943 resultados para susceptibility to infection


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Susceptibility of Alphitobius diaperinus (Panzer) (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae) to cypermethrin, dichlorvos and triflumuron in southern Brazil. The lesser mealworm, Alphitobius diaperinus (Panzer), is an important insect pest in poultry houses in Brazil. Susceptibility of the lesser mealworm collected from eight poultry houses in Paraná state, southern Brazil, was evaluated for cypermethrin, dichlorvos and triflumuron. Adult A. diaperinus were tested in bioassays with cypermethrin and dichlorvos. Larvae were fed rabbit feed wetted with a triflumuron-water solution. Concentration-mortality regressions were estimated using Probit analysis and resistance ratios were calculated based on the susceptible population. Among the field populations evaluated, cypermethrin LC50 values for adults, ranged from 68.1 to 6,263 ng (AI)/cm². LC50 values for adults challenged with dichlorvos ranged from 10.3 to 1,385 ng (AI)/cm². One population from Pato Branco showed reduced susceptibility to triflumuron (LC50 = 272 µg (AI)/ml of solution) when compared to the most susceptible population (LC50 = 109.8 µg (AI)/ml). Application of cypermethrin and dichlorvos analogues should be managed with caution to minimize insecticide resistance problems.

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In disease ecology, there is growing evidence that environmental quality interacts with parasite and host to determine host susceptibility to an infection. Most studies of malaria parasites have focused on the infection costs incurred by the hosts, and few have investigated the costs on mosquito vectors. The interplay between the environment, the vector and the parasite has therefore mostly been ignored and often relied on unnatural or allopatric Plasmodium/vector associations. Here, we investigated the effects of natural avian malaria infection on both fecundity and survival of field-caught female Culex pipiens mosquitoes, individually maintained in laboratory conditions. We manipulated environmental quality by providing mosquitoes with different concentrations of glucose-feeding solution prior to submitting them to a starvation challenge. We used molecular-based methods to assess mosquitoes' infection status. We found that mosquitoes infected with Plasmodium had lower starvation resistance than uninfected ones only under low nutritional conditions. The effect of nutritional stress varied with time, with the difference of starvation resistance between optimally and suboptimally fed mosquitoes increasing from spring to summer, as shown by a significant interaction between diet treatment and months of capture. Infected and uninfected mosquitoes had similar clutch size, indicating no effect of infection on fecundity. Overall, this study suggests that avian malaria vectors may suffer Plasmodium infection costs in their natural habitat, under certain environmental conditions. This may have major implications for disease transmission in the wild.

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Rapid production of IL-4 by Leishmania homolog of mammalian RACK1 (LACK)-reactive CD4(+) T cells expressing the V beta 4-V alpha 8 TCR chains has been shown to drive aberrant Th2 cell development and susceptibility to Leishmania major in BALB/c mice. In contrast, mice from resistant strains fail to express this early IL-4 response. However, administration of either anti-IL-12 or -IFN-gamma at the initiation of infection allows the expression of this early IL-4 response in resistant mice. In this work we show that Leishmania homolog of mammalian RACK1-reactive CD4(+) T cells also expressing the V beta 4-V alpha 8 TCR chains are the source of the early IL-4 response to L. major in resistant mice given anti-IL-12 or -IFN-gamma Abs only at the onset of infection. Strikingly, these cells were found to be required for the reversal of the natural resistance of C57BL/6 mice following a single administration of anti-IL-12 or -IFN-gamma Abs. Together these results suggest that a deficiency in mechanisms capable of down-regulating the early IL-4 response to L. major contributes to the exquisite susceptibility of BALB/c mice to L. major.

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Recent years have seen a significant increase in understanding of the host genetic and genomic determinants of susceptibility to HIV-1 infection and disease progression, driven in large part by candidate gene studies, genome-wide association studies, genome-wide transcriptome analyses, and large-scale in vitro genome screens. These studies have identified common variants in some host loci that clearly influence disease progression, characterized the scale and dynamics of gene and protein expression changes in response to infection, and provided the first comprehensive catalogs of genes and pathways involved in viral replication. Experimental models of AIDS and studies in natural hosts of primate lentiviruses have complemented and in some cases extended these findings. As the relevant technology continues to progress, the expectation is that such studies will increase in depth (e.g., to include host whole exome and whole genome sequencing) and in breadth (in particular, by integrating multiple data types).

