| Literature DB >> 34113578 |
Caroline M Weight1, Simon P Jochems2, Hugh Adler3,4, Daniela M Ferreira3, Jeremy S Brown5, Robert S Heyderman1.
Abstract
In humans, nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae is common and although primarily asymptomatic, is a pre-requisite for pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD). Together, these kill over 500,000 people over the age of 70 years worldwide every year. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines have been largely successful in reducing IPD in young children and have had considerable indirect impact in protection of older people in industrialized country settings (herd immunity). However, serotype replacement continues to threaten vulnerable populations, particularly older people in whom direct vaccine efficacy is reduced. The early control of pneumococcal colonization at the mucosal surface is mediated through a complex array of epithelial and innate immune cell interactions. Older people often display a state of chronic inflammation, which is associated with an increased mortality risk and has been termed 'Inflammageing'. In this review, we discuss the contribution of an altered microbiome, the impact of inflammageing on human epithelial and innate immunity to S. pneumoniae, and how the resulting dysregulation may affect the outcome of pneumococcal infection in older individuals. We describe the impact of the pneumococcal vaccine and highlight potential research approaches which may improve our understanding of respiratory mucosal immunity during pneumococcal colonization in older individuals.Entities:
Keywords: epithelium; inflammageing; innate immunity; older individuals; pneumococcus (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34113578 PMCID: PMC8185287 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.651474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1The impact of pneumococcal infection on mucosal immunity in older individuals. The human respiratory epithelium includes many cell types all of which contribute to the development of innate immunity through a physical barrier held together by junctional proteins, and a chemical barrier via secretions of mucus, cytokines, chemokines, antimicrobial peptides, vitamin D and retinoic acid. Innate immune cells such as monocytes, neutrophils and MAIT cells are also present in the mucosa. In older individuals, there is a loss of physical movement both at a mechanical elasticity level and a lack of cilia beating which impacts on mucus clearance. This contributes towards increased prevalence of luminal factors such as cell debris, secreted factors, microbiota and pathogens such as S. pneumoniae which trigger already elevated baseline levels of cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8 and TNFα. In younger adults, epithelial-derived secretion of anti-microbial peptides such as cathelicidin and NFκB activation, leads to autophagy. Impaired autophagy and type 1 interferon responses in older individuals may lead to suppressed IFNβ levels, increasing pneumococcal load. Increased expression of epithelial senescence markers and pneumococcal ligands such as PAFr in older people enhances pneumococcal colonization, influencing adhesion, micro-invasion and transmigration potential. Vitamin D deficiency in older people may affect epithelial barrier integrity. In younger adults, disruption to barrier function after pneumococcal infection affected the expression of junctional proteins such as Claudins. In older adults, dysregulation of barrier may enhance rates of pneumococcal transmigration, infiltration of innate immune cells and inflammation. Although MAIT cells are rare in the airway of older individuals, neutrophil prevalence is enhanced, which elevates degranulation and reactive oxygen species levels following pneumococcal infection. However, neutrophil ability for opsonophagocytosis and chemotaxis is impaired in older individuals. Monocyte function may also be impaired in signal transduction and secrete less IL-6, IL-8 and TNFα during infection, in comparison to younger adults. PNE cell, pulmonary neuroendocrine cell; AMP, anti-microbial peptides. Created with Biorender.com.
Epithelial cell changes and ageing in the context of pneumococcal infection.
| Molecular changes | Pneumococcal outcome | Impact on epithelial barrier |
|---|---|---|
| ↑Keratin 10, laminin receptor, PAFr expression | ↑ Pneumococcal adherence, micro-invasion and toxin concentrations | ↑ Epithelial damage, inflammation and immune cell recruitment |
| ↓ Claudin-5, -7, -10, Occludin, ZO-1, VE-cadherin expression | ↑ Pneumococcal transmigration across the epithelial barrier | ↑ Barrier permeability, NFκB activation, inflammation and immune cell recruitment |
| ↑Claudin 2 expression | ↓ Transepithelial electrical resistance | |
| ↓ Vitamin D signalling | ↑ Epithelial damage, inflammation and immune cell recruitment | |
| ↓ LL-37, β defensin -2, -3, -4, S100A7, -8, -9, Lipocalin and RNase 7 secretion | ↑ Pneumococcal load and toxin concentrations | ↓Autophagy, NLRP3 inflammasome activation |
| ↑ Or ↓ IL-6 production | ↓ Or ↑ Effects on pneumococcal-epithelial associations, micro-invasion and transmigration | ↓ Or ↑ Affecting barrier permeability, proliferation and epithelial repair |
Changes in Innate Immunity with age.
| Changes with age | Monocytes/Macrophage | Neutrophils | MAIT cells |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence | ↑ Alveolar macrophages | ↑ Nose and lungs | ↓ Blood |
| ↑ CD14++CD16+ monocytes | ↓Total CD8+ T cells in nasal mucosa | ||
| Cellular changes | ↓ TLR1/2/4 | ↑ CD11b | ↑ Clonal expansion |
| ↓STING/TBK1/IRF3 | ↓Extracellular traps, migration and opsonophagocytosis | ||
| ↓ Inflammasome activation | |||
| Cytokine responses | ↑ TNF baseline | ↑ ROS, Proteinase | |
| ↓TNF, IL-6, IL-1β, IL-8, IFNβ |