Severe acute malnutrition promotes bacterial binding over pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion by circulating innate immune cells
Author:
Phiri Tracy N., Mutasa Kuda, Rukobo Sandra, Govha Margaret, Mushayanembwa Patience, Mwakamui Simutanyi, Haider Tafhima, Zyambo Kanekwa, Dumbura Cherlynn, Tome Joice, Runodamoto Thompson, Chidamba Leah, Majo Florence D., Ngosa Deophine, Chandwe Kanta, Kapoma Chanda, Mwapenya Benjamin, Sturgeon Jonathan P., Robertson Ruairi C., Smuk Melanie, Ntozini Robert, Nathoo Kusum, Amadi Beatrice, Kelly Paul, Bwakura-Dangarembizi Mutsa, Prendergast Andrew J., Bourke Claire D.ORCID
Abstract
ABSTRACTChildren with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) are at high risk of infectious mortality and morbidity during and after hospital discharge. This risk persists despite nutritional and prophylactic antibiotic interventions among children with SAM, implicating persistent deficits in their immune defenses. Here we test the hypothesis that innate immune cells from children (0-59 months) hospitalized with SAM in Zambia and Zimbabwe (n=141) have distinct capacity to respond to bacteria relative to adequately-nourished healthy controls from the same communities (n=92). Neutrophils and monocytes from SAM inpatients had a higher capacity to bindE. colibut lower monocyte activation and pro-inflammatory mediator secretion in response toE. colilipopolysaccharide (LPS) or heat-killedSalmonella typhimurium(HKST) than controls. Bacterial binding capacity differentiated children with SAM from controls after adjusting for clinical and demographic heterogeneity and normalized with duration of hospital treatment. Wasting severity, HIV status, and age group were associated with LPS and HKST-induced cytokine secretion, monocyte activation, and myeloperoxidase secretion, respectively. Bacterial binding capacity and monocyte activation during hospitalization were associated with higher odds of persistent SAM at discharge; a risk factor for subsequent mortality. Thus, SAM shifts anti-bacterial innate immune cell function, favoring bacterial containment over pro-inflammatory activation upon challenge, which contributes to persistent health deficits among hospitalized children.TEASERChildren with severe acute malnutrition have distinct anti-bacterial innate immune cell function compared to healthy children which persists during their hospitalization and contributes to persistent wasting.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference61 articles.
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