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Immunity to infection with intracellular pathogens is regulated by interleukin 12 (IL-12), which mediates protective T helper type 1 (TH1) responses, or IL-4, which induces TH2 cells and susceptibility. Paradoxically, we show here that when present during the initial activation of dendritic cells (DCs) by infectious agents, IL-4 instructed DCs to produce IL-12 and promote TH1 development. This TH1 response established resistance to Leishmania major in susceptible BALB/c mice. When present later, during the period of T cell priming, IL-4 induced TH2 differentiation and progressive leishmaniasis in resistant mice. Because immune responses developed via the consecutive activation of DCs and then T cells, the contrasting effects of IL-4 on DC development and T cell differentiation led to immune responses that had opposing functional phenotypes.

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Hypoxia in the tumor microenvironment plays a central role in the evolution of immune escape mechanisms by tumor cells. In this study, we report the definition of miR-210 as a miRNA regulated by hypoxia in lung cancer and melanoma, documenting its involvement in blunting the susceptibility of tumor cells to lysis by antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). miR-210 was induced in hypoxic zones of human tumor tissues. Its attenuation in hypoxic cells significantly restored susceptibility to autologous CTL-mediated lysis, independent of tumor cell recognition and CTL reactivity. A comprehensive approach using transcriptome analysis, argonaute protein immunoprecipitation, and luciferase reporter assay revealed that the genes PTPN1, HOXA1, and TP53I11 were miR-210 target genes regulated in hypoxic cells. In support of their primary importance in mediating the immunosuppressive effects of miR-210, coordinate silencing of PTPN1, HOXA1, and TP53I11 dramatically decreased tumor cell susceptibility to CTL-mediated lysis. Our findings show how miR-210 induction links hypoxia to immune escape from CTL-mediated lysis, by providing a mechanistic understanding of how this miRNA mediates immunosuppression in oxygen-deprived regions of tumors where cancer stem-like cells and metastatic cellular behaviors are known to evolve.

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Susceptibility and development of Th2 cells in BALB/c mice infected with Leishmania major result from early IL-4 production by Vbeta4Valpha8 CD4+ T cells in response to the Leishmania homolog of mammalian RACK1 Ag. A role for CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells in the control of this early IL-4 production was investigated by depleting in vivo this regulatory T cell population. Depletion induced an increase in the early burst of IL-4 mRNA in the draining lymph nodes of BALB/c mice, and exacerbated the course of disease with higher levels of IL-4 mRNA and protein in their lymph nodes. We further showed that transfer of 10(7) BALB/c spleen cells that were depleted of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells rendered SCID mice susceptible to infection and allowed Th2 differentiation while SCID mice reconstituted with 10(7) control BALB/c spleen cells were resistant to infection with L. major and developed a Th1 response. Treatment with a mAb against IL-4 upon infection with L. major in SCID mice reconstituted with CD25-depleted spleen cells prevented the development of Th2 polarization and rendered them resistant to infection. These results demonstrate that CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells play a role in regulating the early IL-4 mRNA and the subsequent development of a Th2 response in this model of infection.

