Literature DB >> 7558298

Commensal enteric bacteria engender a self-limiting humoral mucosal immune response while permanently colonizing the gut.

K E Shroff1, K Meslin, J J Cebra.   

Abstract

We have employed a germfree mouse model to study the development and persistence of a humoral mucosal immune response to a gram-negative murine commensal organism, Morganella morganii. M. morganii bacteria rapidly colonize the gut, resulting in hypertrophy of Peyer's patches (PP), including germinal center reactions (GCR), and the development of specific immunoglobulin A (IgA) responses detected in vitro in PP fragment cultures and by ELISPOT assays of lamina propria cells. The GCR peaks 14 days after infection and begins to wane thereafter. Upon colonization, the organisms successfully translocate to the mesenteric lymph node and spleen, but the number of translocating bacteria begins to drop with the onset of a specific IgA response. A clonal B-cell microculture technique was used to determine the frequency of specific IgA plasmablasts and IgA memory cells. The frequencies of preplasmablasts were seen to be higher in the earlier stages of germinal center development, whereas the frequencies of antigen-specific memory cells appeared to remain at a relatively constant level even after 193 days postmonoassociation. We suggest that a successful secretory IgA response can attenuate chronic stimulation of GCR even though the bacteria persist in the gut. The observed developing hyporesponsiveness to a chronically present commensal organism may be relevant to the use of bacterial vectors for mucosal immunization.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7558298      PMCID: PMC173549          DOI: 10.1128/iai.63.10.3904-3913.1995

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Immun        ISSN: 0019-9567            Impact factor:   3.441


  45 in total

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Review 7.  The role of secretory antibodies in infection immunity.

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8.  Gut microbiota utilize immunoglobulin A for mucosal colonization.

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9.  Humoral immunity to commensal oral bacteria in human infants: salivary antibodies reactive with Actinomyces naeslundii genospecies 1 and 2 during colonization.

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Review 10.  Autoimmunity, immunodeficiency and mucosal infections: chronic intestinal inflammation as a sensitive indicator of immunoregulatory defects in response to normal luminal microflora.

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