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Myeloid dendritic cells (DCs) of mice susceptible to paracoccidioidomycosis suppress T cell responses whereas myeloid and plasmacytoid DCs from resistant mice induce effector and regulatory T cells.

Abstract
The protective adaptive immune response in paracoccidioidomycosis, a mycosis endemic among humans, is mediated by T cell immunity, whereas impaired T cell responses are associated with severe, progressive disease. The early host response to Paracoccidioides brasiliensis infection is not known since the disease is diagnosed at later phases of infection. Our laboratory established a murine model of infection where susceptible mice reproduce the severe disease, while resistant mice develop a mild infection. This work aimed to characterize the influence of dendritic cells in the innate and adaptive immunity of susceptible and resistant mice. We verified that P. brasiliensis infection induced in bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DCs) of susceptible mice a prevalent proinflammatory myeloid phenotype that secreted high levels of interleukin-12 (IL-12), tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IL-β, whereas in resistant mice, a mixed population of myeloid and plasmacytoid DCs secreting proinflammatory cytokines and expressing elevated levels of secreted and membrane-bound transforming growth factor β was observed. In proliferation assays, the proinflammatory DCs from B10.A mice induced anergy of naïve T cells, whereas the mixed DC subsets from resistant mice induced the concomitant proliferation of effector and regulatory T cells (Tregs). Equivalent results were observed during pulmonary infection. The susceptible mice displayed preferential expansion of proinflammatory myeloid DCs, resulting in impaired proliferation of effector T cells. Conversely, the resistant mice developed myeloid and plasmacytoid DCs that efficiently expanded gamma interferon-, IL-4-, and IL-17-positive effector T cells associated with increased development of Tregs. Our work highlights the deleterious effect of excessive innate proinflammatory reactions and provides new evidence for the importance of immunomodulation during pulmonary paracoccidioidomycosis.
AuthorsAdriana Pina, Eliseu Frank de Araujo, Maíra Felonato, Flávio V Loures, Claudia Feriotti, Simone Bernardino, José Alexandre M Barbuto, Vera L G Calich
JournalInfection and immunity (Infect Immun) Vol. 81 Issue 4 Pg. 1064-77 (Apr 2013) ISSN: 1098-5522 [Electronic] United States
PMID23340311 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Chemical References
  • Cytokines
Topics
  • Animals
  • Cell Proliferation
  • Cells, Cultured
  • Cytokines (metabolism)
  • Dendritic Cells (immunology)
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Disease Resistance
  • Disease Susceptibility
  • Gene Expression Profiling
  • Mice
  • Paracoccidioides (immunology, pathogenicity)
  • Paracoccidioidomycosis (immunology)
  • T-Lymphocytes (immunology)

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