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Résumé : Dans le modèle murin d'infection avec le parasite protozoaire Leishmania major (L. major), la souche de souris C57BL/6 est résistante a |'infection et développe une réponse protectrice Thelper (Th) 1. Inversement, les souris de la souche BALB/c développent une réponse Th2 et sont sensibles a cette infection. A la suite d'une infection avec ce parasite, les neutrophiles sont les premières cellules présentes au site d'infection et sont recrutées de manière égale dans les souches résistantes et sensibles à L. major, Néanmoins, trois jours après l'infection, la majorité des neutrophiles disparaissent du site d'infection chez les souris C57BL/6, tandis que ils restent jusqu'a dix jours chez les souris BALB/c. Un rôle crucial des neutrophiles a été démontré durant l'infection avec L. major. En effet, la déplétion de ces cellules avant |'infection dans les souris BALB/c, conduit a une réduction du développement des lésions, associée à une baisse de la charge parasitaire et a une modification de la réponse immunitaire vers une réponse Th1 dans des souris normalement sensibles a |'infection, suggérant un rôle immunorégulateur de ces neutrophiles durant les premiers jours de l'infection. Dans la première partie de cette thèse, nous avons étudié le rôle des neutrophiles suite à l'infection avec L. major. Nous avons démontré que le parasite induisait des phénotypes de neutrophiles distincts chez les souris résistantes ou sensibles à L. major. Suite à l'exposition au parasite, les neutrophiles de souris C57BL/6 ont montré une expression élevée des récepteurs Toll-like 2, 7 et 9 ainsi que la sécrétion d'lL-12p7O et d'lL-10, alors que ceux de souris BALB/c sécrétaient de l'IL-12p40 et du TGFB. Nous avons ensuite démontré qu'en réponse à L. major, au contraire des neutrophiles de BALB/c, les neutrophiles de souris résistantes C57BL/6, libéraient la chimiokine CCL3 attirant les cellules dendritiques. Le rôle crucial de cette chimiokine dans la migration de la première de vague de cellules dendritiques au site d'infection ainsi que son rôle dans le développement de la réponse immunitaire subséquente a été établi. Ces résultats démontrent que les neutrophiles, suite a |'infection avec le parasite L. major, créent un microenvironnement capable de déterminer le développement d'une réponse immunitaire spécifique a un antigène. Dans un second temps, nous nous sommes intéressés au rôle des neutrophiles suite a l'infection avec d'autres espèces de Leishmania: L, doriovani et L. mexicaria, agents responsables de leishmaniose viscérale et cutanée chronique respectivement. Un rôle crucial des neutrophiles a été démontré dans la réponse protectrice suite a l'infection avec L. donovani, l'absence de ces cellules amenant à une susceptibilité au parasite accrue, associée avec une induction préférentielle d'une réponse Th2. Inversement, la déplétion des neutrophiles lors de l'infection avec L. mexicaria aboutit a une résistance accrue, comme constaté par la baisse dela charge parasitaire, la hausse de la réponse Th1 ainsi la baisse de la réponse Th2 dans les souris déplétées en neutrophiles. Néanmoins, malgré le rôle délétère des neutrophiles sur le développement d'une réponse protectrice suite à |'infection avec L. mexicana, ces cellules sont nécessaires pour une résolution correcte dela réponse inflammatoire. En résumé, cette étude révèle un rôle majeur des neutrophiles lors de |'infection avec plusieurs especes de Leishmania. Résumé pour un large public : Les neutrophiles font partie de la famille des globules blancs. A la suite d'une infection, ces cellules sont les premières a être recrutées au site d'infection et sont impliquées dans |'élimination des pathogènes. Dans cette thèse, nous nous somme donc intéressés au rôle que pouvaient jouer ces neutrophiles durant l'infection avec le parasite protozoaire Leishmania major (L. major). Dans le modèle murin d'infection avec L. major, la majorité des souches de souris utilisées dans la recherche, dont les souris de la souche C57BL/6, développent de petites lésions qui guérissent spontanément après quelques semaines (souris résistantes). ll existe néanmoins, quelques souches de souris, dont la souche de souris BALB/c, qui développent des lésions qui ne guérissent pas (souris sensibles). Il a été observé que lors de l'lnfection avec ce parasites les neutrophiles étaient les premières cellules recrutées au site de l'lnfection dans toutes les souches de souris, toutefois trois jours après le début dela réaction immunitaire, la majorité des neutrophiles disparaissent chez les souris C57BL/6, tandis qu'ils restent jusqu'à dix jours chez les souris BALB/c. De plus, un rôle crucial des neutrophiles a été démontré durant l'infection avec L. major. En effet, l'absence de neutrophiles durant les trois premiers jours de l'infection chez les souris sensibles à |'infection, rend ces souris résistantes. Ces résultats suggèrent donc un rôle régulateur de la réponse immunitaire des neutrophiles durant les premiers jours de l'infection. Dans la première partie de cette thèse, nous avons étudié le rôle des neutrophiles