Lee, JY;Davis, I;Youth, EHH;Kim, J;Churchill, G;Godwin, J;Korstanje, R;Beck, S;
PMID: 34910517 | DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj9111
[Figure: see text].
The induction of preterm labor in rhesus macaques is determined by the strength of immune response to intrauterine infection
Cappelletti, M;Presicce, P;Feiyang, M;Senthamaraikannan, P;Miller, LA;Pellegrini, M;Sim, MS;Jobe, AH;Divanovic, S;Way, SS;Chougnet, CA;Kallapur, SG;
PMID: 34495952 | DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001385
Intrauterine infection/inflammation (IUI) is a major contributor to preterm labor (PTL). However, IUI does not invariably cause PTL. We hypothesized that quantitative and qualitative differences in immune response exist in subjects with or without PTL. To define the triggers for PTL, we developed rhesus macaque models of IUI driven by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or live Escherichia coli. PTL did not occur in LPS challenged rhesus macaques, while E. coli-infected animals frequently delivered preterm. Although LPS and live E. coli both caused immune cell infiltration, E. coli-infected animals showed higher levels of inflammatory mediators, particularly interleukin 6 (IL-6) and prostaglandins, in the chorioamnion-decidua and amniotic fluid (AF). Neutrophil infiltration in the chorio-decidua was a common feature to both LPS and E. coli. However, neutrophilic infiltration and IL6 and PTGS2 expression in the amnion was specifically induced by live E. coli. RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis of fetal membranes revealed that specific pathways involved in augmentation of inflammation including type I interferon (IFN) response, chemotaxis, sumoylation, and iron homeostasis were up-regulated in the E. coli group compared to the LPS group. Our data suggest that the intensity of the host immune response to IUI may determine susceptibility to PTL.
March-Riera, S;Wilson, AA;Bhatia, SN;Muhlberger, E;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.stemcr.2022.08.003
Liver damage and an exacerbated inflammatory response are hallmarks of Ebola virus (EBOV) infection. Little is known about the intrinsic response to infection in human hepatocytes and their contribution to inflammation. Here, we present an induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived hepatocyte-like cell (HLC) platform to define the hepato-intrinsic response to EBOV infection. We used this platform to show robust EBOV infection, with characteristic ultrastructural changes and evidence for viral replication. Transcriptomics analysis revealed a delayed response with minimal early transcriptomic changes, followed by a general downregulation of hepatic function and upregulation of interferon signaling, providing a potential mechanism by which hepatocytes participate in disease severity and liver damage. Using RNA-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), we showed that IFNB1 and CXCL10 were mainly expressed in non-infected bystander cells. We did not observe an inflammatory signature during infection. In conclusion, iPSC-HLCs are an immune competent platform to study responses to EBOV infection.
Rapid endotheliitis and vascular damage characterize SARS-CoV-2 infection in a human lung-on-chip model
Thacker, VV;Sharma, K;Dhar, N;Mancini, GF;Sordet-Dessimoz, J;McKinney, JD;
PMID: 33908688 | DOI: 10.15252/embr.202152744
Severe cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection are characterized by hypercoagulopathies and systemic endotheliitis of the lung microvasculature. The dynamics of vascular damage, and whether it is a direct consequence of endothelial infection or an indirect consequence of an immune cell-mediated cytokine storm remain unknown. Using a vascularized lung-on-chip model, we find that infection of alveolar epithelial cells leads to limited apical release of virions, consistent with reports of monoculture infection. However, viral RNA and proteins are rapidly detected in underlying endothelial cells, which are themselves refractory to apical infection in monocultures. Although endothelial infection is unproductive, it leads to the formation of cell clusters with low CD31 expression, a progressive loss of barrier integrity and a pro-coagulatory microenvironment. Viral RNA persists in individual cells generating an inflammatory response, which is transient in epithelial cells but persistent in endothelial cells and typified by IL-6 secretion even in the absence of immune cells. Inhibition of IL-6 signalling with tocilizumab reduces but does not prevent loss of barrier integrity. SARS-CoV-2-mediated endothelial cell damage thus occurs independently of cytokine storm.
