Gervais F, Morris-Hooke A, Tran T A, Skamene E
Infect Immun. 1986 Nov;54(2):315-21. doi: 10.1128/iai.54.2.315-321.1986.
Innate resistance to infection by Listeria monocytogenes is genetically controlled and is critically dependent on prompt macrophage recruitment to the sites of infection. Experiments reported here were designed to examine whether there was an additional, qualitative difference between the intrinsic bactericidal activity of the inflammatory macrophages of genetically resistant (C57BL/6J) and susceptible (A/J) hosts. To critically evaluate the bactericidal (rather than bacteriostatic) function of the macrophage, a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of L. monocytogenes was developed. Mutagenesis was induced with nitrosoguanidine, and the ts mutants were isolated following enrichment with penicillin-gentamicin combinations. The ts mutants were found to carry the cell surface and biochemical characteristics of the original wild-type strain of L. monocytogenes. Inflammatory peritoneal macrophages from resistant C57BL/6J mice were found to have enhanced listericidal activity when compared with inflammatory macrophages from susceptible A/J mice. However, further analysis of the macrophage populations revealed that this seemingly qualitative advantage was due to the relatively greater proportion of inflammatory macrophages present in the inflammatory exudates of resistant C57BL/6J mice. When homogeneous populations of pure inflammatory macrophages were compared, no interstrain differences in their listericidal activity in vitro were seen. These results suggest that the susceptibility of A/J strain mice to L. monocytogenes is not due to an intrinsic deficiency of the listericidal activity of the inflammatory macrophage. The slight increase in bactericidal activity of macrophages from resistant mice that was reported by others (C. J. Czuprynski, B. P. Canono, P. M. Henson, and P. A. Campbell, Immunology 55:511-518, 1985) is caused by the difference in the relative percentage of resident cells present in the peritoneal exudates from resistant and susceptible mice.
对单核细胞增生李斯特菌感染的先天抵抗力是由基因控制的,并且严重依赖于巨噬细胞迅速募集到感染部位。本文报道的实验旨在研究基因抗性(C57BL/6J)和易感(A/J)宿主的炎性巨噬细胞的内在杀菌活性之间是否存在额外的质的差异。为了严格评估巨噬细胞的杀菌(而非抑菌)功能,构建了单核细胞增生李斯特菌的温度敏感(ts)突变体。用亚硝基胍诱导诱变,并用青霉素-庆大霉素组合富集后分离出ts突变体。发现ts突变体具有原始野生型单核细胞增生李斯特菌菌株的细胞表面和生化特征。与易感A/J小鼠的炎性巨噬细胞相比,抗性C57BL/6J小鼠的炎性腹膜巨噬细胞具有增强的杀李斯特菌活性。然而,对巨噬细胞群体的进一步分析表明,这种看似质的优势是由于抗性C57BL/6J小鼠炎性渗出物中存在的炎性巨噬细胞比例相对较高。当比较纯炎性巨噬细胞的同质群体时,未观察到它们在体外杀李斯特菌活性的品系间差异。这些结果表明,A/J品系小鼠对单核细胞增生李斯特菌的易感性不是由于炎性巨噬细胞杀菌活性的内在缺陷。其他人(C.J.Czuprynski、B.P.Canono、P.M.Henson和P.A.Campbell,《免疫学》55:511-518,1985)报道的抗性小鼠巨噬细胞杀菌活性的轻微增加是由抗性和易感小鼠腹膜渗出物中存在的常驻细胞相对百分比的差异引起的。