Literature DB >> 8522615

Surface attachment of Salmonella typhimurium to intestinal epithelia imprints the subepithelial matrix with gradients chemotactic for neutrophils.

B A McCormick1, P M Hofman, J Kim, D K Carnes, S I Miller, J L Madara.   

Abstract

During intestinal disease induced by Salmonella typhimurium transepithelial migration of neutrophils (PMN) rapidly follows attachment of the bacteria to the epithelial apical membrane. Among the events stimulated by these interactions is the release of chemotaxins that guide PMN through the subepithelial matrix and subsequently through the epithelium itself (McCormick, B.A., S.P. Colgan, C. Delp-Archer, S.I. Miller, and J.L. Madara. 1993. J. Cell Biol. 123:895-907). Given the substantial volume flow that normally characterizes matrix compartments underlying transporting epithelia, it is unclear how such transmatrix signaling is sustained. Here we show that when underlying matrices are isolated from biophysically confluent polarized monolayers of the human intestinal epithelial cell line T84, they fail to support substantial transmatrix migration of PMN unless an exogenous chemotactic gradient is imposed. In contrast, such matrices isolated from confluent monolayers apically colonized with S. typhimurium support spontaneous transmatrix migration of PMN. Such chemotactic imprinting of underlying matrices is resistant to volume wash and is paralleled by secretion of the known matrix-binding chemokine IL-8. Chemotactic imprinting of the matrix underlying S. typhimurium-colonized monolayers is dependent on epithelial protein synthesis, is directional implying the existence of a gradient, and is neutralized by antibodies either to IL-8 or to the IL-8 receptor on PMN. An avirulent S. typhimurium strain, PhoPc, which attaches to epithelial cells as efficiently as wild-type S. typhimurium, fails to induce basolateral secretion of IL-8 and likewise fails to imprint matrices. Together, these observations show that the epithelial surface can respond to the presence of a luminal pathogen and subsequently imprint the subepithelial matrix with retained IL-8 gradients sufficient to resist washout effects of the volume flow that normally traverses this compartment. Such data further support the notion that the primary role for basolateral secretion of IL-8 by the intestinal and likely other epithelia is recruitment of PMN through the matrix to the subepithelial space, rather than directing the final movement of PMN across the epithelium.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8522615      PMCID: PMC2120679          DOI: 10.1083/jcb.131.6.1599

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Biol        ISSN: 0021-9525            Impact factor:   10.539


  42 in total

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2.  Recognition of an endothelial determinant for CD 18-dependent human neutrophil adherence and transendothelial migration.

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4.  Structural analysis of a human intestinal epithelial cell line.

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5.  Pathophysiology of Salmonella diarrhea in the Rhesus monkey: Intestinal transport, morphological and bacteriological studies.

Authors:  W R Rout; S B Formal; G J Dammin; R A Giannella
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6.  Plasmid-associated virulence of Salmonella typhimurium.

Authors:  P A Gulig; R Curtiss
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7.  Pathology of salmonella colitis.

Authors:  V J McGovern; L J Slavutin
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9.  A role of secreted glycosaminoglycans in cell-substratum adhesion.

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Authors:  N Dana; R F Todd; J Pitt; T A Springer; M A Arnaout
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1984-01       Impact factor: 14.808

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  90 in total

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Review 5.  Bacteria in the intestine, helpful residents or enemies from within?

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6.  Attachment of a noninvasive enteric pathogen, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, to cultured human intestinal epithelial monolayers induces transmigration of neutrophils.

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7.  Neutralization of G-CSF inhibits ILK-induced heterophil influx: granulocyte-colony stimulating factor mediates the Salmonella enteritidis-immune lymphokine potentiation of the acute avian inflammatory response.

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8.  Requirement of the Shigella flexneri virulence plasmid in the ability to induce trafficking of neutrophils across polarized monolayers of the intestinal epithelium.

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9.  Secreted effector proteins of Salmonella dublin act in concert to induce enteritis.

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10.  Endocervical and Neutrophil Lipoxygenases Coordinate Neutrophil Transepithelial Migration to Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

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