| Literature DB >> 29065562 |
Amy Llewellyn1,2, Andrew Foey3.
Abstract
There is a growing body of evidence documenting probiotic bacteria to have a beneficial effect to the host through their ability to modulate the mucosal immune system. Many probiotic bacteria can be considered to act as either immune activators or immune suppressors, which have appreciable influence on homeostasis, inflammatory- and suppressive-immunopathology. What is becoming apparent is the ability of these probiotics to modulate innate immune responses via direct or indirect effects on the signaling pathways that drive these activatory or suppressive/tolerogenic mechanisms. This review will focus on the immunomodulatory role of probiotics on signaling pathways in innate immune cells: from positive to negative regulation associated with innate immune cells driving gut mucosal functionality. Research investigations have shown probiotics to modulate innate functionality in many ways including, receptor antagonism, receptor expression, binding to and expression of adaptor proteins, expression of negative regulatory signal molecules, induction of micro-RNAs, endotoxin tolerisation and finally, the secretion of immunomodulatory proteins, lipids and metabolites. The detailed understanding of the immunomodulatory signaling effects of probiotic strains will facilitate strain-specific selective manipulation of innate cell signal mechanisms in the modulation of mucosal adjuvanticity, immune deviation and tolerisation in both healthy subjects and patients with inflammatory and suppressive pathology.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; dendritic cells; epithelial cells; immunomodulation; inflammation; innate; macrophages; neutrophils; probiotics; signaling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29065562 PMCID: PMC5691772 DOI: 10.3390/nu9101156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Probiotic modulation of signaling pathways in intestinal epithelial cells.
| Probiotic Species (Soluble Product) | Probiotic–Induced Effector Response | Cells/Cell Line | Signaling Pathway | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increase IL-8, MCP-1 and IL-6 levels | PIE cells | NFκB via activation of A20 | [ | |
| Suppress NFκB-binding activity & IκB degradation | HT-29 cells | NFκB | [ | |
| Decrease ETEC-induced IL-8 & IL-1β production | Caco-2/TC7 cells (higher transport activity). | TLR4 signaling via activation of Tollip and IRAK-M | [ | |
| Decrease IL-6, IL-8, IL-1α and MCP-1 | BIE cells | NFκB and p38 MAPK | [ | |
| Increased expression of IL-10R2 | Phospho-STAT3, increased expression of SOCS-3 | [ | ||
| TLR2 up-regulation | IPEC-J2 | TLR signaling | [ | |
| Reduce NFκB activation via ROS | FHs74Int cells (human foetal) | NFκB | [ | |
| Enhance tight junction | YAMC | EGFR/Akt | [ | |
| Decrease cytokine-induced apoptosis | YAMC | EGFR/Akt via Src | [ | |
| Activate negative regulators A20, Bcl-3 and MKP-1 | PIE cells | TLR4-dependent NFκB and MAPK | [ | |
| Increased tight junction proteins | Caco-2 cells | TLR2 signaling | [ | |
| Inhibit IκB phosphorylation | NFκB | [ | ||
| Decrease IL-6 and IL-8 expression | IPEC-1 | Decrease of ERK1/2 and p38 phosphorylation | [ | |
| Inhibit NFκB activity | HT-29 | NFκB | [ | |
| VSL#3 | Increased tight junction proteins | HT-29 cells | Phosphorylation of ERK and p38 MAPKs | [ |
| VSL#3 | Induction of heat shock proteins (hsp) | Colonic IECs | Suppression of NFκB via inhibition of proteosome | [ |
Probiotics differentially modulate epithelial cell responses via activation or suppression of distinct signaling pathways in a strain-dependent manner. Observations presented include a range of strains of bifidobacteria, lactobacilli, streptococcus, VSL#3 mixture and the yeast, S. cerevisiae (Sc). Epithelial cell models include human (Caco-2, Caco-2/TC7 (late passage clone), HT-29, FHs74Int), murine (YAMC), porcine (porcine intestinal epithelium PIE, intestinal porcine epithelial cells, IPEC), and bovine (BIE) cells. Endogenous negative regulators of TLR signaling (IRAK-M, Interleukin receptor-associated kinase-M; Tollip, Toll interacting protein; A20, TNF-inducible zinc finger protein A20; Bcl-3, proto-oncogene 3 of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia; MKP-1, mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase-1). Cytokines indicated are Interleukin (IL)-1α, -1β, -6, -8, -10, IL-10R2, IL-10 Receptor subunit 2 and MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein -1. ROS, reactive oxygen species. NFκB, Nuclear factor kappa B; ETEC, Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli; TLR, Toll-Like Receptor; MAPK, mitogen activated protein kinases; SOCS, suppressor of cytokine signaling; EGFR, epithelial growth factor receptor; ERK, extracellular signal-related kinases.