suite à l'infection avec L. major. Nous avons donc analysé la sécrétion des cytokines, molécules essentielles qui déterminent la réponse immunitaire, par les neutrophiles. Nous avons démontré que le parasite induisait une sécrétion de cytokines différente entre les souris résistantes ou sensibles a L. major. Nous avons ensuite démontré que seule la souche de souris résistante sécrétait la chimiokine CCL3, connue pour être impliquée dans le recrutement de différentes cellules au site d'infecti0n, dont les cellules dendritiques. Les cellules dendritiques sont un élément fondamental pour un bon déroulement d'une réponse immunitaire, de par leur rôle décisif de liaison entre une réponse précoce non-spécifique au pathogène et une réponse plus tardive spécifique au pathogène et nécessaire pour |'élimination de dernier. Nous avons démontré que les neutrophiles de souris résistantes sécrétaient CCL3 et recrutaient les cellules dendritiques au site d'infecti0n, jouant de ce fait un rôle essentiel dans le développement de la réponse immunitaire. Ces résultats démontrent que les neutrophiles, suite à l'infection avec le parasite L. major, créent un microenvironnement capable de déterminer le développement d'une réponse immunitaire. Dans un second temps, nous nous sommes intéressés au rôle des neutrophiles suite à l'lnfection avec d'autres espèces de Leishmania, L. donovani et L. mexicana. Nous avons pu montrer un rôle crucial de ces cellules dans la réponse à ces deux parasites. En effet, suite à |'infection avec L. donovani, un rôle protecteur des neutrophiles a été observé, leur absence menant à une susceptibilité accrue aux parasites. Dans le cas de l'infection avec L. mexicana, une réduction de |'infection a été observée en absence de neutrophiles, avec néanmoins une augmentation de la lésion, suggérant un rôle important de ces cellules dans le développement de la réponse immunitaire ainsi que dans le contrôle de la réponse inflammatoire. En résumé, cette étude révèle un rôle majeur des neutrophiles lors de l'lnfection avec plusieurs membres de la famille Leishrnania. Summary : Upon infection with the protozoan parasite Leishmania major (L. major), C57BL/6 mice show a resistant phenotype, developing a protective Thelper (Th) 1 response. ln contrast, BALB/c mice develop a Th2 response and are susceptible to infection. Following inoculation with the parasite, neutrophils are the first cells migrating at the site of infection and are equally recruited in both L. major- resistant and susceptible mouse strains. However, after three days of infection, almost all neutrophils disappear from the site of infection in C57BL/6 mice, while they persist until ten days in BALB/c mice. Neutrophils were shown to play a crucial role during infection with L. major. indeed, depletion of these cells in BALB/c mice prior to infection with the parasite led to a lower Iesion development, associated with a lower parasite burden and a modification in the immune response towards a Th1 response in these otherwise susceptible mice, suggesting an immunomodulatory role for neutrophils during the first days of infection. ln the first part of this thesis, we were interested in better understanding the role of neutrophils in infection with L. major. \/\/e found that this parasite was inducing distinct neutrophil phenotypes in L. major-resistant and susceptible mice. Upon exposition with L. major, C57BL/6 neutrophils were reported to express high level of Toll-like receptors 2, 7, 9 mRNA and secrete IL-12p70 and IL-10, while BALB/c neutrophils secreted homodimers of IL-12p40, and TGFB. We then demonstrated that in response to L. major, neutrophils from L. major-resistant C57BL/6 mice release the CCL3 dendritic cell attracting chemokine, which is critical for the first wave of dendritic cell migration to the site of infection and in the development of the subsequent immune response. Altogether, these results demonstrated that upon infection with L. major, neutrophils create a microenvironment that can determine the development of an antigen-specific immune response. ln the second part of the thesis we were interested in understanding the role of neutrophils upon infection with of other species of Leishmania: L. donovani causing visceral leishmaniasis and L. mexicana, agent of chronic cutaneous leishmaniasis. Upon infection with L. donovani, neutrophils were found to play a crucial role in the early protective response, their absence leading to an increased susceptibility to the parasite, associated with the preferential induction of a Th2 response. ln contrast, depletion of these cells early in infection with L. mexicana was leading to an increased resistance, as observed by a decreased parasite burden, increased Th1 and decreased Th2 response in neutrophil-depleted mice. However, despite the deleterious role of neutrophils on the development of a protective immune response upon L. mexicana infection, these cells were required for the proper resolution of the inflammatory response. Altogether, these results highlight a major immunomodulatory role for neutrophils in infection with several species of Leishmania.

