Allergy and Clinical Immunology Branch, Health Effects Laboratory Division, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Morgantown, WV, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Dec 29;15(12):e0244436. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0244436. eCollection 2020.
Healthcare workers concurrently may be at a higher risk of developing respiratory infections and allergic disease, such as asthma, than the general public. Increased incidence of allergic diseases is thought to be caused, in part, due to occupational exposure to chemicals that induce or augment Th2 immune responses. However, whether exposure to these chemical antimicrobials can influence immune responses to respiratory pathogens is unknown. Here, we use a BALB/c murine model to test if the Th2-promoting antimicrobial chemical triclosan influences immune responses to influenza A virus. Mice were dermally exposed to 2% triclosan for 7 days prior to infection with a sub-lethal dose of mouse adapted PR8 A(H1N1) virus (50 pfu); triclosan exposure continued until 10 days post infection (dpi). Infected mice exposed to triclosan did not show an increase in morbidity or mortality, and viral titers were unchanged. Assessment of T cell responses at 10 dpi showed a decrease in the number of total and activated (CD44hi) CD4+ and CD8+ T cells at the site of infection (BAL and lung) in triclosan exposed mice compared to controls. Influenza-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were assessed using MHCI and MHCII tetramers, with reduced populations, although not reaching statistical significance at these sites following triclosan exposure. Reductions in the Th1 transcription factor T-bet were seen in both activated and tetramer+ CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the lungs of triclosan exposed infected mice, indicating reduced Th1 polarization and providing a potential mechanism for numerical reduction in T cells. Overall, these results indicate that the immune environment induced by triclosan exposure has the potential to influence the developing immune response to a respiratory viral infection and may have implications for healthcare workers who may be at an increased risk for developing infectious diseases.
医护人员与普通公众相比,患呼吸道感染和过敏性疾病(如哮喘)的风险可能更高。过敏性疾病发病率的增加部分归因于职业接触化学物质,这些化学物质诱导或增强了 Th2 免疫反应。然而,接触这些化学抗菌剂是否会影响对呼吸道病原体的免疫反应尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用 BALB/c 小鼠模型来测试促 Th2 的抗菌化学物质三氯生是否会影响对甲型流感病毒的免疫反应。在感染低致死剂量的适应小鼠的 PR8 A(H1N1)病毒(50 pfu)之前,将小鼠的皮肤暴露于 2%的三氯生 7 天;三氯生暴露持续到感染后 10 天(dpi)。感染了三氯生的小鼠没有出现发病率或死亡率增加的情况,病毒滴度也没有变化。在 10 dpi 评估 T 细胞反应时,与对照组相比,在感染部位(BAL 和肺),暴露于三氯生的感染小鼠的总 T 细胞和活化(CD44hi)CD4+和 CD8+T 细胞数量减少。使用 MHCI 和 MHCII 四聚体评估流感特异性 CD4+和 CD8+T 细胞,在这些部位,暴露于三氯生后,虽然没有达到统计学意义,但细胞数量减少。在感染了三氯生的暴露小鼠的肺部,活化的和四聚体+CD4+和 CD8+T 细胞中的 Th1 转录因子 T-bet 减少,表明 Th1 极化减少,并为 T 细胞数量减少提供了潜在的机制。总的来说,这些结果表明,三氯生暴露诱导的免疫环境有可能影响正在发育的呼吸道病毒感染的免疫反应,这可能对感染风险增加的医护人员产生影响。