Author:
Bottek Jenny,Soun Camille,Lill Julia K.,Dixit Akanksha,Thiebes Stephanie,Beerlage Anna-Lena,Horstmann Marius,Urbanek Annett,Heuer Heike,Uszkoreit Julian,Eisenacher Martin,Bracht Thilo,Sitek Barbara,Hoffmann Franziska,Vijitha Nirojah,von Eggeling Ferdinand,Engel Daniel R.
Abstract
AbstractThe urothelium of the urinary bladder represents the first line of defense. However, uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) damage the urothelium and cause acute bacterial infection. Here, we demonstrate the crosstalk between macrophages and the urothelium stimulating macrophage migration into the urothelium. Using spatial proteomics by MALDI-MSI and LC-MS/MS, a novel algorithm revealed the spatial activation and migration of macrophages. Analysis of the spatial proteome unravelled the coexpression of Myo9b and F4/80 in the infected urothelium, indicating that macrophages have entered the urothelium upon infection. Immunofluorescence microscopy additionally indicated that intraurothelial macrophages phagocytosed UPEC and eliminated neutrophils. Further analysis of the spatial proteome by MALDI-MSI showed strong expression of IL-6 in the urothelium and local inhibition of this molecule reduced macrophage migration into the urothelium and aggravated the infection. After IL-6 inhibition, the expression of matrix metalloproteinases and chemokines, such as CX3CL1 was reduced in the urothelium. Accordingly, macrophage migration into the urothelium was diminished in the absence of CX3CL1 signaling in Cx3cr1gfp/gfp mice. Conclusively, this study describes the crosstalk between the infected urothelium and macrophages through IL-6-induced CX3CL1 expression. Such crosstalk facilitates the relocation of macrophages into the urothelium and reduces bacterial burden in the urinary bladder.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
22 articles.
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