Infection and Immunity 2009-07-01

Distinct roles of CD28- and CD40 ligand-mediated costimulation in the development of protective immunity and pathology during Chlamydia muridarum urogenital infection in mice.

Lili Chen, Wen Cheng, Pooja Shivshankar, Lei Lei, Xiaoyun Zhang, Yimou Wu, I-Tien Yeh, Guangming Zhong

Index: Infect. Immun. 77(7) , 3080-9, (2009)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Infection with Chlamydia muridarum in the mouse urogenital tract can induce both protective immunity and inflammatory pathologies, which has been used as a model for understanding the immune and pathogenic mechanisms of C. trachomatis infection. We compared the roles of CD28- and CD40 ligand (CD40L)-mediated costimulation in C. muridarum infection. Mice with CD28 or CD80/CD86 gene knockout (KO) displayed an infection course similar to that of wild-type mice during both primary and secondary infection, suggesting that CD28-mediated costimulation is not required for protection against C. muridarum infection. However, mice deficient in CD40L or CD40 displayed a prolonged infection course after primary or secondary infection, suggesting that CD40-CD40L costimulation plays an essential role in the development of anti-C. muridarum immunity. Interestingly, the CD28- or CD80/CD86-deficient mice displayed significantly lower levels of inflammatory pathologies in the upper genital tracts after primary infection, although the attenuation in inflammation was no longer significant during secondary infection. However, the CD40L or CD40 KO mice developed inflammatory pathologies as severe as those in wild-type mice following either primary or secondary infection despite the obvious deficits in adaptive immunity in these KO mice. The resistance of CD28 or CD80/CD86 KO mice to chlamydial infection correlated with production of gamma interferon, while the development of inflammatory pathologies in CD40L or CD40 KO mice correlated with the production of other proinflammatory cytokines in mouse urogenital tracts during the early stages of the infection. These observations together suggest that C. muridarum-induced protective immunity and inflammatory pathologies can be mediated by distinct costimulatory signals.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

CAF01 potentiates immune responses and efficacy of an inactivated influenza vaccine in ferrets.

2011-01-01

[PLoS ONE 6 , e22891, (2011)]

An optimized method to process mouse CNS to simultaneously analyze neural cells and leukocytes by flow cytometry.

2015-05-30

[J. Neurosci. Methods 247 , 23-31, (2015)]

Human dendritic cells infected with an adenoviral vector suppress proliferation of autologous and allogeneic T cells.

2008-12-01

[Immunology 125(4) , 469-79, (2008)]

PDADMAC flocculation of Chinese hamster ovary cells: enabling a centrifuge-less harvest process for monoclonal antibodies.

2015-01-01

[MAbs 7(2) , 413-28, (2015)]

S100 calgranulin proteins S100A8, S100A9 and S100A12 are expressed in the inflamed gastric mucosa of Helicobacter pylori-infected children.

2008-05-01

[Can. J. Gastroenterol. 22(5) , 461-4, (2008)]

More Articles...