Reece Joshua J, Siracusa Mark C, Southard Teresa L, Brayton Cory F, Urban Joseph F, Scott Alan L
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 615 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Infect Immun. 2008 Aug;76(8):3511-24. doi: 10.1128/IAI.00192-08. Epub 2008 May 27.
A number of important helminth parasites of humans have incorporated short-term residence in the lungs as an obligate phase of their life cycles. The significance of this transient pulmonary exposure to the infection and immunity is not clear. Employing a rodent model of infection with hookworm (Nippostrongylus brasiliensis), we characterized the long-term changes in the immunological status of the lungs induced by parasite infection. At 36 days after infection, alterations included a sustained increase in the transcription of both Th2 and Th1 cytokines as well as a significant increase in the number and frequency of alveolar macrophages displaying an alternatively activated phenotype. While N. brasiliensis did not induce alternate activation of lung macrophages in STAT6(-/-) animals, the parasite did induce a robust Th17 response in the pulmonary environment, suggesting that STAT6 signaling plays a role in modulating Th17 immunity and pathology in the lungs. In the context of the cellular and molecular changes induced by N. brasiliensis infection, there was a significant reduction in overall airway responsiveness and lung inflammation in response to allergen. In addition, the N. brasiliensis-altered pulmonary environment showed dramatic alterations in the nature and number of genes that were up- and downregulated in the lung in response to allergen challenge. The results demonstrate that even a transient exposure to a helminth parasite can effect significant and protracted changes in the immunological environment of the lung and that these complex molecular and cellular changes are likely to play a role in modulating a subsequent allergen-induced inflammatory response.
许多重要的人体蠕虫寄生虫在其生命周期的一个必需阶段会在肺部进行短期寄生。这种短暂的肺部暴露对感染和免疫的意义尚不清楚。我们利用巴西钩虫感染的啮齿动物模型,对寄生虫感染诱导的肺部免疫状态的长期变化进行了表征。感染后36天,变化包括Th2和Th1细胞因子转录持续增加,以及显示交替激活表型的肺泡巨噬细胞数量和频率显著增加。虽然巴西钩虫在STAT6(-/-)动物中未诱导肺巨噬细胞的交替激活,但该寄生虫在肺部环境中确实诱导了强烈的Th17反应,这表明STAT6信号在调节肺部Th17免疫和病理过程中发挥作用。在巴西钩虫感染诱导的细胞和分子变化的背景下,对过敏原的总体气道反应性和肺部炎症显著降低。此外,巴西钩虫改变的肺部环境在对过敏原攻击作出反应时,肺部上调和下调的基因的性质和数量发生了显著变化。结果表明,即使是短暂接触蠕虫寄生虫也会对肺部免疫环境产生显著而持久的变化,并且这些复杂的分子和细胞变化可能在调节随后的过敏原诱导的炎症反应中发挥作用。