McSorley Stephen J
Center for Comparative Medicine, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
Immunol Rev. 2014 Jul;260(1):168-82. doi: 10.1111/imr.12184.
Salmonella are a common source of food- or water-borne infection and cause a wide range of clinical disease in human and animal hosts. Salmonella are relatively easy to culture and manipulate in a laboratory setting, and the infection of laboratory animals induces robust innate and adaptive immune responses. Thus, immunologists have frequently turned to Salmonella infection models to expand understanding of host immunity to intestinal pathogens. In this review, I summarize current knowledge of innate and adaptive immunity to Salmonella and highlight features of this response that have emerged from recent studies. These include the heterogeneity of the antigen-specific T-cell response to intestinal infection, the prominence of microbial mechanisms to impede T- and B-cell responses, and the contribution of non-cognate pathways for elicitation of T-cell effector functions. Together, these different issues challenge an overly simplistic view of host-pathogen interaction during mucosal infection, but also allow deeper insight into the real-world dynamic of protective immunity to intestinal pathogens.
沙门氏菌是食源性或水源性感染的常见来源,可在人类和动物宿主中引发广泛的临床疾病。沙门氏菌在实验室环境中相对易于培养和操作,并且对实验动物的感染会诱导强烈的先天性和适应性免疫反应。因此,免疫学家经常借助沙门氏菌感染模型来拓展对宿主针对肠道病原体免疫的理解。在这篇综述中,我总结了目前对沙门氏菌先天性和适应性免疫的认识,并强调了近期研究中出现的这种免疫反应的特征。这些特征包括针对肠道感染的抗原特异性T细胞反应的异质性、阻碍T细胞和B细胞反应的微生物机制显著、以及非同源途径对T细胞效应功能激发的作用。这些不同的问题对粘膜感染期间宿主-病原体相互作用的过度简单化观点提出了挑战,但也有助于更深入地了解针对肠道病原体保护性免疫的实际动态。