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Publication : Regulation and role of IFN-gamma in the innate resistance to infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae.

First Author  Rottenberg ME Year  2000
Journal  J Immunol Volume  164
Issue  9 Pages  4812-8
PubMed ID  10779789 Mgi Jnum  J:124531
Mgi Id  MGI:3721831 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.164.9.4812
Citation  Rottenberg ME, et al. (2000) Regulation and role of IFN-gamma in the innate resistance to infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae. J Immunol 164(9):4812-8
abstractText  By using mice genomically lacking IFN-gammaR, IL-12, perforin, and recombination-activating gene-1 (RAG-1), we analyzed the regulation and importance of IFN-gamma in the control of infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae. IL-12 participates in resistance of mice to C. pneumoniae, probably by regulating the protective levels of IFN-gamma mRNA. In turn, IFN-gamma is necessary for the increased IL-12p40 mRNA accumulation that occurs in lungs during infection with C. pneumoniae, suggesting a positive feedback regulation between these two cytokines. In experiments including RAG-1-/-/IFN-gammaR-/- mice we showed that IFN-gamma produced by innate cells controls the bacterial load and is necessary for the increased accumulation of transcripts for enzymes controlling high output NO release (inducible NO synthase), superoxide production (gp-91 NADPH oxidase), and catalysis of tryptophan (indoleamine 2, 3-dioxygenase (IDO)), mechanisms probably related to bacterial killing. Adaptive immune responses diminish the levels of IFN-gamma and IL-12 mRNA and thereby the levels of inducible NO synthase, IDO, and gp91 NADPH oxidase transcripts. By using RAG-1-/-/perforin-/- mice, we excluded the overt participation of NK cell cytotoxicity in the control of C. pneumoniae. However, NK cells and probably other innate immune cells release IFN-gamma during the bacterial infection.
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