Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Biochemistry, University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Abstract
Previous studies demonstrated that
Leptospira biflexa
, a saprophytic species, triggers innate immune responses in the host during early infection. This raised the question of whether these responses could suppress a subsequent challenge with pathogenic
Leptospira
. We inoculated C3H/HeJ mice with a single or a double dose of
L. biflexa
before challenge with a pathogenic serovar,
L. interrogans
serovar Copenhageni FioCruz (LIC). Pre-challenge exposure to
L. biflexa
did not prevent LIC dissemination and colonization of the kidney. However, it rescued weight loss and mouse survival thereby mitigating disease severity. Unexpectedly, there was correlation between rescue of overall health (weight gain, higher survival, lower kidney fibrosis marker ColA1) and higher shedding of LIC in urine. This stood in contrast to the
L. biflexa
unexposed LIC challenged control. Immune responses were dominated by increased frequency of effector T helper (CD4+) cells in spleen, as well as significant increases in serologic IgG2a. Our findings suggest that exposure to live saprophytic
Leptospira
primes the host to develop Th1 biased immune responses that prevent severe disease induced by a subsequent challenge with a pathogenic species. Thus, mice exposed to live saprophytic
Leptospira
before facing a pathogenic serovar may withstand infection with far better outcomes. Furthermore, a status of homeostasis may have been reached after kidney colonization that helps LIC complete its enzootic cycle.
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd