The Blood Transcriptome of Experimental Melioidosis Reflects Disease Severity and Shows Considerable Similarity with the Human Disease.

LauraConejero; KrzysztofPotempa; Christine MGraham; NatashaSpink; SimonBlankley; Francisco JSalguero; RungnapaPankla-Sranujit; PrasongKhaenam; Jacques FBanchereau; VirginiaPascual; +4 more... DamienChaussabel; GanjanaLertmemongkolchai; AnneO'Garra; Gregory J Bancroft ORCID logo; (2015) The Blood Transcriptome of Experimental Melioidosis Reflects Disease Severity and Shows Considerable Similarity with the Human Disease. Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md, 195 (7). pp. 3248-3261. ISSN 0022-1767 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1500641
Copy

Melioidosis, a severe human disease caused by the bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, has a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations ranging from acute septicemia to chronic localized illness or latent infection. Murine models have been widely used to study the pathogenesis of infection and to evaluate novel therapies or vaccines, but how faithfully they recapitulate the biology of human melioidosis at a molecular level is not known. In this study, mice were intranasally infected with either high or low doses of B. pseudomallei to generate either acute, chronic, or latent infection and host blood and tissue transcriptional profiles were generated. Acute infection was accompanied by a homogeneous signature associated with induction of multiple innate immune response pathways, such as IL-10, TREM1, and IFN signaling, largely found in both blood and tissue. The transcriptional profile in blood reflected the heterogeneity of chronic infection and quantitatively reflected the severity of disease. Genes associated with fibrosis and tissue remodeling, including matrix metalloproteases and collagen, were upregulated in chronically infected mice with severe disease. Transcriptional signatures of both acute and chronic melioidosis revealed upregulation of iNOS in tissue, consistent with the expression of IFN-γ, but also Arginase-1, a functional antagonist of the iNOS pathway, and was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. Comparison of these mouse blood datasets by pathway and modular analysis with the blood transcriptional signature of patients with melioidosis showed that many genes were similarly perturbed, including Arginase-1, IL-10, TREM1, and IFN signaling, revealing the common immune response occurring in both mice and humans.



description
Conejero bps Transcriptomic Paper JI submit 19 march 2015.docx
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

Download
picture_as_pdf

Accepted Version


Explore Further

Read more research from the creator(s):

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work from this publication:

Find other related resources: