[HTML][HTML] TLR-mediated inflammatory responses to Streptococcus pneumoniae are highly dependent on surface expression of bacterial lipoproteins

G Tomlinson, S Chimalapati, T Pollard… - The Journal of …, 2014 - journals.aai.org
G Tomlinson, S Chimalapati, T Pollard, T Lapp, J Cohen, E Camberlein, S Stafford…
The Journal of Immunology, 2014journals.aai.org
Streptococcus pneumoniae infections induce inflammatory responses that contribute toward
both disease pathogenesis and immunity, but the host–pathogen interactions that mediate
these effects are poorly defined. We used the surface lipoprotein-deficient∆ lgt
pneumococcal mutant strain to test the hypothesis that lipoproteins are key determinants of
TLR-mediated immune responses to S. pneumoniae. We show using reporter assays that
TLR2 signaling is dependent on pneumococcal lipoproteins, and that macrophage NF-κB …
Abstract
Streptococcus pneumoniae infections induce inflammatory responses that contribute toward both disease pathogenesis and immunity, but the host–pathogen interactions that mediate these effects are poorly defined. We used the surface lipoprotein-deficient∆ lgt pneumococcal mutant strain to test the hypothesis that lipoproteins are key determinants of TLR-mediated immune responses to S. pneumoniae. We show using reporter assays that TLR2 signaling is dependent on pneumococcal lipoproteins, and that macrophage NF-κB activation and TNF-α release were reduced in response to the∆ lgt strain. Differences in TNF-α responses between Δlgt and wild-type bacteria were abrogated for macrophages from TLR2-but not TLR4-deficient mice. Transcriptional profiling of human macrophages revealed attenuated TLR2-associated responses to∆ lgt S. pneumoniae, comprising many NF-κB–regulated proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine genes. Importantly, non-TLR2–associated responses were preserved. Experiments using leukocytes from IL-1R–associated kinase-4–deficient patients and a mouse pneumonia model confirmed that proinflammatory responses were lipoprotein dependent. Our data suggest that leukocyte responses to bacterial lipoproteins are required for TLR2-and IL-1R–associated kinase-4–mediated inflammatory responses to S. pneumoniae.
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