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Publication : The role of the MHC on resistance to group a streptococci in mice.

First Author  Goldmann O Year  2005
Journal  J Immunol Volume  175
Issue  6 Pages  3862-72
PubMed ID  16148132 Mgi Jnum  J:116696
Mgi Id  MGI:3694842 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.175.6.3862
Citation  Goldmann O, et al. (2005) The role of the MHC on resistance to group a streptococci in mice. J Immunol 175(6):3862-72
abstractText  The severity of infection with Streptococcus pyogenes is strongly influenced by the host's genetics. This observation extends to the murine model of streptococcal infection, where the background of the mouse strain determines the infection outcome (BALB/c are resistant, whereas C3H/HeN are susceptible). To determine the extent to which the MHC complex (H2) contributed to diseases susceptibility, the response to S. pyogenes of congenic BALB mice from a resistant background (BALB/c), but carrying the H2(k) region of susceptible C3H/HeN mice (BALB/k), was examined. BALB/k were as susceptible as the H2 donor strain (C3H/HeN). Linkage analysis performed in F(2) backcross ([BALB/c x C3H/HeN] x BALB/c) mice confirmed the presence of a susceptibility locus within the H2 region on proximal chromosome 17. The possibility that modulation of T cell responses to streptococcal superantigens (GAS-SAgs) by different H2 haplotypes may influence disease severity was examined. BALB/k exhibited a significantly stronger response at the level of cell proliferation and cytokine production to GAS-SAgs than did BALB/c mice. However, the fact that T cell-deficient SCID-C3H/HeN mice also exhibited a susceptible phenotype suggests a more important contribution of innate effector cells to disease susceptibility. Lower transcriptional levels of certain inflammation-related regulatory genes located on chromosome 17 were detected in macrophages from susceptible than in those from resistant mice in response to infection. These results suggest that susceptibility to S. pyogenes may be associated with an altered transcription of specific genes that may compromise the endogenous regulatory processes controlling the inflammatory cascade and favor the progression to sepsis.
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