Publication | Closed Access
Resident CD11c<sup>+</sup>Lung Cells Are Impaired by Anthrax Toxins after Spore Infection
61
Citations
30
References
2006
Year
Acute Lung InjuryInflammatory Lung DiseaseMicrobial PathogensLung InflammationIl-6 SecretionToxinologyImmunologyPathologyAnthrax ToxinsImmune SystemInflammationRespiratory ToxicologyRespiratory InfectionSpore InfectionLethal ToxinMicrobial ToxinImmune FunctionClinical MicrobiologyPhagocytePathogenesisInfectious Respiratory DiseaseMedicine
Bacillus anthracis secretes 2 toxins: lethal toxin (LT) and edema toxin (ET). We investigated their role in the physiopathologic mechanisms of inhalational anthrax by evaluating murine lung dendritic cell (LDC) functions after infection with B. anthracis strains secreting LT, ET, or both or with a nontoxinogenic strain. Three lung cell populations gated on CD11c/CD11b expression were obtained after lung digestion: (1) CD11c(high)/CD11b(low) (alveolar macrophages), (2) CD11c(intermediate (int))/CD11b(int) (LDCs), and (3) CD11c(low)/CD11b(high) (interstitial macrophages or monocytes). After infection with LT-secreting strains, a decrease in costimulatory molecule expression on LDCs was observed. All CD11c+ cells infected with a nontoxinogenic strain secreted tumor necrosis factor (TNF)- alpha , interleukin (IL)-10, and IL-6. LT-secreting strains inhibited overall cytokine secretion, whereas the ET-secreting strain inhibited only TNF- alpha secretion and increased IL-6 secretion. Similar results were obtained after preincubation with purified toxins. Our results suggest that anthrax toxins secreted during infection impair LDC function and suppress the innate immune response.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1