Investigating a role for members of the respiratory tract microbiota in Th17 cell pathogenicity and CNS autoimmunity
Citation:
Mannion, Jenny, Investigating a role for members of the respiratory tract microbiota in Th17 cell pathogenicity and CNS autoimmunity, Trinity College Dublin.School of Biochemistry & Immunology, 2022Download Item:
Abstract:
The respiratory tract is home to a diverse microbial community whose influence on local
and systemic immune responses is only beginning to be appreciated. Increasing reports
have linked the airways with the trafficking of myelin-specific T cells in the pre-clinical
stages of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model of multiple
sclerosis (MS). Myelin-reactive Th17 cells are important pathogenic effectors in MS and
EAE but are innocuous immediately following differentiation. IL-23 driven conversion to
an ex-Th17 cell phenotype appears to be a critical step in their acquisition of pathogenic
potential, but little is known about the mechanisms that mediate this process. We
hypothesize that the airways are a critical site in the immunopathogenesis of EAE, where
respiratory tract bacteria express crucial factors that promotes encephalogenicity in Th17
cells.
We exposed innate immune cells in vitro and ex vivo to a range of respiratory symbionts
and examined IL-23 and related cytokine secretion. In vivo, we colonised the upper
respiratory tract of mice with selected bacteria to determine expression of IL-23 and
related cytokines in the airways. We transferred myelin-specific Th17 cells to congenic
recipient mice exposed to a range of IL-23 inducing human respiratory symbionts and
monitored disease severity and T cell trafficking. Disease was exacerbated in mice
exposed to the IL-23 inducing Proteobacteria species Moraxella catarrhalis and Klebsiella
pneumoniae, but not the Firmicute species Veillonella parvula (commonly associated with
healthy human lungs), compared to PBS administered controls. Disease susceptibility was
reduced in germ-free mice compared to conventionally housed mice but was partially
restored in germ-free mice colonised with K. pneumoniae. In the pre-clinical stages of
disease, we found a significant increase in the frequency of GM-CSF + and GM-CSF + IFNγ +
double positive donor CD4 T cells in the lungs of mice exposed to M. catarrhalis or K.
pneumoniae, compared to V. parvula-exposed mice or PBS controls. We also found
elevated expression by donor Th17 cells of key trafficking molecules including CCR6 and
CXCR6 in the lungs of these mice. In vitro, dendritic cells exposed to these respiratory
bacteria secrete high concentrations of the critical pathogenic cytokine IL-23 and Th17-
polarised cells co-cultured with these bacteria-stimulated dendritic cells also displayed a
significant increase in GM-CSF and IFNg expression. Our data indicates that exposure to
the respiratory symbionts M. catarrhalis and K. pneumoniae promotes expression of key
pathogenic molecules in myelin-specific Th17 cells and supports the concept that
perturbations in the respiratory microbiota may contribute to the pathophysiology of CNS
autoimmune disease.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Author's Homepage:
https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:JEMANNIODescription:
APPROVED
Author: Mannion, Jenny
Sponsor:
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)Advisor:
McLoughlin, RachelPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Biochemistry & Immunology. Discipline of BiochemistryType of material:
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