elderly donors were incubated for 45 min with complement-opsonized S. pneumoniae TIGR4. The level (A,C) and activity (B,D) of cathepsin G or neutrophil elastase in PMN lysates were determined (see Materials and Methods). Data from 5 young and 8 elderly donors are shown. Significant differences were determined by a Mann-Whitney test and denoted by “*.”
Figure 5α-Toc boosts bacterial killing by PMNs from young donors. PMNs were pre-treated with α-Toc or vehicle control and then incubated for 45 min with complement-opsonized S. pneumoniae TIGR4. (A) The activity of cathepsin G (left panel) and neutrophil elastase (right panel) in lysates of pelleted PMNs were determined (see Materials and Methods). Shown are the α-Toc activity indices, i.e. the ratio of activities of α-Toc-treated to control-treated PMNs, for all donors. Significant differences were determined by Mann Whitney test. (B) The average percent bacterial killing compared to a no PMN control was calculated from triplicate wells per condition (see Materials and Methods). Shown are the α-Toc bacteriocidal indices, i.e. the ratio of killing by α-Toc-treated to control-treated PMNs, for all donors. Data from 5 young donors and 8 elderly donors are shown. Significant differences were determined by unpaired Student's t-test (p < 0.05 denoted by **) and one sample t-test revealed α-Toc bacteriocidal index was significantly different from 1 only in the young donors (p < 0.05 denoted by #). (C) Spearman correlation analysis between α-Toc activity index and age and (D) Pearson correlation analysis between α-Toc bacteriocidal index and age revealed significant correlations denoted by “*.”