Bhaskaran Natarajan, Quigley Cheriese, Paw Clarissa, Butala Shivani, Schneider Elizabeth, Pandiyan Pushpa
Department of Biological Sciences, School of Dental Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.
Front Microbiol. 2018 Aug 24;9:1995. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.01995. eCollection 2018.
Interactions between mucosal tissues and commensal microbes control appropriate host immune responses and inflammation, but very little is known about these interactions. Here we show that the depletion of resident bacteria using antibiotics (Abx) causes oral and gut immunopathology during oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC) infection. Antibiotic treatment causes reduction in the frequency of Foxp3+ regulatory cells (T) and IL-17A producers, with a concomitant increase in oral tissue pathology. While (CA) is usually controlled in the oral cavity, antibiotic treatment led to CA dependent oral and gut inflammation. A combination of short chain fatty acids (SCFA) controlled the pathology in Abx treated mice, correlating to an increase in the frequency of Foxp3+, IL-17A+, and Foxp3+IL-17A+ double positive (T17) cells in tongue and oral draining lymph nodes. However, SCFA treatment did not fully reverse the gut inflammation suggesting that resident microbiota have SCFA independent homeostatic mechanisms in gut mucosa. We also found that SCFA potently induce Foxp3 and IL-17A expression in CD4+ T cells depending on the cytokine milieu . Depletion of T alone in FDTR mice recapitulated oral inflammation in CA infected mice, showing that Abx mediated reduction of T was involved in infection induced pathology. SCFA did not control inflammation in T depleted mice in CA infected FDTR mice, showing that Foxp3 T cell induction was required for the protective effect mediated by SCFA. Taken together, our data reveal that SCFA derived from resident bacteria play a critical role in controlling immunopathology by regulating T cell cytokines during mucosal infections. This study has broader implications on protective effects of resident microbiota in regulating pathological infections.
黏膜组织与共生微生物之间的相互作用控制着宿主适当的免疫反应和炎症,但人们对这些相互作用知之甚少。在这里,我们表明,使用抗生素(Abx)清除常驻细菌会在口咽念珠菌病(OPC)感染期间导致口腔和肠道免疫病理。抗生素治疗导致Foxp3 +调节性T细胞和IL - 17A产生细胞的频率降低,同时口腔组织病理学增加。虽然念珠菌(CA)通常在口腔中受到控制,但抗生素治疗导致CA依赖性口腔和肠道炎症。短链脂肪酸(SCFA)的组合控制了Abx处理小鼠的病理,这与舌部和口腔引流淋巴结中Foxp3 +、IL - 17A +和Foxp3 + IL - 17A +双阳性(T17)细胞频率的增加相关。然而,SCFA治疗并未完全逆转肠道炎症,这表明常驻微生物群在肠道黏膜中有独立于SCFA的稳态机制。我们还发现,SCFA根据细胞因子环境在CD4 + T细胞中有效诱导Foxp3和IL - 17A表达。在FDTR小鼠中单独耗尽T细胞可重现CA感染小鼠的口腔炎症,表明Abx介导的T细胞减少参与了感染诱导的病理过程。在CA感染的FDTR小鼠中,SCFA不能控制T细胞耗尽小鼠的炎症,这表明Foxp3 + T细胞诱导是SCFA介导的保护作用所必需的。综上所述,我们的数据表明,常驻细菌衍生的SCFA在黏膜感染期间通过调节T细胞细胞因子来控制免疫病理方面起着关键作用。这项研究对常驻微生物群在调节病理性感染中的保护作用具有更广泛的意义。