Influence of the microenvironment on modulation of the host response by typhoid toxin
Martin, OCB;Bergonzini, A;Lopez Chiloeches, M;Paparouna, E;Butter, D;Theodorou, SDP;Haykal, MM;Boutet-Robinet, E;Tebaldi, T;Wakeham, A;Rhen, M;Gorgoulis, VG;Mak, T;Pateras, IS;Frisan, T;
PMID: 33826883 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.108931
Bacterial genotoxins cause DNA damage in eukaryotic cells, resulting in activation of the DNA damage response (DDR) in vitro. These toxins are produced by Gram-negative bacteria, enriched in the microbiota of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. However, their role in infection remains poorly characterized. We address the role of typhoid toxin in modulation of the host-microbial interaction in health and disease. Infection with a genotoxigenic Salmonella protects mice from intestinal inflammation. We show that the presence of an active genotoxin promotes DNA fragmentation and senescence in vivo, which is uncoupled from an inflammatory response and unexpectedly associated with induction of an anti-inflammatory environment. The anti-inflammatory response is lost when infection occurs in mice with acute colitis. These data highlight a complex context-dependent crosstalk between bacterial-genotoxin-induced DDR and the host immune response, underlining an unexpected role for bacterial genotoxins.
Interleukin-6 is an activator of pituitary stem cells upon local damage, a competence quenched in the aging gland
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Vennekens, A;Laporte, E;Hermans, F;Cox, B;Modave, E;Janiszewski, A;Nys, C;Kobayashi, H;Malengier-Devlies, B;Chappell, J;Matthys, P;Garcia, MI;Pasque, V;Lambrechts, D;Vankelecom, H;
PMID: 34161279 | DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2100052118
Stem cells in the adult pituitary are quiescent yet show acute activation upon tissue injury. The molecular mechanisms underlying this reaction are completely unknown. We applied single-cell transcriptomics to start unraveling the acute pituitary stem cell activation process as occurring upon targeted endocrine cell-ablation damage. This stem cell reaction was contrasted with the aging (middle-aged) pituitary, known to have lost damage-repair capacity. Stem cells in the aging pituitary show regressed proliferative activation upon injury and diminished in vitro organoid formation. Single-cell RNA sequencing uncovered interleukin-6 (IL-6) as being up-regulated upon damage, however only in young but not aging pituitary. Administering IL-6 to young mice promptly triggered pituitary stem cell proliferation, while blocking IL-6 or associated signaling pathways inhibited such reaction to damage. By contrast, IL-6 did not generate a pituitary stem cell activation response in aging mice, coinciding with elevated basal IL-6 levels and raised inflammatory state in the aging gland (inflammaging). Intriguingly, in vitro stem cell activation by IL-6 was discerned in organoid culture not only from young but also from aging pituitary, indicating that the aging gland's stem cells retain intrinsic activatability in vivo, likely impeded by the prevailing inflammatory tissue milieu. Importantly, IL-6 supplementation strongly enhanced the growth capability of pituitary stem cell organoids, thereby expanding their potential as an experimental model. Our study identifies IL-6 as a pituitary stem cell activator upon local damage, a competence quenched at aging, concomitant with raised IL-6/inflammatory levels in the older gland. These insights may open the way to interfering with pituitary aging.
Host IL11 Signaling Suppresses CD4+ T cell-Mediated Antitumor Responses to Colon Cancer in Mice
Cancer immunology research
Huynh, J;Baloyan, D;Chisanga, D;Shi, W;O'Brien, M;Afshar-Sterle, S;Alorro, M;Pang, L;Williams, DS;Parslow, AC;Thilakasiri, P;Eissmann, MF;Boon, L;Masson, F;Chand, AL;Ernst, M;
PMID: 33906864 | DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-19-1023
IL11 is a member of the IL6 family of cytokines and signals through its cognate receptor subunits, IL11RA and glycoprotein 130 (GP130), to elicit biological responses via the JAK/STAT signaling pathway. IL11 contributes to cancer progression by promoting the survival and proliferation of cancer cells, but the potential immunomodulatory properties of IL11 signaling during tumor development have thus far remained unexplored. Here, we have characterized a role for IL11 in regulating CD4+ T cell-mediated antitumor responses. Absence of IL11 signaling impaired tumor growth in a sporadic mouse model of colon cancer and syngeneic allograft models of colon cancer. Adoptive bone marrow transfer experiments and in vivo depletion studies demonstrated that the tumor-promoting activity of IL11 was mediated through its suppressive effect on host CD4+ T cells in the tumor microenvironment. Indeed, when compared with Il11ra-proficient CD4+ T cells associated with MC38 tumors, their Il11ra-deficient counterparts displayed elevated expression of mRNA encoding the antitumor mediators IFNγ and TNFα. Likewise, IL11 potently suppressed the production of proinflammatory cytokines (IFNγ, TNFα, IL6, and IL12p70) by CD4+ T cells in vitro, which we corroborated by RNAscope analysis of human colorectal cancers, where IL11RAhigh tumors showed less IFNG and CD4 expression than IL11RAlow tumors. Therefore, our results ascribe a tumor cell-extrinsic immunomodulatory role to IL11 during colon cancer development that could be amenable to an anticytokine-based therapy.See related commentary by van der Burg.