Figure 1Probiotic modulation of intestinal epithelial cell signaling pathways Probiotic-mediated modulation of epithelial cell responses via activation or suppression of distinct signaling pathways is species-dependent. Mechanisms of modulation are presented above for a range of species of Bifidobacteria, Lactobacilli, Streptococcus, VSL#3 mixture and the yeast S. cerevisiae, indicated in the luminal space above the square epithelial cells; additionally, LGG, L. rhamnosus strain GG; LGGp40, LGG secreted p40 protein; LP, L. plantarum; Lca, L. casei. Mechanisms are indicated by numbers 1–8 in orange boxes: 1. Anti-apoptotic, 2. Antimicrobial defence, 3. Reinforcement of tight junction (TJ), 4. Reinforcement of TJ (gene expression & translocation to TJ), 5. Pathogen sensing, 6. Protection against TJ damage, 7. & 8. Suppression of inflammatory cytokines. Arrowed lines are activatory, blunted lines are suppressive/inbibitory. Light blue boxes between epithelial cells are representative of tight junctions. Dark blue boxes represent PRRs, predominantly TLR2. Dark green box on apical surface is an, as yet unidentified receptor for LGGp40. EGFR, Epithelial growth factor receptor; Src, serine-threonine kinase; ZO-1, zonula occludens-1; AMPs, antimicrobial peptides; TNFα, tumour necrosis factor-alpha; PRR, pattern recognition receptors; PKC, protein kinase C; PI3K, phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase.
Figure 2Probiotic modulation of pathogen sensing by TLR-2 and TLR-4 signaling pathways. Probiotic-mediated modulation of TLR-2 and TLR-4 signaling via direct and indirect mechanisms of activation or suppression of distinct signaling molecules/pathways is strain-dependent. Mechanisms of modulation are presented above for a range of strains of bifidobacteria (BL = B. longum strain BB536; BB = B. breve strain M-16V), lactobacilli (LGG = L. rhamnosus strain GG; LC = L. casei strain 0LL2768; LJ = L. jensenii strain TL2937; LA = L. amylovorus strain DSM16698T), and the yeast S. cerevisiae, indicated in the extracellular space above the intracellular post-membrane receptor signaling pathways. TLR signal transduction is initiated by TLR signal adaptor molecules, represented by red ovals, which bind the TIR domains (orange box) on the TLR cytoplasmic region. Signal is passed downstream via activation of IRAK-1 (purple box) and TRAF-6 (maroon box), resulting in the activation of NFkB and MAPK pathways. Arrowed lines are activatory, blunted lines are suppressive/inhibitory. Probiotic bacteria regulate inflammatory responses via induction of a range of endogenous negative regulators of TLR signaling (IRAK-M, Tollip, A20, Ubcl2, Bcl-3 and p50/p50 NFkB homodimer). TLR2 ligation may induce a suppressive effect on TLR4-mediated inflammatory responses via expression/activation of IRAK-M and Tollip. S. cerevisiae can exert a suppressive effect on inflammatory responses via inhibition of MAPK pathways (p38, JNK and ERKs). At this time, studies represented in this figure use a range of cells/cell lines; selective manipulation of signal checkpoint molecules and pathways is likely to represent a cell and cell subset-specific nature.
Probiotic modulation of signaling pathways in intestinal dendritic cells.
| Probiotic | T Cell Activation | PRR and Signaling Pathway | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tr1 cells | TLR2/MyD88 | [ | |
| Increased CD4+CD25+ Treg cells & Th1 activation | TLR9 and IκB-α phosphorylation | [ | |
| CD4+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells | Not described. | [ | |
| Increased CD4+CD25+ Treg cells and Th1 activation | TLR9 and IκB-α phosphorylation | [ | |
| ND | TLR9 and reduced IκBα degradation and p38 phosphorylation | [ | |
| CD4+ Foxp3+ Treg cells | TLR9 | [ | |
| CD4+ Foxp3+ Treg cells | NOD2 | [ |
Probiotics differentially modulate dendritic cell responses via activation of distinct pathogen sensing signaling pathways (TLR2, TLR9, NOD2) in a strain-dependent manner. Table also indicates the downstream effects on effector T cells (Th1) and regulatory T cells (Treg). Observations presented include a range of strains of Bifidobacterium, lactobacilli, and IRT5 probiotic mixture and the modulatory effect of probiotic DNA from L. rhamnosus GG and B. longum BB536. ND, indicates not determined.
