Leber Andrew, Bassaganya-Riera Josep, Tubau-Juni Nuria, Zoccoli-Rodriguez Victoria, Viladomiu Monica, Abedi Vida, Lu Pinyi, Hontecillas Raquel
Nutritional Immunology and Molecular Medicine Laboratory, Biocomplexity Institute of Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Dec 9;11(12):e0167440. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167440. eCollection 2016.
Immune responses to Helicobacter pylori are orchestrated through complex balances of host-bacterial interactions, including inflammatory and regulatory immune responses across scales that can lead to the development of the gastric disease or the promotion of beneficial systemic effects. While inflammation in response to the bacterium has been reasonably characterized, the regulatory pathways that contribute to preventing inflammatory events during H. pylori infection are incompletely understood. To aid in this effort, we have generated a computational model incorporating recent developments in the understanding of H. pylori-host interactions. Sensitivity analysis of this model reveals that a regulatory macrophage population is critical in maintaining high H. pylori colonization without the generation of an inflammatory response. To address how this myeloid cell subset arises, we developed a second model describing an intracellular signaling network for the differentiation of macrophages. Modeling studies predicted that LANCL2 is a central regulator of inflammatory and effector pathways and its activation promotes regulatory responses characterized by IL-10 production while suppressing effector responses. The predicted impairment of regulatory macrophage differentiation by the loss of LANCL2 was simulated based on multiscale linkages between the tissue-level gastric mucosa and the intracellular models. The simulated deletion of LANCL2 resulted in a greater clearance of H. pylori, but also greater IFNγ responses and damage to the epithelium. The model predictions were validated within a mouse model of H. pylori colonization in wild-type (WT), LANCL2 whole body KO and myeloid-specific LANCL2-/- (LANCL2Myeloid) mice, which displayed similar decreases in H. pylori burden, CX3CR1+ IL-10-producing macrophages, and type 1 regulatory (Tr1) T cells. This study shows the importance of LANCL2 in the induction of regulatory responses in macrophages and T cells during H. pylori infection.
对幽门螺杆菌的免疫反应是通过宿主-细菌相互作用的复杂平衡来协调的,包括跨尺度的炎症和调节性免疫反应,这可能导致胃部疾病的发展或有益全身效应的促进。虽然对该细菌的炎症反应已得到合理表征,但对幽门螺杆菌感染期间有助于预防炎症事件的调节途径仍不完全清楚。为了助力这一研究,我们构建了一个计算模型,纳入了对幽门螺杆菌-宿主相互作用理解的最新进展。对该模型的敏感性分析表明,调节性巨噬细胞群体对于维持幽门螺杆菌的高定植且不产生炎症反应至关重要。为了探究这种髓系细胞亚群是如何产生的,我们开发了第二个模型,描述巨噬细胞分化的细胞内信号网络。建模研究预测,LANCL2是炎症和效应途径的核心调节因子,其激活促进以产生IL-10为特征的调节性反应,同时抑制效应性反应。基于组织水平的胃黏膜与细胞内模型之间的多尺度联系,模拟了LANCL2缺失对调节性巨噬细胞分化的预测损害。模拟删除LANCL2导致幽门螺杆菌的清除增加,但也导致IFNγ反应增强和上皮损伤。在野生型(WT)、LANCL2全身敲除和髓系特异性LANCL2-/-(LANCL2髓系)小鼠的幽门螺杆菌定植小鼠模型中验证了模型预测,这些小鼠在幽门螺杆菌负荷、CX3CR1+产生IL-10的巨噬细胞和1型调节性(Tr1)T细胞方面表现出类似的下降。这项研究表明了LANCL2在幽门螺杆菌感染期间诱导巨噬细胞和T细胞调节性反应中的重要性。