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Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome

Brucella melitensis causes the most severe and acute symptoms of all Brucella species in human beings and infects hosts primarily through the oral route. The epithelium covering domed villi of jejunal-ileal Peyer's patches is an important site of entry for several pathogens, including Brucella....

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Autores principales: Rossetti, Carlos A., Drake, Kenneth L., Siddavatam, Prasad, Lawhon, Sara D., Nunes, Jairo E. S., Gull, Tamara, Khare, Sangeeta, Everts, Robin E., Lewin, Harris A., Adams, Leslie Garry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3857238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081719
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author Rossetti, Carlos A.
Drake, Kenneth L.
Siddavatam, Prasad
Lawhon, Sara D.
Nunes, Jairo E. S.
Gull, Tamara
Khare, Sangeeta
Everts, Robin E.
Lewin, Harris A.
Adams, Leslie Garry
author_facet Rossetti, Carlos A.
Drake, Kenneth L.
Siddavatam, Prasad
Lawhon, Sara D.
Nunes, Jairo E. S.
Gull, Tamara
Khare, Sangeeta
Everts, Robin E.
Lewin, Harris A.
Adams, Leslie Garry
author_sort Rossetti, Carlos A.
collection PubMed
description Brucella melitensis causes the most severe and acute symptoms of all Brucella species in human beings and infects hosts primarily through the oral route. The epithelium covering domed villi of jejunal-ileal Peyer's patches is an important site of entry for several pathogens, including Brucella. Here, we use the calf ligated ileal loop model to study temporal in vivo Brucella-infected host molecular and morphological responses. Our results document Brucella bacteremia occurring within 30 min after intraluminal inoculation of the ileum without histopathologic traces of lesions. Based on a system biology Dynamic Bayesian Network modeling approach (DBN) of microarray data, a very early transient perturbation of the host enteric transcriptome was associated with the initial host response to Brucella contact that is rapidly averted allowing invasion and dissemination. A detailed analysis revealed active expression of Syndecan 2, Integrin alpha L and Integrin beta 2 genes, which may favor initial Brucella adhesion. Also, two intestinal barrier-related pathways (Tight Junction and Trefoil Factors Initiated Mucosal Healing) were significantly repressed in the early stage of infection, suggesting subversion of mucosal epithelial barrier function to facilitate Brucella transepithelial migration. Simultaneously, the strong activation of the innate immune response pathways would suggest that the host mounts an appropriate protective immune response; however, the expression of the two key genes that encode innate immunity anti-Brucella cytokines such as TNF-α and IL12p40 were not significantly changed throughout the study. Furthermore, the defective expression of Toll-Like Receptor Signaling pathways may partially explain the lack of proinflammatory cytokine production and consequently the absence of morphologically detectable inflammation at the site of infection. Cumulatively, our results indicate that the in vivo pathogenesis of the early infectious process of Brucella is primarily accomplished by compromising the mucosal immune barrier and subverting critical immune response mechanisms.
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spelling pubmed-38572382013-12-13 Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome Rossetti, Carlos A. Drake, Kenneth L. Siddavatam, Prasad Lawhon, Sara D. Nunes, Jairo E. S. Gull, Tamara Khare, Sangeeta Everts, Robin E. Lewin, Harris A. Adams, Leslie Garry PLoS One Research Article Brucella melitensis causes the most severe and acute symptoms of all Brucella species in human beings and infects hosts primarily through the oral route. The epithelium covering domed villi of jejunal-ileal Peyer's patches is an important site of entry for several pathogens, including Brucella. Here, we use the calf ligated ileal loop model to study temporal in vivo Brucella-infected host molecular and morphological responses. Our results document Brucella bacteremia occurring within 30 min after intraluminal inoculation of the ileum without histopathologic traces of lesions. Based on a system biology Dynamic Bayesian Network modeling approach (DBN) of microarray data, a very early transient perturbation of the host enteric transcriptome was associated with the initial host response to Brucella contact that is rapidly averted allowing invasion and dissemination. A detailed analysis revealed active expression of Syndecan 2, Integrin alpha L and Integrin beta 2 genes, which may favor initial Brucella adhesion. Also, two intestinal barrier-related pathways (Tight Junction and Trefoil Factors Initiated Mucosal Healing) were significantly repressed in the early stage of infection, suggesting subversion of mucosal epithelial barrier function to facilitate Brucella transepithelial migration. Simultaneously, the strong activation of the innate immune response pathways would suggest that the host mounts an appropriate protective immune response; however, the expression of the two key genes that encode innate immunity anti-Brucella cytokines such as TNF-α and IL12p40 were not significantly changed throughout the study. Furthermore, the defective expression of Toll-Like Receptor Signaling pathways may partially explain the lack of proinflammatory cytokine production and consequently the absence of morphologically detectable inflammation at the site of infection. Cumulatively, our results indicate that the in vivo pathogenesis of the early infectious process of Brucella is primarily accomplished by compromising the mucosal immune barrier and subverting critical immune response mechanisms. Public Library of Science 2013-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3857238/ /pubmed/24349118 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081719 Text en © 2013 Rossetti et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rossetti, Carlos A.
Drake, Kenneth L.
Siddavatam, Prasad
Lawhon, Sara D.
Nunes, Jairo E. S.
Gull, Tamara
Khare, Sangeeta
Everts, Robin E.
Lewin, Harris A.
Adams, Leslie Garry
Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title_full Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title_fullStr Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title_full_unstemmed Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title_short Systems Biology Analysis of Brucella Infected Peyer's Patch Reveals Rapid Invasion with Modest Transient Perturbations of the Host Transcriptome
title_sort systems biology analysis of brucella infected peyer's patch reveals rapid invasion with modest transient perturbations of the host transcriptome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3857238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081719
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