Probiotic modulation of neutrophil effector function and signaling pathways.
| Probiotic | Effector Response | Cells/Cell Line/Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reduction in severity of inflammation —decreased Nφ & Mφ infiltration | IL-10 deficient mouse model of colitis | [ | |
| Inhibition of Nφ transmigration by suppression of IL-8, Gro-α, ENAP-78 and suppression of chemokine regulators, IL-1β & TNFα. | Enterotoxigenic | [ | |
| Increased Nφ phagocytic capacity & enhanced phagocyte-mediated bacteriocidal activity. | Clinical trial: Healthy human PBMCs | [ | |
| Amelioration of inflammation: Reduced levels of Nφs & chemokines. | DSS-induced colitis, murine model. Prophylaxis – faecal transplantation model. | [ | |
| Worsening of faecal condition accompanied by reduced Nφ numbers. | DSS-induced chronic colitis, murine model. Relapse–Remision cycling. | [ | |
| Reduction in inflammation: decreased Nφ infiltration & CXCL-1. | DSS-induced acute colitis, murine model. | [ | |
| Suppression of IL-8 expression. Conditioned media: L34 suppressed NFκB phosphorylation, L39 suppressed both NFκB & c-Jun. | [ | ||
| Cell wall extract—lethality. Increased TNFα, IL-1β, MIP-1α, MCP-1, NO & decreased Nφ count. | Sepsis model in Sprague-Dawley rats. | [ | |
| AM development prevented by suppressing IL-4 (Th2), IL-17 (Th17), TSLP via a Foxp3+ Treg-dependent mechanism. | Murine OVA challenge allergic march (AM) model. | [ | |
| Inhibition of PMA- and | HL60-derived Nφ cell model. | [ | |
| Augmentation of Nφ recruitment. Upregulation of adhesion molecule & cytokine expression. | Diet-restricted murine peritonitis model: ip glycogen injection. | [ | |
| VSL#3 Probiotic mixture | Reduction in mucosal levels of Nφ chemoattractant, IL-8 & tissue influx of Nφs. | Human retrospective study of proB-treated UC pouchitis. | [ |
| Reduction in bacterial load, Nφ numbers, apoptotic/necrotic cells and IL-8. Wound healing. | Chronic infected leg ulcers (diabetic and non-diabetic). | [ | |
| Anti-tumour effects by MMP-8 driven release of TRAIL (TLR2/4–dependent) | Nφs in BCG-responsive bladder cancer patients | [ |
Probiotics differentially modulate neutrophil effector responses via activation of distinct pathogen sensing signaling pathways in a strain-dependent manner. Observations presented include a range of LAB strains of bifidobacteria, lactobacilli, and Escherichia coli Nissle 1917. Effector responses to probiotic introduction are indicated as modulation of phagocytosis, killing activity, inflammation and cytokine production, which by inference are linked to effects on pathogen sensing and signaling pathways. These observations have been recorded for a range of neutrophil studies using distinct primary cells, cell lines and in vivo models indicated.
Probiotic modulation of signaling pathways in macrophage cells.
| Probiotic | Effector Response | Cells/Cell Line | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TNFα: Increased—CD14hi M1/M2 Decreased—CD14lo M1/M2 | M1 & M2 Mφ subsets (THP-1 cell line) | [ | |
| Secreted Protein | +/− IL-6 M1 Mφs | M1 & M2 Mφ subsets (THP-1) | [ |
| SCFA-butyrate | Suppression of IL-12 & augmentation of IL-10 | Human monocytes | [ |
| SCFA-butyrate | Decreased TNFα | M1 & M2 Mφ | [ |
| Increased IL-10:IL-12 ratios | Human Mφs | [ | |
| Suppression of LPS | THP-1 & U937 pro-monocytes | [ | |
| Suppression of | THP-1 pro-monocytes | [ | |
| Suppression of | THP-1 pro-monocytes | [ | |
| Differential modulation of TNFα, IL-1β, IL-12p40 mRNA. Decreased IκB phosphorylation and induction of SOCS-1, -3. | RAW264.7 murine Mφs | [ | |
| LAB LTA | Regulate TLR2-dependent | Murine peritoneal Mφs Balb/c | [ |
| G-CSF-mediated inhibition of JNK: Suppression of TNFα | Murine immort peritoneal & BMM C57Bl/6 Human THP-1s | [ | |
| ProB DNA | Induction of IL-1, IL-10 & IL-6 | Human PBMCs | [ |
| TLR2-dependent up-regulation of negative regulators of NFκB | Human PBMCs & PMA-THP-1 cells. | [ | |
| Suppression of LPS-induced TNFα & MCP-1 via inhibition of MAPK-driven cJun/AP-1actn | THP-1 cells, MonoMac-6 cells, CD Mφs | [ |
Probiotics differentially modulate macrophage responses via activation of distinct pathogen sensing signaling pathways in a strain-dependent manner. Observations presented include a range of strains of bifidobacteria, lactobacilli, and streptococci and enterococci and the modulatory effect of probiotic DNA, conditioned medium, cell wall lipoteichoic acid (LTA) and the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) metabolite, butyrate. Effector responses to probiotic introduction (and their products) are indicated as modulation of inflammation, pathogen sensing, cytokine production and their linkage to effects on signaling molecules and pathways. These observations have been recorded for a range of macrophage studies using distinct primary cells, cell lines and ex vivo models indicated.
