Borghesi Alessandro, Stronati Mauro, Fellay Jacques
School of Life Sciences, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Lausanne, Switzerland; Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, San Matteo Hospital, Pavia, Italy.
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, San Matteo Hospital , Pavia , Italy.
Front Immunol. 2017 Mar 7;8:215. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00215. eCollection 2017.
Only a small proportion of newborn infants exposed to a pathogenic microorganism develop overt infection. Susceptibility to infection in preterm infants and infants with known comorbidities has a likely multifactorial origin and can be often attributed to the concurrence of iatrogenic factors, environmental determinants, underlying pathogenic processes, and probably genetic predisposition. Conversely, infection occurring in otherwise healthy full-term newborn infants is unexplained in most cases. Microbial virulence factors and the unique characteristics of the neonatal immune system only partially account for the interindividual variability in the neonatal immune responses to pathogens. We here suggest that neonatal infection occurring in otherwise healthy infants is caused by a failure of the specific protective immunity to the microorganism. To explain infection in term and preterm infants, we propose an extension of the previously proposed model of the genetic architecture of infectious diseases in humans. We then focus on group B streptococcus (GBS) disease, the best characterized neonatal infection, and outline the potential molecular mechanisms underlying the selective failure of the immune responses against GBS. In light of the recent discoveries of pathogen-specific primary immunodeficiencies and of the role of anticytokine autoantibodies in increasing susceptibility to specific infections, we hypothesize that GBS disease occurring in otherwise healthy infants could reflect an immunodeficiency caused either by rare genetic defects in the infant or by transmitted maternal neutralizing antibodies. These hypotheses are consistent with available epidemiological data, with clinical and epidemiological observations, and with the state of the art of neonatal physiology and disease. Studies should now be designed to comprehensively search for genetic or immunological factors involved in susceptibility to severe neonatal infections.
仅一小部分接触致病微生物的新生儿会发生明显感染。早产儿和患有已知合并症的婴儿对感染的易感性可能源于多种因素,通常可归因于医源性因素、环境决定因素、潜在致病过程,可能还有遗传易感性的共同作用。相反,在其他方面健康的足月儿中发生的感染,在大多数情况下无法解释。微生物毒力因子和新生儿免疫系统的独特特征仅部分解释了新生儿对病原体免疫反应的个体差异。我们在此提出,在其他方面健康的婴儿中发生的新生儿感染是由对该微生物的特异性保护性免疫失败所致。为了解释足月儿和早产儿的感染情况,我们提出对先前提出的人类传染病遗传结构模型进行扩展。然后我们聚焦于B族链球菌(GBS)疾病,这是特征最明确的新生儿感染,并概述针对GBS免疫反应选择性失败背后的潜在分子机制。鉴于最近发现的病原体特异性原发性免疫缺陷以及抗细胞因子自身抗体在增加对特定感染易感性方面的作用,我们假设在其他方面健康的婴儿中发生的GBS疾病可能反映了由婴儿罕见的遗传缺陷或母体传递的中和抗体引起的免疫缺陷。这些假设与现有的流行病学数据、临床和流行病学观察结果以及新生儿生理学和疾病的最新状况一致。现在应该设计研究来全面寻找与严重新生儿感染易感性相关的遗传或免疫因素。