Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390;
Department of Ophthalmology, Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha 410008, China;
J Immunol. 2014 Aug 1;193(3):1353-63. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1301772. Epub 2014 Jun 27.
Mycoplasmas are a common cause of pneumonia in humans and animals, and attempts to create vaccines have not only failed to generate protective host responses, but they have exacerbated the disease. Mycoplasma pulmonis causes a chronic inflammatory lung disease resulting from a persistent infection, similar to other mycoplasma respiratory diseases. Using this model, Th1 subsets promote resistance to mycoplasma disease and infection, whereas Th2 responses contribute to immunopathology. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the capacity of cytokine-differentiated dendritic cell (DC) populations to influence the generation of protective and/or pathologic immune responses during M. pulmonis respiratory disease in BALB/c mice. We hypothesized that intratracheal inoculation of mycoplasma Ag-pulsed bone marrow-derived DCs could result in the generation of protective T cell responses during mycoplasma infection. However, intratracheal inoculation (priming) of mice with Ag-pulsed DCs resulted in enhanced pathology in the recipient mice when challenged with mycoplasma. Inoculation of immunodeficient SCID mice with Ag-pulsed DCs demonstrated that this effect was dependent on lymphocyte responses. Similar results were observed when mice were primed with Ag-pulsed pulmonary, but not splenic, DCs. Lymphocytes generated in uninfected mice after the transfer of either Ag-pulsed bone marrow-derived DCs or pulmonary DCs were shown to be IL-13(+) Th2 cells, known to be associated with immunopathology. Thus, resident pulmonary DCs most likely promote the development of immunopathology in mycoplasma disease through the generation of mycoplasma-specific Th2 responses. Vaccination strategies that disrupt or bypass this process could potentially result in a more effective vaccination.
支原体是人类和动物肺炎的常见病因,试图制造疫苗不仅未能产生保护性的宿主反应,反而使疾病恶化。肺炎支原体引起慢性炎症性肺病是由持续感染引起的,类似于其他支原体呼吸道疾病。使用这种模型,Th1 亚群促进对支原体疾病和感染的抵抗力,而 Th2 反应则有助于免疫病理学。本研究的目的是评估细胞因子分化的树突状细胞(DC)群体在 BALB/c 小鼠肺炎支原体呼吸道疾病期间影响保护性和/或病理性免疫反应的能力。我们假设,通过气管内接种肺炎支原体 Ag 脉冲骨髓来源的 DC 可以在支原体感染期间产生保护性 T 细胞反应。然而,当用支原体挑战时,气管内接种(启动)Ag 脉冲 DC 的小鼠会导致受者小鼠的病理加重。用 Ag 脉冲 DC 接种免疫缺陷性 SCID 小鼠表明,这种效应依赖于淋巴细胞反应。当用 Ag 脉冲肺 DC 而不是脾 DC 对小鼠进行启动时,观察到了类似的结果。在转移 Ag 脉冲骨髓来源的 DC 或肺 DC 后,未感染的小鼠中产生的淋巴细胞被证明是 IL-13(+)Th2 细胞,已知与免疫病理学有关。因此,驻留的肺 DC 可能通过产生支原体特异性 Th2 反应来促进支原体病中的免疫病理学发展。破坏或绕过此过程的疫苗接种策略可能会导致更有效的疫苗接种。