Figure 3Immune stimulation or tolerisation?—Probiotics hold the key! Probiotics differentially modulate macrophage responses via activation and suppression of distinct pathogen sensing signaling pathways in a strain-dependent manner. Both pathogenic (red) and probiotic (green) bacteria can express similar/overlapping profiles of PAMPs/MAMPs (LTA, LPS, Flagellin, PGN, DNA) through a range of PRRs including external-facing TLR2 (homodimeric or heterodimerised with TLR1 or TLR6), TLR4, TLR5, and intracellular NOD1, NOD2 and endosomal TLR9. All of which can transduce immune activatory/inflammatory responses through activation of NFkB and MAPK signal pathways (indicated in red arrows). In addition, secondary exposure and chronic exposure to probiotic-derived MAMPs (indicated in green arrows), induce a suppressive/tolerogenic response via the induction of endogenous negative regulators to TLR signals (Tollip, IRAK-M, Myd88s, A20, TRIAD3A and miRNAs) that inhibit NFkB and MAPK pathways. Finally, recognition of PGN and its breakdown products through NODs-1 and -2 (indicated in a blue arrow) can have both a positive and negative effect on the inflammatory response that may be determined by selective NOD receptor utilisation or specific structural differences between PAMPs and MAMPs. TIR domain and TLR signal adaptor molecules are indicated in the blue key box.
Probiotic-derived MAMPs, secreted products and metabolites modulate immune signaling pathways.
| Probiotic Format | Effector Response | Cells/Cell Line | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TNFα: Increased—CD14hi M1 | M1 & M2 Mφ subsets | [ | |
| Suppressed LPS-induced TNFα, NFκB activation & augmented IL-1β (M1 Mφs). Suppressed LPS-induced IL-6 & augmented IL-1β (M2 Mφs), independent of NFκB activation. | M1 & M2 Mφ subsets | [ | |
| SCFA-butyrate | Suppression of LPS/PGN-induced TNFα (M1 & M2). Suppression of LPS/PGN-induced IL-1β (M2). Augmentation of LPS/PGN-induced IL-10 (M2). Suppression of monocyte LPS/PGN—induced TNFα & IL-1β. | M1 & M2 Mφ subsets | [ |
| Inhibition of NFκB binding activity andproteosome-dependent degredation of IκBα. (Stimuli: TNFα, LPS, Flagellin, Poly I:C). Suppression of MCP-1 secretion. | Murine YAMC intestinal epithelial cells, RAW264.7 Mφs, Primary DCs | [ | |
| Suppression of LPS-induced TNFα pLTA suppn of ERK, JNK, p38 MAPK phosphorylation, IκB degradation & TLR4. Induction of IRAK-M expression. | THP-1 & U937 pro-monocytes. Murine sepsis model L929-BMM Balb/c | [ | |
| Suppression of | THP-1 pro-monocytes | [ | |
| Suppression of | THP-1 pro-monocytes | [ | |
| Protection from H2O2-mediated damage to IEC barrier TJs (PKC & MAPK-dependent). | IECs | [ | |
| LAB LTA | Regulate TLR2-dependent | Murine peritoneal Mφs Balb/c | [ |
| Prevention of epithelial cell barrier damage. | Mass Spec. (MS/MS) analysis of LGG S/N grown in MRS broth. | [ | |
| ProB DNA | Induction of IL-1, IL-10 & IL-6 | Human PBMCs | [ |
| Immunostimulation | Murine immune cells B cells | [ | |
| Bifidobacteria (Non-designated strain) unmethylated CpG DNA | Augmentation of Mφ phagocytosis, NO release and secretion of IL-1β, IL-6, IL-12p40 and TNFα (CpG DNA recognised by TLR9). | Murine Mφs : J774A.1 cells | [ |
Probiotic-derived products differentially modulate immune cell effector responses via activation of distinct pathogen sensing signaling pathways. Observations presented include the modulatory effect of probiotic DNA, conditioned medium, cell wall lipoteichoic acid (LTA) and the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) metabolite, butyrate for a range of strains of bifidobacteria and lactobacilli. Effector responses to introduction of probiotic-derived products are indicated as modulation of inflammation, pathogen sensing, cytokine production and their linkage to effects on signaling molecules and pathways. These observations have been recorded for a range of studies using distinct primary cells, cell lines and ex vivo models indicated.