Differentiation towards regulatory DC is maintained during RSV infection in airway epithelial cells


Autoria(s): Obregon Carolina; Van der Sluijs Koenraad F.; Geiser Thomas K. Mühlemann Kathrin; Nicod Laurent P.
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Airway epithelial cells have been shown to drive differentiation of monocytes into dendritic cells (DC) with suppressive phenotype. In this study we investigated the impact of virus-induced inflammatory mediator production on DC development. Monocyte differentiation into functional DC, as reflected by the expression of CD11c, CD123, BDCA-4 and DC-SIGN and the capacity to activate T cells, was similar for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)- and mock-infected BEAS-2B and A549 cells. RSV-conditioned culture media resulted in a partially mature DC phenotype, but failed to upregulate CD80, CD83, CD86 and CCR7 and failed to release pro-inflammatory mediators upon TLR triggering. Nevertheless, these DCs were able to maintain an antiviral response by the release of type I IFN. Collectively, these data indicate that the airway epithelium maintains an important suppressive DC phenotype under inflammatory conditions induced by RSV infection.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_EE81A76010DC

Idioma(s)

en

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/other

unpublished