| Literature DB >> 28770333 |
Abstract
Rickettsiae are small intracellular bacteria that can cause life-threatening febrile diseases. Rickettsioses occur worldwide with increasing incidence. Therefore, a vaccine is highly desired. A prerequisite for the development of a vaccine is the knowledge of the immune response against these bacteria, in particular protective immunity. In recent years murine models of rickettsial infections have been established, and the study of immune response against rickettsiae in mice provided many new insights into protective and pathological immune reactions. This review summarizes the current knowledge about immune mechanisms in protection and pathology in rickettsial infections.Entities:
Keywords: Immunity ; Immunopathology; Rickettsiae
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28770333 PMCID: PMC5664416 DOI: 10.1007/s00430-017-0514-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Microbiol Immunol ISSN: 0300-8584 Impact factor: 3.402
The family of Rickettsiaceae
| Genus | Group | Species | Vector | Reservoir | Disease/symptoms | Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| SFG |
| Tick | Rodents | Rocky Mountain SF | North, Central and South America |
|
| Tick | Rodents | Mediterranean SF | Europe, Asia, Africa | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Flinder´s island SF | Australia, Thailand | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Japanese SF/oriental SF | Japan | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | North Asian tick typhus | Russia, China, Mongolia, Europe | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | African tick bite fever | Sub-Saharan Africa, Caribbean | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Necrosis, erythema | Europe | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Aneruptive fever | Africa, Europe, Asia | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Mild spotted fever | US, Brazil, Uruguay | ||
| TG |
| Louse | Human, flying squirrel | Epidemic typhus | Worldwide | |
|
| Flea | Rodents, cats, dogs | Endemic typhus | Worldwide | ||
| Transitional |
| Flea | Rodents, cats, opossums | Cat flea typhus | Worldwide | |
|
| Mite | Rodents | Rickettsialpox | Worldwide | ||
|
| Tick | Rodents | Queensland tick typhus | Australia, Tasmania | ||
| Ancestral |
| Tick | ||||
|
| Tick | |||||
|
|
| Mite | Rodents | Scrub typhus | Indian subcontinent, Asia, Australia |
The family of Rickettsiceae consists of two genera: Rickettsia and Orientia. O. tsutsugamushi is the only member of the genus Orientia. The genus Rickettsia is subdivided into four groups: SFG (spotted fever group), TG (typhus group), transitional and ancestral rickettsiae. The vast majority of rickettsiae belongs to the SFG. SF spotted fever (adapted and modified from [5])
Fig. 1Rickettsiae replicate in ECs and induce local inflammatory reactions. Rickettsiae enter ECs by endocytosis and rapidly escape from the endosome. The bacteria replicate free in the cytosol and are released by different mechanisms. SFG rickettsiae are capable to induce focal lysis while TG rickettsiae replicate in the cell until burst. O. tsutsugamushi induces a kind of budding (a). Rickettsiae infect adjacent ECs, further spread via the blood stream and enter the tissue via local lesions. Infected ECs release a series of chemokines, cytokines, prostaglandins and other factors. Chemokines attract neutrophils, monocytes/MΦ, NK cells and T cells from the periphery into the affected tissue. MΦ and neutrophils both of which also get infected with rickettsiae release NO and ROS which is important for killing of ingested bacteria. The production of NO is supported by IFNγ which is provided by infiltrating NK cells and T cells. MΦ and infiltrating NK and T cells further produce inflammatory cytokines such as TNFα that contribute to local inflammation (b)
Murine models of rickettsial infections
| Strain | Species | Route | Suscept. | Pathology | Persistence | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Wild-type |
| i.v. |
| Vasculitis, pneumonia, hepatitis | [ | |
|
| i.p. | − | [ | |||
|
| s.c., i.v. | − | Pneumonia, hepatitis (mild) | yes | [ | |
|
| s.c., i.p. | − | Pneumonia, hepatits, myocarditis, meningoencephalitis | yes | [ | |
