Gram-negative infections can cause overwhelming inflammatory responses. Although factors other than LPS are clearly involved, these factors and their mechanisms of action have been poorly defined. During studies of LPS-independent inflammatory responses of the gram-negative pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an important virulence factor (exoenzyme S) was shown to be a potent mitogen for T cells. The current work demonstrates that exoenzyme S selectively induced transcription and secretion of biologically active cytokines and chemokines (chemotactic for neutrophils and T cells) from monocytes. Exoenzyme S stimulated highly purified monocytes independent of T cells. In addition, exoenzyme S stimulated T cells directly; neither T-cell activation (CD69) nor apoptosis (hypodiploidy) required the presence of monocytes. However, T-cell activation was enhanced via a noncontact-dependent mechanism as a result of the secretion of TNF-alpha and IL-6. This study identifies a unique property of a gram-negative-derived microbial product capable of activating multiple cell types and suggests a mechanism by which exoenzyme S contributes to the immunopathogenesis of cystic fibrosis and sepsis in patients infected with P. aeruginosa.

Distinct fates of monocytes and T cells directly activated by Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzyme S.

Gjomarkaj M;Pace E;Melis M;
2002

Abstract

Gram-negative infections can cause overwhelming inflammatory responses. Although factors other than LPS are clearly involved, these factors and their mechanisms of action have been poorly defined. During studies of LPS-independent inflammatory responses of the gram-negative pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an important virulence factor (exoenzyme S) was shown to be a potent mitogen for T cells. The current work demonstrates that exoenzyme S selectively induced transcription and secretion of biologically active cytokines and chemokines (chemotactic for neutrophils and T cells) from monocytes. Exoenzyme S stimulated highly purified monocytes independent of T cells. In addition, exoenzyme S stimulated T cells directly; neither T-cell activation (CD69) nor apoptosis (hypodiploidy) required the presence of monocytes. However, T-cell activation was enhanced via a noncontact-dependent mechanism as a result of the secretion of TNF-alpha and IL-6. This study identifies a unique property of a gram-negative-derived microbial product capable of activating multiple cell types and suggests a mechanism by which exoenzyme S contributes to the immunopathogenesis of cystic fibrosis and sepsis in patients infected with P. aeruginosa.
2002
Istituto di biomedicina e di immunologia molecolare - IBIM - Sede Palermo
71
458
468
monociti
linfociti
gram-
Questo studio identifica alcuni importanti meccanismi biomolecolari evocati da prodotti di batteri gram-negativi su differenti cellule immunocompetenti e identifica il loro potenziale ruolo patogenetico nella fibrosi cistica e nelle sepsi provocate da Pseudomonas Aeruginosa. Questo studio è inserito nel contesto di una formale collaborazione con l'University of Calgary-Alberta-Canada che concerne oltre all'identificazione dei meccanismi di risposta dell'ospite ad agenti infettanti anche lo studio di meccanismi immunologici nello spazio pleurico in differenti condizioni patologiche.
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Epelman S.; Neely Gg.; Ma L.l.; Gjomarkaj M.; Pace E.; Melis M.; Woods De.; Mody Ch.
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/156793
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