Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Zoonotic Pathogens
2. Genomics Unit, Research Technologies Section
3. Flow Cytometry Unit, Research Technologies Section
4. Veterinary Branch, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana 59840
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A delayed inflammatory response is a prominent feature of infection with
Yersinia pestis
, the agent of bubonic and pneumonic plague. Using a rat model of bubonic plague, we examined lymph node histopathology, transcriptome, and extracellular cytokine levels to broadly characterize the kinetics and extent of the host response to
Y. pestis
and how it is influenced by the
Yersinia
virulence plasmid (pYV). Remarkably, dissemination and multiplication of wild-type
Y. pestis
during the bubonic stage of disease did not induce any detectable gene expression or cytokine response by host lymph node cells in the developing bubo. Only after systemic spread had led to terminal septicemic plague was a transcriptomic response detected, which included upregulation of several cytokine, chemokine, and other immune response genes. Although an initial intracellular phase of
Y. pestis
infection has been postulated, a Th1-type cytokine response associated with classical activation of macrophages was not observed during the bubonic stage of disease. However, elevated levels of interleukin-17 (IL-17) were present in infected lymph nodes. In the absence of pYV, sustained recruitment to the lymph node of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN, or neutrophils), the major IL-17 effector cells, correlated with clearance of infection. Thus, the ability to counteract a PMN response in the lymph node appears to be a major
in vivo
function of the
Y. pestis
virulence plasmid.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
51 articles.
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