Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8437259 | EBioMedicine | 2018 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
Commensal microorganisms influence a variety of host functions in the gut, including immune response, glucose homeostasis, metabolic pathways and oxidative stress, among others. This study describes how Salmonella Typhi, the pathogen responsible for typhoid fever, uses similar strategies to escape immune defense responses and survive within its human host. To elucidate the early mechanisms of typhoid fever, we performed studies using healthy human intestinal tissue samples and “mini-guts,” organoids grown from intestinal tissue taken from biopsy specimens. We analyzed gene expression changes in human intestinal specimens and bacterial cells both separately and after colonization. Our results showed mechanistic strategies that S. Typhi uses to rearrange the cellular machinery of the host cytoskeleton to successfully invade the intestinal epithelium, promote polarized cytokine release and evade immune system activation by downregulating genes involved in antigen sampling and presentation during infection. This work adds novel information regarding S. Typhi infection pathogenesis in humans, by replicating work shown in traditional cell models, and providing new data that can be applied to future vaccine development strategies.
Keywords
ISCSTMSTYPBSmicrofold cellsCFUDMEMDAPTqPCRDTTFITCIntestinal organoidsTEERDulbecco's modified Eagle MediumH&EEDTAEthylenediaminetetraacetic acidribonucleic acidRNAPeriodic Acid SchiffInnate immunityTeminterleukinHuman tissueTyphoid feverTerminal ileumHost-pathogen interactionVaccine developmentImmune systemdithiothreitolSalmonellaSalmonella typhiSalmonella TyphimuriumM cellsintestinal stem cellImmune evasionPhosphate buffered salinefluorescein isothiocyanatelactate dehydrogenaseLDHTrans-epithelial electrical resistanceTransmission electron microscopyPASHematoxylin and Eosincolony forming unitsQuantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cancer Research
Authors
K.P. Nickerson, S. Senger, Y. Zhang, R. Lima, S. Patel, L. Ingano, W.A. Flavahan, D.K.V. Kumar, C.M. Fraser, C.S. Faherty, M.B. Sztein, M. Fiorentino, A. Fasano,