Centre de Physiopathologie Toulouse-Purpan (CPTP), Université de Toulouse, Toulouse, France.
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (Inserm), Université Paul Sabatier (UPS), Toulouse, France.
mBio. 2020 Apr 7;11(2):e03394-19. doi: 10.1128/mBio.03394-19.
Coinfections shape immunity and influence the development of inflammatory diseases, resulting in detrimental or beneficial outcome. Coinfections with concurrent species can alter malaria clinical evolution, and malaria infection itself can modulate autoimmune reactions. Yet, the underlying mechanisms remain ill defined. Here, we demonstrate that the protective effects of some rodent malaria strains on T cell-mediated inflammatory pathologies are due to an RNA virus cohosted in malaria-parasitized blood. We show that live and extracts of blood parasitized by K173 or 17X YM, protect against ANKA-induced experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)/complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA)-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), and that protection is associated with a strong type I interferon (IFN-I) signature. We detected the presence of the RNA virus lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus (LDV) in the protective stabilates and we established that LDV infection alone was necessary and sufficient to recapitulate the protective effects on ECM and EAE. In ECM, protection resulted from an IFN-I-mediated reduction in the abundance of splenic conventional dendritic cell and impairment of their ability to produce interleukin (IL)-12p70, leading to a decrease in pathogenic CD4 Th1 responses. In EAE, LDV infection induced IFN-I-mediated abrogation of IL-23, thereby preventing the differentiation of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-producing encephalitogenic CD4 T cells. Our work identifies a virus cohosted in several stabilates across the community and deciphers its major consequences on the host immune system. More generally, our data emphasize the importance of considering contemporaneous infections for the understanding of malaria-associated and autoimmune diseases. Any infection modifies the host immune status, potentially ameliorating or aggravating the pathophysiology of a simultaneous inflammatory condition. In the course of investigating how malaria infection modulates the severity of contemporaneous inflammatory diseases, we identified a nonpathogenic mouse virus in stabilates of two widely used rodent parasite lines: K173 and 17X YM. We established that the protective effects of these lines on cerebral malaria and multiple sclerosis are exclusively due to this virus. The virus induces a massive type I interferon (IFN-I) response and causes quantitative and qualitative defects in the ability of dendritic cells to promote pathogenic T cell responses. Beyond revealing a possible confounding factor in rodent malaria models, our work uncovers some bases by which a seemingly innocuous viral (co)infection profoundly changes the immunopathophysiology of inflammatory diseases.
Coinfections shape immunity and influence the development of inflammatory diseases, resulting in detrimental or beneficial outcome. Coinfections with concurrent species can alter malaria clinical evolution, and malaria infection itself can modulate autoimmune reactions. Yet, the underlying mechanisms remain ill defined. Here, we demonstrate that the protective effects of some rodent malaria strains on T cell-mediated inflammatory pathologies are due to an RNA virus cohosted in malaria-parasitized blood. We show that live and extracts of blood parasitized by K173 or 17X YM, protect against ANKA-induced experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)/complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA)-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), and that protection is associated with a strong type I interferon (IFN-I) signature. We detected the presence of the RNA virus lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus (LDV) in the protective stabilates and we established that LDV infection alone was necessary and sufficient to recapitulate the protective effects on ECM and EAE. In ECM, protection resulted from an IFN-I-mediated reduction in the abundance of splenic conventional dendritic cell and impairment of their ability to produce interleukin (IL)-12p70, leading to a decrease in pathogenic CD4 Th1 responses. In EAE, LDV infection induced IFN-I-mediated abrogation of IL-23, thereby preventing the differentiation of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-producing encephalitogenic CD4 T cells. Our work identifies a virus cohosted in several stabilates across the community and deciphers its major consequences on the host immune system. More generally, our data emphasize the importance of considering contemporaneous infections for the understanding of malaria-associated and autoimmune diseases. Any infection modifies the host immune status, potentially ameliorating or aggravating the pathophysiology of a simultaneous inflammatory condition. In the course of investigating how malaria infection modulates the severity of contemporaneous inflammatory diseases, we identified a nonpathogenic mouse virus in stabilates of two widely used rodent parasite lines: K173 and 17X YM. We established that the protective effects of these lines on cerebral malaria and multiple sclerosis are exclusively due to this virus. The virus induces a massive type I interferon (IFN-I) response and causes quantitative and qualitative defects in the ability of dendritic cells to promote pathogenic T cell responses. Beyond revealing a possible confounding factor in rodent malaria models, our work uncovers some bases by which a seemingly innocuous viral (co)infection profoundly changes the immunopathophysiology of inflammatory diseases.
共感染塑造免疫并影响炎症性疾病的发展,导致有害或有益的结果。同时感染 种可改变疟疾的临床演变,疟疾感染本身可调节自身免疫反应。然而,其潜在机制仍未明了。在这里,我们证明了一些鼠疟株对 T 细胞介导的炎症性病理的保护作用是由于疟原虫寄生血液中的 RNA 病毒。我们表明,K173 或 17X YM 寄生血液的活虫体和提取物可预防 ANKA 诱导的实验性脑型疟疾(ECM)和髓鞘少突胶质细胞糖蛋白(MOG)/完全弗氏佐剂(CFA)诱导的实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE),并且这种保护与强烈的 I 型干扰素(IFN-I)特征相关。我们在保护性 株中检测到 RNA 病毒乳酸脱氢酶升高病毒(LDV)的存在,并证实 LDV 感染本身是重现对 ECM 和 EAE 的保护作用所必需且充分的。在 ECM 中,保护作用是由于 IFN-I 介导的脾常规树突状细胞数量减少和其产生白细胞介素(IL)-12p70的能力受损,导致致病性 CD4 Th1 反应减少。在 EAE 中,LDV 感染诱导 IFN-I 介导的 IL-23 阻断,从而阻止产生粒细胞-巨噬细胞集落刺激因子(GM-CSF)的致脑炎性 CD4 T 细胞的分化。我们的工作鉴定出一种在多个 株中共同存在的病毒,并阐明其对宿主免疫系统的主要影响。任何感染都会改变宿主的免疫状态,可能改善或加重同时发生的炎症性疾病的病理生理学。在研究疟疾感染如何调节同时发生的炎症性疾病的严重程度的过程中,我们在两种广泛使用的啮齿动物寄生虫系 K173 和 17X YM 的 株中发现了一种非致病性的小鼠病毒。我们证实,这些 株对脑型疟疾和多发性硬化症的保护作用完全是由于这种病毒。该病毒诱导强烈的 I 型干扰素(IFN-I)反应,并导致树突状细胞促进致病性 T 细胞反应的能力在数量和质量上出现缺陷。除了揭示啮齿动物疟疾模型中的一个可能的混杂因素外,我们的工作还揭示了一些基础,即看似无害的病毒(共)感染会深刻改变炎症性疾病的免疫病理生理学。