Critical Role for Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha in Controlling the Number of Lumenal Pathogenic Bacteria and Immunopathology in Infectious Colitis

Author:

Gonçalves Nathalie S.1,Ghaem-Maghami Marjan2,Monteleone Giovanni1,Frankel Gad2,Dougan Gordon2,Lewis David J. M.3,Simmons Cameron P.2,MacDonald Thomas T.1

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton SO16 6YD,1

2. Centre for Molecular Microbiology and Infection, Department of Biochemistry, Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine, London SW7 2AZ,2 and

3. St. George's Hospital Medical School, London SW17 0RE,3 United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT Infection of mice with the intestinal bacterial pathogen Citrobacter rodentium results in colonic mucosal hyperplasia and a local Th1 inflammatory response similar to that seen in mouse models of inflammatory bowel disease. In these latter models, and in patients with Crohn's disease, neutralization of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) is of therapeutic benefit. Since there is no information on the role of TNF-α in either immunity to noninvasive bacterial pathogens or on the role of TNF-α in the immunopathology of infectious colitis, we investigated C. rodentium infection in TNFRp55 −/− mice. In TNFRp55 −/− mice, there were higher colonic bacterial burdens, but the organisms were cleared at the same rate as C57BL/6 mice, showing that TNF-α is not needed for protective antibacterial immunity. The most striking feature of infection in TNFRp55 −/− mice, however, was the markedly enhanced pathology, with increased mucosal weight and thickness, increased T-cell infiltrate, and a markedly greater mucosal Th1 response. Interleukin-12 p40 transcripts were markedly elevated in C. rodentium -infected TNFRp55 −/− mice, and this was associated with enhanced mucosal STAT4 phosphorylation. TNF-α is not obligatory for protective immunity to C. rodentium in mice; however, it appears to play some role in downregulating mucosal pathology and Th1 immune responses.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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