Role of T cells in innate and adaptive immunity against murine Burkholderia pseudomallei infection.

AshrafulHaque; AnnaEaston; DebbieSmith; AnneO'Garra; NicoVan Rooijen; GanjanaLertmemongkolchai; Richard WTitball; Gregory J Bancroft ORCID logo; (2006) Role of T cells in innate and adaptive immunity against murine Burkholderia pseudomallei infection. The Journal of infectious diseases, 193 (3). pp. 370-379. ISSN 0022-1899 DOI: 10.1086/498983
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Antigen-specific T cells are important sources of interferon (IFN)-gamma for acquired immunity to intracellular pathogens, but they can also produce IFN- gamma directly via a "bystander" activation pathway in response to proinflammatory cytokines. We investigated the in vivo role of cytokine- versus antigen-mediated T cell activation in resistance to the pathogenic bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei. IFN-gamma, interleukin (IL)-12, and IL-18 were essential for initial bacterial control in infected mice. B. pseudomallei infection rapidly generated a potent IFN-gamma response from natural killer (NK) cells, NK T cells, conventional T cells, and other cell types within 16 h after infection, in an IL-12- and IL-18-dependent manner. However, early T cell- and NK cell-derived IFN-gamma responses were functionally redundant in cell depletion studies, with IFN-gamma produced by other cell types, such as major histocompatibility complex class II(int) F4/80(+) macrophages being sufficient for initial resistance. In contrast, B. pseudomallei-specific CD4(+) T cells played an important role during the later stage of infection. Thus, the T cell response to primary B. pseudomallei infection is biphasic, an early cytokine-induced phase in which T cells appear to be functionally redundant for initial bacterial clearance, followed by a later antigen-induced phase in which B. pseudomallei-specific T cells, in particular CD4(+) T cells, are important for host resistance.


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