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Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections

The sepsis-induced cytokine storm leads to severe lymphopenia and reduced effector capacity of remaining/surviving cells. This results in a prolonged state of immunoparalysis, that contributes to enhanced morbidity/mortality of sepsis survivors upon secondary infection. The impact of sepsis on sever...

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Autores principales: Jensen, Isaac J., Winborn, Christina S., Fosdick, Micaela G., Shao, Peng, Tremblay, Mikaela M., Shan, Qiang, Tripathy, Sandeep Kumar, Snyder, Christopher M., Xue, Hai-Hui, Griffith, Thomas S., Houtman, Jon C., Badovinac, Vladimir P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6231673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30379932
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007405
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author Jensen, Isaac J.
Winborn, Christina S.
Fosdick, Micaela G.
Shao, Peng
Tremblay, Mikaela M.
Shan, Qiang
Tripathy, Sandeep Kumar
Snyder, Christopher M.
Xue, Hai-Hui
Griffith, Thomas S.
Houtman, Jon C.
Badovinac, Vladimir P.
author_facet Jensen, Isaac J.
Winborn, Christina S.
Fosdick, Micaela G.
Shao, Peng
Tremblay, Mikaela M.
Shan, Qiang
Tripathy, Sandeep Kumar
Snyder, Christopher M.
Xue, Hai-Hui
Griffith, Thomas S.
Houtman, Jon C.
Badovinac, Vladimir P.
author_sort Jensen, Isaac J.
collection PubMed
description The sepsis-induced cytokine storm leads to severe lymphopenia and reduced effector capacity of remaining/surviving cells. This results in a prolonged state of immunoparalysis, that contributes to enhanced morbidity/mortality of sepsis survivors upon secondary infection. The impact of sepsis on several lymphoid subsets has been characterized, yet its impact on NK-cells remains underappreciated–despite their critical role in controlling infection(s). Here, we observed numerical loss of NK-cells in multiple tissues after cecal-ligation-and-puncture (CLP)-induced sepsis. To elucidate the sepsis-induced lesions in surviving NK-cells, transcriptional profiles were evaluated and indicated changes consistent with impaired effector functionality. A corresponding deficit in NK-cell capacity to produce effector molecules following secondary infection and/or cytokine stimulation (IL-12,IL-18) further suggested a sepsis-induced NK-cell intrinsic impairment. To specifically probe NK-cell receptor-mediated function, the activating Ly49H receptor, that recognizes the murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) m157 protein, served as a model receptor. Although relative expression of Ly49H receptor did not change, the number of Ly49H(+) NK-cells in CLP hosts was reduced leading to impaired in vivo cytotoxicity and the capacity of NK-cells (on per-cell basis) to perform Ly49H-mediated degranulation, killing, and effector molecule production in vitro was also severely reduced. Mechanistically, Ly49H adaptor protein (DAP12) activation and clustering, assessed by TIRF microscopy, was compromised. This was further associated with diminished AKT phosphorylation and capacity to flux calcium following receptor stimulation. Importantly, DAP12 overexpression in NK-cells restored Ly49H/D receptors-mediated effector functions in CLP hosts. Finally, as a consequence of sepsis-dependent numerical and functional lesions in Ly49H(+) NK-cells, host capacity to control MCMV infection was significantly impaired. Importantly, IL-2 complex (IL-2c) therapy after CLP improved numbers but not a function of NK-cells leading to enhanced immunity to MCMV challenge. Thus, the sepsis-induced immunoparalysis state includes numerical and NK-cell-intrinsic functional impairments, an instructive notion for future studies aimed in restoring NK-cell immunity in sepsis survivors.
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spelling pubmed-62316732018-11-19 Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections Jensen, Isaac J. Winborn, Christina S. Fosdick, Micaela G. Shao, Peng Tremblay, Mikaela M. Shan, Qiang Tripathy, Sandeep Kumar Snyder, Christopher M. Xue, Hai-Hui Griffith, Thomas S. Houtman, Jon C. Badovinac, Vladimir P. PLoS Pathog Research Article The sepsis-induced cytokine storm leads to severe lymphopenia and reduced effector capacity of remaining/surviving cells. This results in a prolonged state of immunoparalysis, that contributes to enhanced morbidity/mortality of sepsis survivors upon secondary infection. The impact of sepsis on several lymphoid subsets has been characterized, yet its impact on NK-cells remains underappreciated–despite their critical role in controlling infection(s). Here, we observed numerical loss of NK-cells in multiple tissues after cecal-ligation-and-puncture (CLP)-induced sepsis. To elucidate the sepsis-induced lesions in surviving NK-cells, transcriptional profiles were evaluated and indicated changes consistent with impaired effector functionality. A corresponding deficit in NK-cell capacity to produce effector molecules following secondary infection and/or cytokine stimulation (IL-12,IL-18) further suggested a sepsis-induced NK-cell intrinsic impairment. To specifically probe NK-cell receptor-mediated function, the activating Ly49H receptor, that recognizes the murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) m157 protein, served as a model receptor. Although relative expression of Ly49H receptor did not change, the number of Ly49H(+) NK-cells in CLP hosts was reduced leading to impaired in vivo cytotoxicity and the capacity of NK-cells (on per-cell basis) to perform Ly49H-mediated degranulation, killing, and effector molecule production in vitro was also severely reduced. Mechanistically, Ly49H adaptor protein (DAP12) activation and clustering, assessed by TIRF microscopy, was compromised. This was further associated with diminished AKT phosphorylation and capacity to flux calcium following receptor stimulation. Importantly, DAP12 overexpression in NK-cells restored Ly49H/D receptors-mediated effector functions in CLP hosts. Finally, as a consequence of sepsis-dependent numerical and functional lesions in Ly49H(+) NK-cells, host capacity to control MCMV infection was significantly impaired. Importantly, IL-2 complex (IL-2c) therapy after CLP improved numbers but not a function of NK-cells leading to enhanced immunity to MCMV challenge. Thus, the sepsis-induced immunoparalysis state includes numerical and NK-cell-intrinsic functional impairments, an instructive notion for future studies aimed in restoring NK-cell immunity in sepsis survivors. Public Library of Science 2018-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6231673/ /pubmed/30379932 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007405 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jensen, Isaac J.
Winborn, Christina S.
Fosdick, Micaela G.
Shao, Peng
Tremblay, Mikaela M.
Shan, Qiang
Tripathy, Sandeep Kumar
Snyder, Christopher M.
Xue, Hai-Hui
Griffith, Thomas S.
Houtman, Jon C.
Badovinac, Vladimir P.
Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title_full Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title_fullStr Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title_full_unstemmed Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title_short Polymicrobial sepsis influences NK-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing NK-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
title_sort polymicrobial sepsis influences nk-cell-mediated immunity by diminishing nk-cell-intrinsic receptor-mediated effector responses to viral ligands or infections
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6231673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30379932
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007405
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