Publication | Open Access
Brucella CβG induces a dual pro- and anti-inflammatory response leading to a transient neutrophil recruitment
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Citations
15
References
2015
Year
Mouse EarInnate Immune SystemImmunologyPathologyImmunologic MechanismImmune SystemDual Pro-InflammationBrucella CβgImmunopathologyGranulocyteVirulence FactorAnti-inflammatory ResponseChronic InflammationCell BiologyInflammatory DiseasePhagocyteCytokineInflammation BiologyChronic ZoonosisDendritic Cell BiologyMedicine
Brucella is the causing agent of a chronic zoonosis called brucellosis. The Brucella β-1,2 cyclic glucan (CβG) is a virulence factor, which has been described as a potent immune stimulator, albeit with no toxicity for cells and animals. We first used a genome-wide approach to characterize human myeloid dendritic cell (mDC) responses to CβG. Transcripts related to inflammation (IL-6, IL2RA, PTGS2), chemokine (CXCR7, CXCL2) and anti-inflammatory pathways (TNFAIP6, SOCS3) were highly expressed in CβG-treated mDC. In mouse GMCSF-derived DC, CβG triggered the expression of both activation (CXCL2, KC) and inhibition (SOCS3 and TNFAIP6) molecules. We then characterized the inflammatory infiltrates at the level of mouse ear when injected with CβG or LPS. CβG yielded a lower and transient recruitment of neutrophils compared to LPS. The consequence of these dual pro- and anti-inflammatory signals triggered by CβG corresponds to the induction of a controlled local inflammation.
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