Affiliation:
1. Departments of Medicine
2. Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Connecticut Children's Medical Center, Hartford, Connecticut 06106
3. Genetics and Developmental Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut 06030-3715
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We examined the interactions of live and lysed spirochetes with innate immune cells. THP-1 monocytoid cells were activated to comparable extents by live
Borrelia burgdorferi
and by
B. burgdorferi
and
Treponema pallidum
lysates but were poorly activated by live
T. pallidum
. Because THP-1 cells poorly internalized live spirochetes, we turned to an ex vivo peripheral blood mononuclear cell system that would more closely reflect spirochete-mononuclear phagocyte interactions that occur during actual infection. In this system,
B. burgdorferi
induced significantly greater monocyte activation and inflammatory cytokine production than did borrelial lysates or
T. pallidum
, and only
B. burgdorferi
elicited gamma interferon (IFN-γ) from NK cells.
B. burgdorferi
was phagocytosed avidly by monocytes, while
T. pallidum
was not, suggesting that the enhanced response to live
B. burgdorferi
was due to phagocytosis of the organism. When cytochalasin D was used to block phagocytosis of live
B. burgdorferi
, cytokine production decreased to levels comparable to those induced by
B. burgdorferi
lysates, while the IFN-γ response was abrogated altogether. In the presence of human syphilitic serum,
T. pallidum
was efficiently internalized and initiated responses resembling those observed with live
B. burgdorferi
, including the production of IFN-γ by NK cells. Depletion of monocytes revealed that they were the primary source of inflammatory cytokines, while dendritic cells (DCs) directed IFN-γ production from innate lymphocytes. Thus, phagocytosis of live spirochetes initiates cell activation programs in monocytes and DCs that differ qualitatively and quantitatively from those induced at the cell surface by lipoprotein-enriched lysates. The greater stimulatory capacity of
B. burgdorferi
versus
T. pallidum
appears to be explained by the successful recognition and phagocytosis of
B. burgdorferi
by host cells and the ability of
T. pallidum
to avoid detection and uptake by virtue of its denuded outer membrane rather than by differences in surface lipoprotein expression.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
92 articles.
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