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* Department of Periodontics/Oral Health & Systemic Disease and
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Louisville Health Sciences Center, Louisville, KY 40292; and
Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine,
Alcohol Research Center, and
¶ Department of Physiology, Louisiana State University Health Science Center, New Orleans, LA 70112
| Abstract |
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, TNF-
, IL-6, IL-12p70, and NO) in the lung and exhibited impaired clearance of P. gingivalis compared with normal controls. However, the influx of polymorphonuclear leukocytes into the lung and the numbers of resident alveolar macrophages (AM) were comparable between the two groups. TLR2 signaling was important for in vitro killing of P. gingivalis by polymorphonuclear leukocytes or AM and, moreover, the AM bactericidal activity required NO production. Strikingly, AM were more potent than peritoneal or splenic macrophages in P. gingivalis killing, attributed to diminished AM expression of complement receptor-3 (CR3), which is exploited by P. gingivalis to promote its survival. The selective expression of CR3 by tissue macrophages and the requirement of TLR2 inside-out signaling for CR3 exploitation by P. gingivalis suggest that the role of TLR2 in host protection may be contextual. Thus, although TLR2 may mediate destructive effects, as seen in models of experimental periodontitis and atherosclerosis, we have now shown that the same receptor confers protection against P. gingivalis in acute lung infection. | Introduction |
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To facilitate the study of host pulmonary-bacterial interactions and the pathogenesis of anaerobic pulmonary infections, a well-defined mouse model was established by one of the coauthors (13). In this model, intratracheal challenge with Bacteroides (Porphyromonas) gingivalis causes inflammation in the lung leading to severe bronchopneumonia and lung abscess (13). The inflammation is characterized by a marked recruitment of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN)3 (3) and significant bacterial killing (13). Subsequent mouse studies by independent groups characterized the inflammatory pulmonary response against P. gingivalis, which includes induction of TNF-
, IL-1β, IL-6, and KC, a functional homolog of human IL-8 (14, 15). However, the host receptor(s) involved in inflammation and control of P. gingivalis lung infection have not been addressed.
In the absence of lung infection or inflammation, PMN are essentially absent and alveolar macrophages (AM) constitute >98% of the total leukocyte population in the alveolar space. AM form the first line of pulmonary defense at the air-tissue interface and their role lies in phagocytosis of airborne particles or invading microorganisms, killing, and coordination of the innate immune response (16). For instance, when the invading pathogen represents an overwhelming load or is too virulent to be contained by the AM alone, AM-released chemokines and other inflammatory mediators recruit and activate large numbers of PMN from the pulmonary vasculature into the alveolar space (17). Studies in humans and experimental animals have underscored the importance of certain cytokines/chemokines in pulmonary host defense, including TNF-
, IL-1, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12, MIP-1
, and IL-17 (16, 17, 18, 19, 20). Also important for host defense of the lung are microbicidal products such as phagocyte-derived reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates (21). Recruited PMN and resident AM utilize these mechanisms to mediate early bacterial clearance (19, 21).
These antimicrobial activities and the pulmonary innate response in general are mediated, in large part, by TLRs (21, 22). TLRs are expressed on a number of immune effector cells, including AM and PMN, and serve as sensors of infection for triggering cytokine and antimicrobial responses (16, 21). Studies with different lung pathogens suggest that the role of TLRs in the host response to lung infection ranges from resistance to susceptibility (22, 23, 24, 25, 26). In general, TLRs can mediate critical antimicrobial responses, although they may be exploited by certain pathogens for induction of IL-10-mediated immunosuppression (27, 28).
The objective of this study was to determine whether TLR2 plays a role in the control of P. gingivalis acute infection in the lung. TLR2 was selected for investigation owing to its importance in P. gingivalis-induced innate immune responses. Specifically, we have shown that TLR2-deficient cells exhibit diminished induction of NF-
B activation and cytokine production in response to P. gingivalis or purified components thereof (29, 30). The TLR2 dependence of the innate response to P. gingivalis was confirmed in vivo by an independent group (31). Indeed, s.c. infection with P. gingivalis elicited high levels of cytokines in wild-type or TLR4-deficient mice, although in TLR2-deficient mice cytokine responses were hardly detectable or delayed (31). In the same study, TLR2 was associated with exacerbation of P. gingivalis-induced periodontal bone loss (31). This finding is supported by another group, which attributed periodontal bone loss to TLR2-induced TNF-
-dependent osteoclastogenesis (32, 33). TLR2 has moreover been implicated in the acceleration of atherosclerotic heart disease by P. gingivalis (34).
In this study, we show for the first time a protective role for TLR2 in acute lung infection with P. gingivalis. Indeed, TLR2-deficient mice elicited reduced proinflammatory or antimicrobial responses and impaired clearance of P. gingivalis compared with wild-type controls. At an in vitro mechanistic level, both PMN and AM exhibited TLR2-dependent killing of P. gingivalis, and the bactericidal activity of the latter required production of reactive nitrogen species. Interestingly, AM were more potent in P. gingivalis killing than peritoneal or splenic macrophages. This is probably because most tissue macrophages, but not AM, express complement receptor-3 (CR3), which is exploited by P. gingivalis to promote its survival in host tissues and cause disease (35, 36, 37). The selective expression of CR3 by tissue macrophages (37, 38) and the requirement of TLR2 inside-out signaling for CR3 exploitation by P. gingivalis (36, 39, 40) suggest that TLR2 deficiency may not always predispose to increased host susceptibility to P. gingivalis. Indeed, our results in conjunction with those of others (31, 32, 34) suggest that TLR2 may play disparate roles in P. gingivalis infections, exacerbating certain chronic conditions (e.g., periodontitis, atherosclerosis) while providing protection against acute pulmonary infection.
| Materials and Methods |
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Female TLR2–/–, CD11b–/–, or wild-type control mice (C57BL/6) were obtained from The Jackson Laboratory. The mice were housed in specific pathogen-free rooms in the Animal Care Facilities of Louisiana State University or the University of Louisville and were used when they were 10–12 wk old, in compliance with established federal guidelines and institutional policies. P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 was grown anaerobically at 37°C in brain heart infusion broth supplemented with hemin (5 µg/ml) and menadione (l µg/ml). Diphenylene iodonium (DPI) and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and its inactive enantiomer NG-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Recombinant mouse TNF-
was from R&D Systems.
Lung infection model
Mice were intratracheally infected with P. gingivalis essentially as previously described (13, 41). Briefly, following mouse anesthesia with intraperitoneal ketamine/xylazine injection, the trachea was aseptically exposed and a P. gingivalis inoculum (108 CFU in 40 µl PBS) was administered via a 28-gauge needle. Unchallenged naive mice were administered PBS only. Groups of animals were sacrificed immediately after infection (time 0) or at later time points, 5 or 24 h postinfection. To determine lung bacterial clearance, the lungs were aseptically removed, homogenized in a tissue homogenizer, and serial 10-fold dilutions were plated onto hemin/menadione-supplemented blood agar plates and cultured anaerobically for enumerating recovered CFU. To determine induction of cytokine production and recruitment of inflammatory cells, each pair of lungs (from naive or infected mice not used for assessing lung bacterial clearance) was surgically removed in toto and lavaged with 1.0-ml aliquots of PBS/0.5 mM EDTA up to 10 ml. The first milliliter of recovered bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was centrifuged at 500 x g and the supernatant was stored at –80°C for subsequent cytokine analysis. The cell pellet was combined with additional lavage fluid obtained from the same pair of lungs and analyzed for total cell count and differential cell counts performed in cytospins stained with Wright-Giemsa (Diff-Quick, Baxter Healthcare).
Cytokine and antimicrobial molecule induction analysis
Cytokine levels in the collected BALF samples were assessed by means of a Bio-Plex cytokine bead array using a multiplex for eight cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12p70, IL-17, TNF-
, KC, and MIP-1
(Bio-Rad Laboratories). Induction of cytokine production in cell culture supernatants was determined using ELISA kits (eBioscience). Myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels in BALF were determined using an ELISA kit (Hycult Biotechnology). NO production was assessed by measuring the amount of nitrite (NO2–, a stable oxidative metabolite of NO) in lung tissue homogenates using an assay kit based on the Griess reaction (Cayman Chemical).
Cell isolation and killing assays
AM were obtained for cell culture from the BALF of naive mice. The BALF cell population contained >98% macrophages as determined by morphology upon cytologic examination. The cells were cultured at 37°C and 5% CO2 atmosphere, in complete RPMI (RPMI 1640 containing 10% heat-inactivated FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM HEPES, 100 U/ml penicillin G, 100 µg/ml streptomycin; Invitrogen). Mouse macrophages were also isolated from the peritoneal cavity via peritoneal lavage with ice-cold HBSS or from splenic cell suspensions by positive selection using anti-CD11b magnetic bead cell sorting (Miltenyi Biotec) (42). Cells were washed and incubated in complete RPMI. After 2 h, aspiration and three successive washes with HBSS were performed to remove any residual nonadherent cells, resulting in a population containing >95% macrophages. To determine intracellular killing of P. gingivalis, an antibiotic protection-based intracellular survival assay was used, as we previously described (36). Briefly, following incubation of P. gingivalis with macrophages (at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10:1) for various time points, extracellular bacteria were eliminated by washing and antibiotic treatment. Viable internalized bacteria were released by macrophage lysis, and serial dilutions of the lysates were plated onto blood agar plates for anaerobic culture and CFU enumeration.
PMN were purified from mouse blood through three-layer Percoll gradient centrifugation as previously described (43). This method yielded
200,000 cells per mouse containing >95% PMN. Killing of P. gingivalis by mouse PMN was determined according to the method of Mydel et al. (44) with minor modifications. PMN-P. gingivalis suspensions (MOI = 1:1) were incubated at 37°C and 5% CO2 for 2 h without washing to remove extracellular bacteria, and enumeration of viable CFU on anaerobically cultured blood agar plates after PMN lysis was used to determine the killing of both extracellular and intracellular bacteria. The killing index was calculated according to the following formula: [(CFU in the absence of PMN – CFU in the presence of PMN)/CFU in the absence of PMN] x 100. The selected 2-h time point was based on a time-course study showing significant mouse PMN killing of P. gingivalis in the interval between 105 and 135 min (44).
Oxidative burst assay
The PMN oxidative burst (H2O2 production) was monitored as we described previously (45) following the method of Bass et al. (46). The assay is based on the ability of 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA) to diffuse into the cells where it is hydrolyzed to 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin (DCFH) and is thereby trapped within the cells. During the oxidative burst, nonfluorescent intracellular DCFH is oxidized to highly fluorescent dichlorofluorescein (DCF), and the generated fluorescent signal has been quantitatively correlated with the PMN oxidative burst (46). PMN in glucose-containing HBSS (Invitrogen) were preincubated at 37°C for 15 min with 100 µM DCFH-DA (Invitrogen/Molecular Probes) in microtiter culture plates (2 x 105 cells/well). The samples were then incubated with P. gingivalis (MOI = 1:1) at 37°C for various time points. The fluorescent signal resulting from the oxidation of DCFH into DCF was measured as relative fluorescence units on a microplate fluorescence reader (BioTek Instruments) with excitation/emission wavelength settings of 485/530 nm.
Flow cytometric uptake assay
Mouse macrophages were incubated at 37°C with FITC-labeled P. gingivalis at a MOI of 10:1 (36). Phagocytosis was stopped at various time points (5–60 min) by cooling the incubation tubes on ice. After cell washing to remove nonadherent bacteria, extracellular fluorescence (representing attached but not internalized bacteria) was quenched with 0.2% trypan blue. The cells were washed again, fixed with 1% paraforlmadehyde, and analyzed by flow cytometry (percent positive cells for FITC-P. gingivalis) using the FACSCalibur and the CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson).
Statistical analysis
Data were evaluated by ANOVA using the InStat v3.06 program (GraphPad Software). Where appropriate (comparison of two groups only), two-tailed t tests were conducted. Statistical differences were considered significant at the level of p < 0.05. The experiments were performed at least twice for verification.
| Results |
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To determine the role of TLR2 in the acute response to P. gingivalis, a 5-h time point was carefully selected as being the most appropriate for the purpose. Indeed, a previous time-course study, which established the P. gingivalis-induced aspiration pneumonia model, has demonstrated pronounced recruitment of PMNs and significant killing of P. gingivalis in wild-type mice at 5 h postinfection (13). A comparable time point (6 h) was shown to be ideal for simultaneously assessing cytokine induction and inflammatory cell influx (47). Moreover, we included a 24-h time point, which represents the peak of the PMN influx upon intratracheal P. gingivalis challenge (13). Preliminary experiments using wild-type mice confirmed that intratracheal infection with 108 P. gingivalis bacteria causes a marked increase in PMN recruitment at 5 h postinfection. Although PMN were essentially undetectable in the BALF of naive mice, their numbers increased to 4.5 (±1.1) x 106 in the BALF of infected mice (n = 5), accounting for >80% of the total cell count. On the other hand, the number of AM remained virtually unaltered 5 h postinfection compared with the levels seen in naive mice (0.9 (±0.2) x 106). Comparison of wild-type and TLR2-deficient (TLR2–/–) mice at 5 or 24 h postinfection showed that TLR2 did not play a significant role in PMN recruitment since both groups showed comparable total cell counts and differential cell counts (Table I). Consistent with this finding, no statistically significant differences were observed between wild-type and TLR2–/– mice in MPO levels (reflecting PMN activity) in the BALF (Table I). Mock inoculation (intratracheal injection of plain PBS) resulted in relatively low levels of PMN recruitment to the lungs after 5 or 24 h (Table I). Indeed, PMN comprised only
19–27% of the total cell count in the BALF of mock-inoculated wild-type or TLR2–/– mice compared with 79–83% in P. gingivalis-infected wild-type or TLR2–/– mice (Table I). As the BALF total cell count was 4–6-fold higher in infected mice (Table I), the estimated PMN numbers in mock-inoculated mice were consistently <8% of the numbers corresponding to infected mice. Consistent with this, the MPO levels in the BALF of mock-inoculated mice were <9% of the levels seen in infected mice (Table I).
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80% of the bacteria by 5 h postinfection, there was no sign of net killing activity in TLR2–/– mice (Fig. 1A). In this regard, no statistically significant differences were observed between P. gingivalis CFU recovered from the lungs of TLR2–/– mice and CFU counts from mice sacrificed immediately upon infection, representing the initial observed inoculum (Fig. 1A). In contrast, P. gingivalis CFU counts recovered from the lungs of wild-type mice were significantly lower compared with the initial inoculum or the CFU levels of TLR2–/– mice (p < 0.05; Fig. 1A). At 24 h postinfection, the viable P. gingivalis counts recovered from the lungs of wild-type mice were
300 less than those seen in TLR2–/– mice and 500 times less than those in the initial observed inoculum (p < 0.05; Fig. 1B). In contrast, an apparent modest reduction in viable CFU counts in TLR2–/– mice, relative to the initial observed inoculum, did not reach statistical significance (Fig. 1B). In conclusion, no significant net growth or killing of P. gingivalis was observed in the lungs of TLR2–/– mice, whereas wild-type mice readily clear the organism, suggesting that TLR2 mediates effective control of P. gingivalis lung infection.
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, TNF-
, IL-6, and IL-12p70, but not for IL-1β, IL-10, or IL-17, with the latter being undetectable (Fig. 2A). At 24 h postinfection, TLR2–/– mice still exhibited significantly (p < 0.05) lower levels of KC, MIP-1
, and IL-12p70 compared with wild-type controls, but not of TNF-
or IL-6 (Fig. 2B). The relatively increased bacterial challenge in TLR2–/– mice (compared with wild-type controls, which effectively eliminated most of the bacteria; Fig. 1B), as well as the possibility for TLR2-independent induction of certain cytokines, may have somewhat blunted differences in cytokine production between the two groups at 24 h. Wild-type or TLR2–/– naive mice had no or negligible cytokine responses (Fig. 2). With regard to induction of antimicrobial molecules, wild-type mice elicited significantly higher levels of NO at 5 or 24 h postinfection (p < 0.05 vs TLR2–/– mice), whereas NO production was undetectable in wild-type or TLR2–/– naive mice (Fig. 3).
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TLR2-deficient PMN display reduced P. gingivalis killing
The impaired clearance of P. gingivalis in the lungs of TLR2–/– mice could be attributed to reduced bactericidal activities of their alveolar phagocytes (PMN and AM). We have thus used freshly explanted wild-type and TLR2–/– phagocytes to address this hypothesis. We first evaluated the ability of TLR2–/– PMN to kill P. gingivalis and found that their bactericidal capacity was reduced by 54% in comparison to wild-type controls (p < 0.05; Fig. 4A). Therefore, TLR2 signaling in PMN contributes significantly to P. gingivalis killing. An additional factor that could have affected the in vivo ability of TLR2–/– PMN to clear P. gingivalis may be related to reduced priming due to decreased cytokine responses in the lungs of TLR2–/– mice. Indeed, certain cytokines and especially TNF-
(which was reduced by 62% in TLR2–/– mice; Fig. 2) can effectively prime the bactericidal capacity of PMN, even though they do not directly activate killing mechanisms (48). Priming of wild-type neutrophils with recombinant mouse TNF-
(10 ng/ml) resulted in modest enhancement of their killing activity (data not shown); however, priming of TLR2–/– PMN with TNF-
or even with activated culture supernatants from wild-type PMN did not significantly enhance their killing capacity against P. gingivalis, which ranged within 37–47% of the killing capacity of wild-type PMN (Fig. 4B).
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In summary, the Fig. 4 data show that TLR2 signaling in PMN is required for maximal killing activity against P. gingivalis. Moreover, the differential killing capacity of wild-type and TLR2–/– PMN appears to involve NADPH oxidase- and iNOS-independent mechanisms.
TLR2 mediates killing of P. gingivalis in AM; comparison with other macrophage types
We have previously shown that TLR2 deficiency does not impair the ability of peritoneal macrophages for intracellular killing of P. gingivalis (36). In striking contrast, TLR2–/– AM exhibited defective intracellular killing of this pathogen compared with normal controls (p < 0.05; Fig. 5A). Specifically, using an antibiotic protection-based intracellular survival assay, we found that the recovery of viable P. gingivalis CFU from TLR2–/– AM was significantly higher by
0.5 or 1.3 log10 units after a 5- or 24-h incubation, respectively, compared with CFU recovery from wild-type controls (p < 0.05; Fig. 5A). These data, in conjunction with the Fig. 4A results, indicate that TLR2 contributes to the killing of P. gingivalis and provide a mechanistic basis for the observed impaired clearance of this pathogen from the lungs of TLR2–/– mice (Fig. 1).
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NO is a key antimicrobial molecule produced by activated macrophages for pathogen killing (49). To determine whether AM utilize this mechanism for intracellular killing of P. gingivalis, we pretreated them with L-NAME, a specific inhibitor of NO synthesis, or with the inactive enantiomer D-NAME (50). The macrophages were then infected with P. gingivalis (MOI = 10:1) and its intracellular fate was monitored using the antibiotic-based intracellular survival assay. The pathogen was recovered at significantly higher CFU numbers from L-NAME-treated AM than from untreated cells (p < 0.05; Fig. 7A). In contrast, D-NAME had no effect in this regard (Fig. 7A). The increased recovery of P. gingivalis CFU from L-NAME-treated cells could not be attributed to increased uptake (relative to medium-only or D-NAME-treated cells) since L-NAME had no effect on the ability of the AM to take up P. gingivalis (data not shown). We also confirmed that L-NAME, but not D-NAME, dramatically diminished production of NO (measured as NO2–, its stable oxidative metabolite) by AM in response to P. gingivalis (p < 0.05; Fig. 8A). However, L-NAME did not affect P. gingivalis-induced cytokine production (Fig. 8A), thus ruling out potential toxic effects on AM.
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75%, comparable to the inhibition of cytokine production (TNF-
and MIP-1
) in TLR2–/– AM (Fig. 8B). In conclusion, the data from Figs. 7 and 8 suggest that induction of NO is at least one mechanism whereby AM control P. gingivalis lung infection. Moreover, this antimicrobial mechanism accounts, at least partly, for the differential capacities of wild-type and TLR2–/– AM to eliminate P. gingivalis.
| Discussion |
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The defective killing of P. gingivalis in the lungs of TLR2–/– mice could not be attributed to impaired recruitment of inflammatory cells. Indeed, despite reduced production of certain chemokines (KC, MIP-1
) in the BALF of P. gingivalis-infected TLR2–/– mice, and although TLR2 deficiency has occasionally been associated with decreased PMN influx (26, 54), we did not observe significant differences between TLR2–/– and wild-type control mice regarding PMN recruitment to the lungs after 5 or 24 h postinfection. It is possible that TLR2-independent mechanisms have compensated for this function, such as stimulation by bacterially derived formyl peptides of the formyl-peptide receptor, which plays a major role in PMN recruitment to infected alveoli (20).
In principle, the defective killing of P. gingivalis in the lungs of TLR2–/– mice could result, at least partly, from decreased priming of their alveolar phagocytes (PMN and AM) owing to reduced proinflammatory cytokine responses. Alternatively, or in addition to the above, the lack of TLR2 signaling in the TLR2–/– alveolar phagocytes may have directly affected their ability to kill P. gingivalis. Our in vitro mechanistic data are consistent with the latter interpretation. TLR2 was also shown to mediate AM killing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (55) and PMN killing of Streptococcus pneumoniae (56). In stark contrast, TLR2 promotes the survival of Staphylococcus aureus in peritoneal macrophages (57). It is unclear whether the outcome depends on the phagocytic cell type or the pathogen involved (or both), but note that the antimicrobial role of TLR2 may be contextual (discussed in greater detail below) and thus may not be predicted a priori in the absence of experimental evidence.
Our findings that the oxidative burst is not important for P. gingivalis killing are consistent with a recent study showing no difference in killing activity against this pathogen between wild-type and NADPH oxidase-deficient (Cybb–/–) PMN (44). It is thus possible that PMN use nonoxidative mechanisms to eliminate P. gingivalis, such as granule proteases or antimicrobial peptides, which can be delivered to the phagosome or released to the extracellular space (58, 59). In contrast, NO may be an effective antimicrobial mechanism for the control of P. gingivalis since inhibition of its production in normal AM resulted in impaired intracellular killing of this pathogen. Therefore, the diminished capacity TLR2–/– AM to induce NO production may, at least partly, explain why TLR2–/– AM failed to efficiently control P. gingivalis. An additional mechanism may involve impaired phagosome maturation in the absence of TLR2 signaling (60), although a competing view supports that phagolysosomal maturation is a TLR-independent process (61). Our data are consistent with earlier findings that iNOS-deficient mice exhibit reduced killing of P. gingivalis in a s.c. chamber model (62). Our results are also in line with a recent study that demonstrated NO-dependent killing of P. gingivalis by mouse peritoneal macrophages (44).
Although we have previously demonstrated intracellular killing of P. gingivalis by peritoneal macrophages (36), we have now found that AM are even more potent than their peritoneal or splenic counterparts in this activity. This finding is at first sight surprising given that AM mediate critical immunosuppressive functions for maintaining respiratory tract homeostasis (16). This difference in P. gingivalis killing by distinct macrophage types may be attributed to selective expression of CR3 by tissue macrophages. Specifically, the fact that resident AM express little or no CR3 (37, 38) renders them resistant to a CR3-dependent immune evasion strategy of P. gingivalis (35, 36). Note that the inhibitory effect of CR3 deficiency on the intracellular survival of P. gingivalis is quite dramatic (viability is reduced by up to 2.5–3.0 log10 units) which cannot be attributed to a
50% reduction in bacterial uptake (Ref. 36 and Fig. 6). Rather, the enhanced intracellular survival of P. gingivalis in CR3-expressing macrophages could be attributed to the notion that CR3 phagocytosis does not promote phagolysosomal fusion (63). Wild-type AM behave closer to CR3-deficient rather than wild-type peritoneal or splenic macrophages in terms of their ability to clear P. gingivalis. Note that AM may not be inherently stronger than peritoneal macrophages in general microbicidal function, since alveolar and peritoneal macrophages display similar killing activities against Pneumocystis carinii (64).
In vitro, TLR2 inside-out signaling activates CR3-mediated uptake of P. gingivalis (39), leading to inhibition of IL-12p70 induction and enhanced intracellular persistence of the pathogen (36). In vivo, CR3 blockade leads to increased clearance of P. gingivalis from murine periodontal tissues and reduced periodontal disease activity (35). These observations, taken together with the selective expression of CR3 by tissue macrophages (37, 38), can at least partly explain why TLR2 deficiency may not necessarily predispose to increased susceptibility to P. gingivalis. For example, TLR2 deficiency has been associated with increased in vivo clearance of P. gingivalis and resistance to P. gingivalis-induced periodontitis in the mouse model (31). On the basis of available evidence (Refs. 31, 32, 34 and this study), we suggest that TLR2 may play diverse and contextual roles in P. gingivalis infections, exacerbating certain chronic conditions (e.g., periodontitis, atherosclerosis) while providing protection against acute pulmonary infection. Whether this depends on the nature of the infection (chronic vs acute) or the selective expression of CR3, or even a combination of these and other factors, remains to be established.
P. gingivalis is a common isolate from aspiration pneumonia (5, 10, 11), which is usually seen in the elderly or the immunocompromised host (8, 65) and is epidemiologically associated with periodontal disease (12). Although TLR2 polymorphisms influence susceptibility to certain infectious or inflammatory diseases (66), there is currently no evidence linking hyporesponsive TLR2 polymorphisms to aspiration pneumonia. However, our findings from the TLR2-deficient mouse model suggest that compromised TLR2 signaling may increase a hosts susceptibility to lung infection with P. gingivalis. Among the immunocompromised population at high risk for aspiration pneumonia are alcohol-abusing patients (67). In addition to increased risk of oropharyngeal aspiration, these patients have impaired acute inflammatory response and ability to control infection (67), at least partly owing to detrimental alcohol effects on TLR-mediated innate immune response (68, 69). Therapeutic immunomodulation to stimulate protective TLR immunity in the immunocompromised patient may thus serve as an effective adjunct therapy. This warrants further investigations to clarify the role of TLR signaling in bacterial infections of the lung.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Grants DE015254 and DE018292 (to G.H.) and AA09803 (to S.N. and G.J.B.) from the National Institutes of Health. ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. George Hajishengallis, University of Louisville Health Sciences Center, 501 South Preston Street, Room 206, Louisville, KY 40292. E-mail address: g0haji01{at}louisville.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: PMN, polymorphonuclear leukocyte; AM, alveolar macrophage; CR3, complement receptor-3; DPI, diphenylene iodonium; L-NAME, NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester; D-NAME, NG-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester; BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NO2–, nitrite; MOI, multiplicity of infection; DCFH-DA, 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase. ![]()
Received for publication March 31, 2008. Accepted for publication July 9, 2008.
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production. Infect. Immun. 76: 812-819. This article has been cited by other articles:
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Q. Zhou, S. E. Leeman, and S. Amar Signaling mechanisms involved in altered function of macrophages from diet-induced obese mice affect immune responses PNAS, June 30, 2009; 106(26): 10740 - 10745. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Craig, J. Mai, S. Cai, and S. Jeyaseelan Neutrophil Recruitment to the Lungs during Bacterial Pneumonia Infect. Immun., February 1, 2009; 77(2): 568 - 575. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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