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Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity

Francisella tularensis is a Select Agent that causes the severe disease tularemia in humans and many animal species. The bacterium demonstrates rapid intracellular replication, however, macrophages can control its replication if primed and activation with IFN-γ is known to be essential, although alo...

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Autores principales: Mohammadi, Nasibeh, Lindgren, Helena, Golovliov, Igor, Eneslätt, Kjell, Yamamoto, Masahiro, Martin, Amandine, Henry, Thomas, Sjöstedt, Anders
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7758253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33363054
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.594063
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author Mohammadi, Nasibeh
Lindgren, Helena
Golovliov, Igor
Eneslätt, Kjell
Yamamoto, Masahiro
Martin, Amandine
Henry, Thomas
Sjöstedt, Anders
author_facet Mohammadi, Nasibeh
Lindgren, Helena
Golovliov, Igor
Eneslätt, Kjell
Yamamoto, Masahiro
Martin, Amandine
Henry, Thomas
Sjöstedt, Anders
author_sort Mohammadi, Nasibeh
collection PubMed
description Francisella tularensis is a Select Agent that causes the severe disease tularemia in humans and many animal species. The bacterium demonstrates rapid intracellular replication, however, macrophages can control its replication if primed and activation with IFN-γ is known to be essential, although alone not sufficient, to mediate such control. To further investigate the mechanisms that control intracellular F. tularensis replication, an in vitro co-culture system was utilized containing splenocytes obtained from naïve or immunized C57BL/6 mice as effectors and infected bone marrow-derived wild-type or chromosome-3-deficient guanylate-binding protein (GBP)-deficient macrophages. Cells were infected either with the F. tularensis live vaccine strain (LVS), the highly virulent SCHU S4 strain, or the surrogate for F. tularensis, F. novicida. Regardless of strain, significant control of the bacterial replication was observed in co-cultures with wild-type macrophages and immune splenocytes, but not in cultures with immune splenocytes and GBP (chr3)-deficient macrophages. Supernatants demonstrated very distinct, infectious agent-dependent patterns of 23 cytokines, whereas the cytokine patterns were only marginally affected by the presence or absence of GBPs. Levels of a majority of cytokines were inversely correlated to the degree of control of the SCHU S4 and LVS infections, but this was not the case for the F. novicida infection. Collectively, the co-culture assay based on immune mouse-derived splenocytes identified a dominant role of GBPs for the control of intracellular replication of various F. tularensis strains, regardless of their virulence, whereas the cytokine patterns markedly were dependent on the infectious agents, but less so on GBPs.
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spelling pubmed-77582532020-12-25 Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity Mohammadi, Nasibeh Lindgren, Helena Golovliov, Igor Eneslätt, Kjell Yamamoto, Masahiro Martin, Amandine Henry, Thomas Sjöstedt, Anders Front Cell Infect Microbiol Cellular and Infection Microbiology Francisella tularensis is a Select Agent that causes the severe disease tularemia in humans and many animal species. The bacterium demonstrates rapid intracellular replication, however, macrophages can control its replication if primed and activation with IFN-γ is known to be essential, although alone not sufficient, to mediate such control. To further investigate the mechanisms that control intracellular F. tularensis replication, an in vitro co-culture system was utilized containing splenocytes obtained from naïve or immunized C57BL/6 mice as effectors and infected bone marrow-derived wild-type or chromosome-3-deficient guanylate-binding protein (GBP)-deficient macrophages. Cells were infected either with the F. tularensis live vaccine strain (LVS), the highly virulent SCHU S4 strain, or the surrogate for F. tularensis, F. novicida. Regardless of strain, significant control of the bacterial replication was observed in co-cultures with wild-type macrophages and immune splenocytes, but not in cultures with immune splenocytes and GBP (chr3)-deficient macrophages. Supernatants demonstrated very distinct, infectious agent-dependent patterns of 23 cytokines, whereas the cytokine patterns were only marginally affected by the presence or absence of GBPs. Levels of a majority of cytokines were inversely correlated to the degree of control of the SCHU S4 and LVS infections, but this was not the case for the F. novicida infection. Collectively, the co-culture assay based on immune mouse-derived splenocytes identified a dominant role of GBPs for the control of intracellular replication of various F. tularensis strains, regardless of their virulence, whereas the cytokine patterns markedly were dependent on the infectious agents, but less so on GBPs. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7758253/ /pubmed/33363054 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.594063 Text en Copyright © 2020 Mohammadi, Lindgren, Golovliov, Eneslätt, Yamamoto, Martin, Henry and Sjöstedt http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Cellular and Infection Microbiology
Mohammadi, Nasibeh
Lindgren, Helena
Golovliov, Igor
Eneslätt, Kjell
Yamamoto, Masahiro
Martin, Amandine
Henry, Thomas
Sjöstedt, Anders
Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title_full Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title_fullStr Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title_full_unstemmed Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title_short Guanylate-Binding Proteins Are Critical for Effective Control of Francisella tularensis Strains in a Mouse Co-Culture System of Adaptive Immunity
title_sort guanylate-binding proteins are critical for effective control of francisella tularensis strains in a mouse co-culture system of adaptive immunity
topic Cellular and Infection Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7758253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33363054
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.594063
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