| CB17 |
| i.v. | − | Mild hepatitis | [ | |
| CB17 SCID |
| i.v. | − | Mild hepatitis | [ | |
|
| s.c. |
| Strong hepatitis, splenomegaly, systemic inflammation (IFNγ) | [ | ||
| RAG2−/− |
| s.c. |
| Strong hepatitis, splenomegaly, systemic inflammation (IFNγ) | [ | |
| IFNγ−/− |
| s.c. | − | [ | ||
| Perforin−/− |
| s.c. | − | [ | ||
|
| ||||||
| Wild-type |
| i.v. |
| [ | ||
|
| i.p. | − | [ | |||
|
| i.v. | − | [ | |||
|
| s.c., i.v. | − | Mild hepatitis, pneumonia | yes | [ | |
|
| i.p. | − | [ | |||
| MHCI−/− |
| i.v. |
| Encephalitis | [ | |
|
| s.c. | − | [ | |||
| MHCII−/− |
| s.c. | − | [ | ||
| RAG2−/− |
| i.v. | − (?) | Survival for at least 21 days, mild hepatitis | [ | |
| RAG1−/− |
| s.c., i.v. |
| Survival for >3 months, lethal CNS inflammation | yes | [ |
| RAG2−/−γc−/− |
| i.v. |
| Enhanced hepatitis | [ | |
| RAG2−/−Perforin−/− |
| i.v. |
| [ | ||
| Perforin−/− |
| i.v. |
| [ | ||
| IFNγ−/− |
| i.v. |
| [ | ||
| NLRP3−/− |
| i.v. |
| [ | ||
|
| ||||||
| Wild-type |
| i.p. | − | [ | ||
|
| i.v. |
| Meningoencephalitis, pneumonia, hepatitis | [ | ||
|
| i.v. |
| Encephalitis, pneumonia | [ | ||
|
| i.p. |
| [ | |||
|
| i.v. | − | [ | |||
| C3H/HeJ |
| i.p. | − | [ | ||
|
| i.p. |
| [ | |||
|
| i.v. |
| [ | |||
|
| i.p | − | [ | |||
|
| i.p. |
| [ | |||
|
| i.v |
| Splenomegaly | [ | ||
| C3H/HeN SCID |
| i.v.. |
| [ | ||
In recent years immune response against rickettsiae has been intensively studied in murine models of infection. BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice that are commonly used for the study of immunity against infectious pathogens are resistant against most rickettsiae while C3H/HeN mice are susceptible to a broader range of rickettsiae. Except for C3H/HeJ mice that are deficient in the expression of a functional TLR4 receptor, knockout mice on the C3H background are not available. Much knowledge about protective immunity against rickettsial infections has been gained from the comparison of rickettsial infections in BALB/c and C57BL/6 wild-type mice and mice of these backgrounds that either lack components of adaptive immunity or effector molecules such as IFNγ and Perforin. Overall, the enhanced susceptibility of BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice that either lack T and B cells (CB17 SCID, RAG2−/− and RAG1−/− mice), CD8+ T cells (MHCI−/−) or CD4+ T cells (MHCII−/−) to rickettsial infections demonstrates the importance of adaptive immunity, especially of T cells, in defense against these pathogens
Suscept. susceptibility; i.v. intravenous; i.p. intraperitoneal; s.c. subcutaneous
Fig. 2Mechanisms of T cell-mediated protection. CD8+ T cells differentiate in the infection with rickettsiae to cytotoxic T cells that induce apoptosis in infected cells via the release of perforin and granzymes. In addition, CD8+ T cells produce IFNγ and TNFα. These cytokines induce the production of NO by MΦ and other cells and, thus, enable bacterial killing. The release of cytokines by CD8+ T cells is sufficient for protection at least in the infection with some rickettsial species such as R. typhi where the cytotoxic activity is not essential for bacterial defense (a). CD4+ T cells usually differentiate into TH1 cells that produce IFNγ and TNFα in the infection with rickettsiae. TH1 cells are protective by the induction of NO and bacterial killing by MΦ and other cells (b). In the absence of IFNγ, CD4+ T cells develop into TH17 cells in the infection with rickettsiae. These cells release IL-17A, IL-22 and TNFα. IL-17A and TNFα synergistically induce the production of NO und ROS by MΦ and other cells. In addition, these cytokines induce the release of proinflammatory cytokines. IL-17A further induces the production of chemokines, leading to the recruitment of neutrophils that contribute to local inflammation. IL-22 does not act on immune cells but various tissue cells. IL-22 induces the release of antimicrobial peptides and other factors and can contribute in this way to bacterial elimination. At least in the infection with R. typhi TH17 cells can be protective. However, the combined release of TNFα and IL-17A is non-beneficial and exerts pathological effects. Inhibition of either TNFα or IL-17A in this situation renders TH17 cells as protective as TH1 cells (c)