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Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections

Pneumonia remains a global health threat, in part due to expanding categories of susceptible individuals and increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistant pathogens. However, therapeutic stimulation of the lungs’ mucosal defenses by inhaled exposure to a synergistic combination of Toll-like receptor...

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Autores principales: Ware, Hayden H., Kulkarni, Vikram V., Wang, Yongxing, Pantaleón García, Jezreel, Leiva Juarez, Miguel, Kirkpatrick, Carson T., Wali, Shradha, Syed, Sarah, Kontoyiannis, Alexander D., Sikkema, William K. A., Tour, James M., Evans, Scott E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30794556
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208216
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author Ware, Hayden H.
Kulkarni, Vikram V.
Wang, Yongxing
Pantaleón García, Jezreel
Leiva Juarez, Miguel
Kirkpatrick, Carson T.
Wali, Shradha
Syed, Sarah
Kontoyiannis, Alexander D.
Sikkema, William K. A.
Tour, James M.
Evans, Scott E.
author_facet Ware, Hayden H.
Kulkarni, Vikram V.
Wang, Yongxing
Pantaleón García, Jezreel
Leiva Juarez, Miguel
Kirkpatrick, Carson T.
Wali, Shradha
Syed, Sarah
Kontoyiannis, Alexander D.
Sikkema, William K. A.
Tour, James M.
Evans, Scott E.
author_sort Ware, Hayden H.
collection PubMed
description Pneumonia remains a global health threat, in part due to expanding categories of susceptible individuals and increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistant pathogens. However, therapeutic stimulation of the lungs’ mucosal defenses by inhaled exposure to a synergistic combination of Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists known as Pam2-ODN promotes mouse survival of pneumonia caused by a wide array of pathogens. This inducible resistance to pneumonia relies on intact lung epithelial TLR signaling, and inducible protection against viral pathogens has recently been shown to require increased production of epithelial reactive oxygen species (ROS) from multiple epithelial ROS generators. To determine whether similar mechanisms contribute to inducible antibacterial responses, the current work investigates the role of ROS in therapeutically-stimulated protection against Pseudomonas aerugnosa challenges. Inhaled Pam2-ODN treatment one day before infection prevented hemorrhagic lung cytotoxicity and mouse death in a manner that correlated with reduction in bacterial burden. The bacterial killing effect of Pam2-ODN was recapitulated in isolated mouse and human lung epithelial cells, and the protection correlated with inducible epithelial generation of ROS. Scavenging or targeted blockade of ROS production from either dual oxidase or mitochondrial sources resulted in near complete loss of Pam2-ODN-induced bacterial killing, whereas deficiency of induced antimicrobial peptides had little effect. These findings support a central role for multisource epithelial ROS in inducible resistance against a bacterial pathogen and provide mechanistic insights into means to protect vulnerable patients against lethal infections.
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spelling pubmed-63863172019-03-09 Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections Ware, Hayden H. Kulkarni, Vikram V. Wang, Yongxing Pantaleón García, Jezreel Leiva Juarez, Miguel Kirkpatrick, Carson T. Wali, Shradha Syed, Sarah Kontoyiannis, Alexander D. Sikkema, William K. A. Tour, James M. Evans, Scott E. PLoS One Research Article Pneumonia remains a global health threat, in part due to expanding categories of susceptible individuals and increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistant pathogens. However, therapeutic stimulation of the lungs’ mucosal defenses by inhaled exposure to a synergistic combination of Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists known as Pam2-ODN promotes mouse survival of pneumonia caused by a wide array of pathogens. This inducible resistance to pneumonia relies on intact lung epithelial TLR signaling, and inducible protection against viral pathogens has recently been shown to require increased production of epithelial reactive oxygen species (ROS) from multiple epithelial ROS generators. To determine whether similar mechanisms contribute to inducible antibacterial responses, the current work investigates the role of ROS in therapeutically-stimulated protection against Pseudomonas aerugnosa challenges. Inhaled Pam2-ODN treatment one day before infection prevented hemorrhagic lung cytotoxicity and mouse death in a manner that correlated with reduction in bacterial burden. The bacterial killing effect of Pam2-ODN was recapitulated in isolated mouse and human lung epithelial cells, and the protection correlated with inducible epithelial generation of ROS. Scavenging or targeted blockade of ROS production from either dual oxidase or mitochondrial sources resulted in near complete loss of Pam2-ODN-induced bacterial killing, whereas deficiency of induced antimicrobial peptides had little effect. These findings support a central role for multisource epithelial ROS in inducible resistance against a bacterial pathogen and provide mechanistic insights into means to protect vulnerable patients against lethal infections. Public Library of Science 2019-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6386317/ /pubmed/30794556 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208216 Text en © 2019 Ware 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
Ware, Hayden H.
Kulkarni, Vikram V.
Wang, Yongxing
Pantaleón García, Jezreel
Leiva Juarez, Miguel
Kirkpatrick, Carson T.
Wali, Shradha
Syed, Sarah
Kontoyiannis, Alexander D.
Sikkema, William K. A.
Tour, James M.
Evans, Scott E.
Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title_full Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title_fullStr Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title_full_unstemmed Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title_short Inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
title_sort inducible lung epithelial resistance requires multisource reactive oxygen species generation to protect against bacterial infections
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30794556
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208216
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