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Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection

The whipworm Trichuris trichiura is a soil-transmitted helminth that dwells in the epithelium of the caecum and proximal colon of their hosts causing the human disease, trichuriasis. Trichuriasis is characterized by colitis attributed to the inflammatory response elicited by the parasite while tunne...

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Autores principales: Duque-Correa, María A., Karp, Natasha A., McCarthy, Catherine, Forman, Simon, Goulding, David, Sankaranarayanan, Geetha, Jenkins, Timothy P., Reid, Adam J., Cambridge, Emma L., Ballesteros Reviriego, Carmen, Müller, Werner, Cantacessi, Cinzia, Dougan, Gordon, Grencis, Richard K., Berriman, Matthew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30640950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007265
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author Duque-Correa, María A.
Karp, Natasha A.
McCarthy, Catherine
Forman, Simon
Goulding, David
Sankaranarayanan, Geetha
Jenkins, Timothy P.
Reid, Adam J.
Cambridge, Emma L.
Ballesteros Reviriego, Carmen
Müller, Werner
Cantacessi, Cinzia
Dougan, Gordon
Grencis, Richard K.
Berriman, Matthew
author_facet Duque-Correa, María A.
Karp, Natasha A.
McCarthy, Catherine
Forman, Simon
Goulding, David
Sankaranarayanan, Geetha
Jenkins, Timothy P.
Reid, Adam J.
Cambridge, Emma L.
Ballesteros Reviriego, Carmen
Müller, Werner
Cantacessi, Cinzia
Dougan, Gordon
Grencis, Richard K.
Berriman, Matthew
author_sort Duque-Correa, María A.
collection PubMed
description The whipworm Trichuris trichiura is a soil-transmitted helminth that dwells in the epithelium of the caecum and proximal colon of their hosts causing the human disease, trichuriasis. Trichuriasis is characterized by colitis attributed to the inflammatory response elicited by the parasite while tunnelling through intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). The IL-10 family of receptors, comprising combinations of subunits IL-10Rα, IL-10Rβ, IL-22Rα and IL-28Rα, modulates intestinal inflammatory responses. Here we carefully dissected the role of these subunits in the resistance of mice to infection with T. muris, a mouse model of the human whipworm T. trichiura. Our findings demonstrate that whilst IL-22Rα and IL-28Rα are dispensable in the host response to whipworms, IL-10 signalling through IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ is essential to control caecal pathology, worm expulsion and survival during T. muris infections. We show that deficiency of IL-10, IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ results in dysbiosis of the caecal microbiota characterised by expanded populations of opportunistic bacteria of the families Enterococcaceae and Enterobacteriaceae. Moreover, breakdown of the epithelial barrier after whipworm infection in IL-10, IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ-deficient mice, allows the translocation of these opportunistic pathogens or their excretory products to the liver causing organ failure and lethal disease. Importantly, bone marrow chimera experiments indicate that signalling through IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ in haematopoietic cells, but not IECs, is crucial to control worm expulsion and immunopathology. These findings are supported by worm expulsion upon infection of conditional mutant mice for the IL-10Rα on IECs. Our findings emphasize the pivotal and complex role of systemic IL-10Rα signalling on immune cells in promoting microbiota homeostasis and maintaining the intestinal epithelial barrier, thus preventing immunopathology during whipworm infections.
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spelling pubmed-63473312019-02-01 Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection Duque-Correa, María A. Karp, Natasha A. McCarthy, Catherine Forman, Simon Goulding, David Sankaranarayanan, Geetha Jenkins, Timothy P. Reid, Adam J. Cambridge, Emma L. Ballesteros Reviriego, Carmen Müller, Werner Cantacessi, Cinzia Dougan, Gordon Grencis, Richard K. Berriman, Matthew PLoS Pathog Research Article The whipworm Trichuris trichiura is a soil-transmitted helminth that dwells in the epithelium of the caecum and proximal colon of their hosts causing the human disease, trichuriasis. Trichuriasis is characterized by colitis attributed to the inflammatory response elicited by the parasite while tunnelling through intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). The IL-10 family of receptors, comprising combinations of subunits IL-10Rα, IL-10Rβ, IL-22Rα and IL-28Rα, modulates intestinal inflammatory responses. Here we carefully dissected the role of these subunits in the resistance of mice to infection with T. muris, a mouse model of the human whipworm T. trichiura. Our findings demonstrate that whilst IL-22Rα and IL-28Rα are dispensable in the host response to whipworms, IL-10 signalling through IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ is essential to control caecal pathology, worm expulsion and survival during T. muris infections. We show that deficiency of IL-10, IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ results in dysbiosis of the caecal microbiota characterised by expanded populations of opportunistic bacteria of the families Enterococcaceae and Enterobacteriaceae. Moreover, breakdown of the epithelial barrier after whipworm infection in IL-10, IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ-deficient mice, allows the translocation of these opportunistic pathogens or their excretory products to the liver causing organ failure and lethal disease. Importantly, bone marrow chimera experiments indicate that signalling through IL-10Rα and IL-10Rβ in haematopoietic cells, but not IECs, is crucial to control worm expulsion and immunopathology. These findings are supported by worm expulsion upon infection of conditional mutant mice for the IL-10Rα on IECs. Our findings emphasize the pivotal and complex role of systemic IL-10Rα signalling on immune cells in promoting microbiota homeostasis and maintaining the intestinal epithelial barrier, thus preventing immunopathology during whipworm infections. Public Library of Science 2019-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6347331/ /pubmed/30640950 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007265 Text en © 2019 Duque-Correa 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Duque-Correa, María A.
Karp, Natasha A.
McCarthy, Catherine
Forman, Simon
Goulding, David
Sankaranarayanan, Geetha
Jenkins, Timothy P.
Reid, Adam J.
Cambridge, Emma L.
Ballesteros Reviriego, Carmen
Müller, Werner
Cantacessi, Cinzia
Dougan, Gordon
Grencis, Richard K.
Berriman, Matthew
Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title_full Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title_fullStr Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title_full_unstemmed Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title_short Exclusive dependence of IL-10Rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
title_sort exclusive dependence of il-10rα signalling on intestinal microbiota homeostasis and control of whipworm infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30640950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007265
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