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BACKGROUND: The clinical course of HIV-1 infection is highly variable among individuals, at least in part as a result of genetic polymorphisms in the host. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) have a key role in innate immunity and mutations in the genes encoding these receptors have been associated with increased or decreased susceptibility to infections. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in TLR2-4 and TLR7-9 influenced the natural course of HIV-1 infection. METHODS: Twenty-eight SNPs in TLRs were analysed in HAART-naive HIV-positive patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. The SNPs were detected using Sequenom technology. Haplotypes were inferred using an expectation-maximization algorithm. The CD4 T cell decline was calculated using a least-squares regression. Patients with a rapid CD4 cell decline, less than the 15th percentile, were defined as rapid progressors. The risk of rapid progression associated with SNPs was estimated using a logistic regression model. Other candidate risk factors included age, sex and risk groups (heterosexual, homosexual and intravenous drug use). RESULTS: Two SNPs in TLR9 (1635A/G and +1174G/A) in linkage disequilibrium were associated with the rapid progressor phenotype: for 1635A/G, odds ratio (OR), 3.9 [95% confidence interval (CI),1.7-9.2] for GA versus AA and OR, 4.7 (95% CI,1.9-12.0) for GG versus AA (P = 0.0008). CONCLUSION: Rapid progression of HIV-1 infection was associated with TLR9 polymorphisms. Because of its potential implications for intervention strategies and vaccine developments, additional epidemiological and experimental studies are needed to confirm this association.

