The immunomodulatory properties of L-rhamnose
Citation:
LUNDAHL, MIMMI LOUISE, The immunomodulatory properties of L-rhamnose, Trinity College Dublin.School of Biochemistry & Immunology, 2020Download Item:
Abstract:
L-Rhamnose is a non-mammalian monosaccharide ubiquitously found on the surface of both commensal and pathogenic bacteria. Previous publications had identified that L-rhamnose-rich Mycobacterium tuberculosis glycolipids, and their structural derivatives, pHBADs, were able to aid this pathogen's ability to escape immune elimination by repressing protective immune responses. A key immune cell for combatting M. tuberculosis is the macrophage, an innate immune cell present in essentially all tissues. A distinguishing feature of macrophages is their polarisation combined with plasticity; the ability to adopt distinct phenotypes. These are simplified into the pro-inflammatory and bactericidal, "classically activated" M1 macrophages and the "alternatively activated" Th2-promoting and anti-inflammatory M2 macrophages. To combat M. tuberculosis, M1 macrophage activation is critical. In the research presented herein, it is demonstrated that L-rhamnose skews macrophage polarisation away from a bactericidal phenotype and enhances M2 characteristics. Furthermore, it is revealed that L-rhamnose is capable of inducing macrophage innate memory, causing responses elicited by subsequent stimuli, a week after L-rhamnose incubation, to yield a more anti-inflammatory and anti-bactericidal profile. Moreover, by investigating synthetic pHBAD analogues it was confirmed that L-rhamnose confers immunomodulatory properties to these molecules. Summarily, it appears that L-rhamnose confers M. tuberculosis with immunomodulatory properties that protects it from macrophage bactericidal responses.
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TCD
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https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:LUNDAHLMDescription:
APPROVED
Author: LUNDAHL, MIMMI LOUISE
Sponsor:
TCDAdvisor:
Lavelle, EdwardPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Biochemistry & Immunology. Discipline of BiochemistryType of material:
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Full text availableSubject:
Immunomodulation, Carbohydrates, Macrophages, Tuberculosis, Innate MemoryMetadata
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