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While learning to avoid toxic food is common in mammals and occurs in some insects, learning to avoid cues associated with infectious pathogens has received little attention. We demonstrate that Drosophila melanogaster show olfactory learning in response to infection with their virulent intestinal pathogen Pseudomonas entomophila. This pathogen was not aversive to taste when added to food. Nonetheless, flies exposed for 3 h to food laced with P. entomophila, and scented with an odorant, became subsequently less likely to choose this odorant than flies exposed to pathogen-laced food scented with another odorant. No such effect occurred after an otherwise identical treatment with an avirulent mutant of P. entomophila, indicating that the response is mediated by pathogen virulence. These results demonstrate that a virulent pathogen infection can act as an aversive unconditioned stimulus which flies can associate with food odours, and thus become less attracted to pathogen-contaminated food.

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Résumé : La majorité des souches de souris de laboratoire sont résistantes à l'infection par le parasite Leishmania major (L. major). A l'opposé, les souris de la souche BALB développent une maladie évolutive. La résistance et la sensibilité sont corrélées avec l'apparition de lymphocytes T CD4+ spécifiques du parasite, Th1 (de l'anglais T helper) ou Th2 respectivement. La réponse aberrante Th2 chez les souris de la souche BALB/c dépend, au moins en partie, de façon critique de la production rapide d'IL-4 suite à l'infection. Ce pic précoce d'IL-4 est produit par une population de lymphocytes T CD4+ restreinte aux molécules du MHC de classe II, exprimant les chaînes du récepteur des cellules T Vß4-Va8. Ces lymphocytes sont spécifiques d'un épitope de l'homologue Leishmania de la molécule RACK1 des mammifères, appelée LACK. Il a été clairement démontré que l'IL-4 rapidement produite par ces cellules T CD4+ Vß4-Va8 induit la maturation Th2 responsable de la sensibilité vis-à-vis de L. major. Des expériences ont été entreprises pour étudier la régulation de cette réponse précoce d'IL-4. Dans ce travail, nous avons documenté, dans les cellules provenant des ganglions de souris sensibles infectées par L. major, une augmentation de la transcription de l'ARNm de l'IL-2 qui précède la réponse précoce d'IL-4. La neutralisation de l'IL-2 durant les premiers jours d'infection induit la maturation des cellules Thl et la résistance vis-à-vis de L. major. Ces effets de l'anticorps anti-IL-2 neutralisant sont liés à sa capacité d'interférer avec la transcription rapide d'IL-4 des cellules CD4+ réactives à l'antigène LACK. Une augmentation similaire d'IL-2 survient chez les souris résistantes C57BL/6 qui sont incapables de générer la réponse précoce d'IL-4. Cependant, la protéiné LACK induit une transcription précoce d'IL-2 uniquement chez les souris sensibles. Des expériences de reconstitution utilisant des souris C.B.-17 SCID et des cellules T CD4+ réactives à LACK provenant de souris BALB/c IL-2-~démontrent un mode d'action autocrine de l'IL-2 sur la régulation de la réponse précoce d'IL4. Par conséquent, chez les souris C57BL/6, l'absence du pic précoce d'ARNm de l'IL-4 important pour la progression de la maladie paraît liée à l'incapacité des cellules T CD4+ réactives à LACK de produire de l'IL-2. Un rôle dans le contrôle de la production précoce d'IL-4 par les cellules T régulatrices CD4+CD25+ a été investigué en déplétant in vivo cette population de cellules. La déplétion induit une élévation du pic précoce de l'ARNm de l'IL-4 dans les ganglions drainant de souris BALB/c, ainsi qu'une exacerbation du cours de la maladie avec des taux augmentés d'IL-4 dans les ganglions. La réponse rapide d'IL-2 vis-à-vis de L. major est aussi significativement augmentée chez les souris BALB/c déplétées en cellules CD4+CD25+. De plus, nous avons démontré que le transfert de 10puissance(7) cellules provenant de la rate de souris BALB/c déplétées en cellules T régulatrices CD4+CD25+ rend les souris SCID sensibles à l'infection et permet la différentiation Th2. Au contraire, les souris SCID reconstituées avec 10' cellules de la rate de souris BALB/c contrôle sont résistantes à infection par L. major et développent une réponse Thl. Chez les souris SCID reconstituées avec des cellules de rate déplétées en cellules exprimant le marqueur CD25, le traitement avec un anticorps neutralisant l'IL-4 au moment de l'infection par L. major prévient le développement de la réponse Th2 et rend ces souris résistantes à l'infection. Ces résultats démontrent que les cellules T régulatrices CD4+CD25+ jouent un rôle dans la régulation du pic précoce d'IL-4 responsable du développement cellulaire Th2 dans ce modèle d'infection. Summary Mice from most strains are resistant to infection with Leishmania major (L. major). In contrast, BALB mice develop progressive disease. Resistance and susceptibility result from parasite-specific CD4+ Thl or Th2 cells, respectively. The aberrant Th2 response in BALB/c mice depends, at least in part, upon the production of IL-4 early after infection. The CD4+ T cells responsible for this early IL-4 response to L. major express a restricted TCR repertoire (Vß4-Va8) and respond to an I-Ad-restricted epitope of the Leishmania homologue of mammalian RACK1, designated LACK. The role of these cells and the IL-4 they produce for subsequent Th2 cell development and disease progression in BALB/c mice was demonstrated. Experiments have been undertaken to study the regulation of the rapid IL-4 production to L. major. In this report, we document an IL-2 mRNA burst, preceding the reported early IL-4 response, in draining lymph nodes of susceptible mice infected with L. major. Neutralization of IL-2 during the first days of infection redirected Thl cell maturation and resistance to L. major, through interference with the rapid IL-4 transcription in LACKreactive CD4+ cells. A burst of IL-2 transcripts also occurred in infected C57BL/6 mice that do not mount an early IL-4 response. However, although the LACK protein induced IL-2 transcripts in susceptible mice, it failed to trigger this response in resistant C57BL/6 mice. Reconstitution experiments using C.B.-17 SCID mice and LACK-reactive CD4+ T cells from IL-2-/- BALB/c mice showed that triggering of the early IL-4 response required autocrine IL2. Thus, in C57BL/6 mice, the inability of LACK-reactive CD4+ T cells to express early IL-4 mRNA transcription, important for disease progression, appears due to an incapacity of these cells to produce IL-2. A role for CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells in the control of this early IL-4 production was investigated by depleting in vivo this regulatory T cell population. Depletion induced an increase in the early burst of IL-4 mRNA in the draining lymph nodes of BALB/c mice, and exacerbated the course of disease with higher levels of IL-4 mRNA and protein in their lymph nodes. The rapid IL-2 response to L. major is also significantly enhanced in BALB/c mice depleted of CD4+CD25+ cells. We further showed that transfer of 10~ BALB/c spleen cells that were depleted of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells rendered SCID mice susceptible to infection and allowed Th2 differentiation while SCID mice reconstituted with 10 control BALB/c spleen cells were resistant to infection with L. major and developed a Thl response. Treatment with a mAb against IL-4 upon infection with L. major in SCID mice reconstituted with CD25-depleted spleen cells prevented the development of Th2 polarization and rendered them resistant to infection. These results demonstrate that CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells play a role in regulating the early IL-4 mRNA and the subsequent development of a Th2 response in this model of infection.

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The macrophage is the niche of the intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Induction of macrophage apoptosis by CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells is accompanied by reduced bacterial counts, potentially defining a host defense mechanism. We have already established that M. tuberculosis-infected primary human macrophages have a reduced susceptibility to Fas ligand (FasL)-induced apoptosis. To study the mechanisms by which M. tuberculosis prevents apoptotic signaling, we have generated a cell culture system based on PMA- and IFN-gamma-differentiated THP-1 cells recapitulating the properties of primary macrophages. In these cells, nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 or TLR2 agonists and mycobacterial infection protected macrophages from apoptosis and resulted in NF-kappaB nuclear translocation associated with up-regulation of the antiapoptotic cellular FLIP. Transduction of a receptor-interacting protein-2 dominant-negative construct showed that nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 is not involved in protection in the mycobacterial infection system. In contrast, both a dominant-negative construct of the MyD88 adaptor and an NF-kappaB inhibitor abrogated the protection against FasL-mediated apoptosis, showing the implication of TLR2-mediated activation of NF-kappaB in apoptosis protection in infected macrophages. The apoptosis resistance of infected macrophages might be considered as an immune escape mechanism, whereby M. tuberculosis subverts innate immunity signaling to protect its host cell against FasL(+)-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes.

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Infection with Leishmania braziliensis causes cutaneous or mucocutaneous leismaniasis in humans. Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) expression has been found in granulomas of lesions in L. braziliensis-infected individuals. L. braziliensis inoculation in mice induces very small lesions that are self-healing, whereas deficiency in the TLR adaptor molecule, MyD88, renders mice susceptible to infection. The TLR involved has not been identified, prompting us to investigate if TLR9 triggering by the parasite contributes to the strong resistance to infection observed in L. braziliensis-inoculated mice. The parasites activated wild-type (WT) dendritic cells (DCs) in vitro but not DCs derived from TLR9(-/-) mice. TLR9(-/-) mice inoculated with L. braziliensis exhibited a transient susceptibility characterized by increased lesion size and parasite burden compared to those of WT mice. Surprisingly, elevated levels of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) were measured at the site of infection and in draining lymph node T cells of TLR9(-/-) mice at the peak of susceptibility, suggesting that unlike observations in vitro, the parasite could induce DC activation leading to the development of Th1 cells in the absence of TLR9 expression. Taken together, these data show that TLR9 signaling is important for the early control of lesion development and parasite burden but is dispensable for the differentiation of Th1 cells secreting IFN-γ, and the high levels of this cytokine are not sufficient to control early parasite replication following L. braziliensis infection.

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Measles, caused by measles virus (MV), is a highly contagious viral disease causing severe respiratory infection and a typical rash. Despite the availability of a protective vaccine, measles is still the leading vaccine-preventable cause of childhood mortality worldwide. The high mortality associated with the disease is mainly due to an increased susceptibility to secondary infections during the period of immunosuppression that continues for several weeks after recovery. The present study was undertaken to elucidate the role of cytoskeletal components in the regulation of MV infection. The most interesting finding was that MV replication was activated in unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) when globular actin was converted into the filamentous form with jasplakinolide. This provides a new aspect in our understanding of MV infection in PBMC. In the second part of the thesis we investigated MV-induced structural changes of cellular nuclear matrix, which is a proteinaceous framework of the nucleus similar to the cytoskeleton in the cytoplasm. We showed that cleavage of nuclear markers was virusspecific and a general caspase inhibitor rescued MV-infected cells from cell death. Furthermore, we studied MV-induced innate immune mechanisms in lung epithelial and endothelial cells. Our results showed that MV infection resulted in activation of the double stranded RNA (dsRNA) binding molecules melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (mda-5), retinoic acid inducible gene I (RIG-I), and toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) gene expression, followed by high expression of antiviral cytokine mRNA.

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Right ventricular (RV) rupture in cases of mediastinitis following cardiac surgery is a rare and dangerous complication. Bleeding from the right ventricle occurs mainly after sternal reopening, due to either iatrogenic manipulation (wire removal, lesions due to wiring maneuvers) or mechanical shearing forces, producing direct injury. We present a case of RV wall perforation due to infection in a recurrent postoperative mediastinitis with a closed chest. The current literature on treatment of postoperative mediastinitis is also reviewed.