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Publication : Infection-induced myelopoiesis during intracellular bacterial infection is critically dependent upon IFN-γ signaling.

First Author  MacNamara KC Year  2011
Journal  J Immunol Volume  186
Issue  2 Pages  1032-43
PubMed ID  21149601 Mgi Jnum  J:168775
Mgi Id  MGI:4938221 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1001893
Citation  MacNamara KC, et al. (2011) Infection-induced myelopoiesis during intracellular bacterial infection is critically dependent upon IFN-gamma signaling. J Immunol 186(2):1032-43
abstractText  Although microbial infections can alter steady-state hematopoiesis, the mechanisms that drive such changes are not well understood. We addressed a role for IFN-gamma signaling in infection-induced bone marrow suppression and anemia in a murine model of human monocytic ehrlichiosis, an emerging tick-borne disease. Within the bone marrow of Ehrlichia muris-infected C57BL/6 mice, we observed a reduction in myeloid progenitor cells, as defined both phenotypically and functionally. Infected mice exhibited a concomitant increase in developing myeloid cells within the bone marrow, an increase in the frequency of circulating monocytes, and an increase in splenic myeloid cells. The infection-induced changes in progenitor cell phenotype were critically dependent on IFN-gamma, but not IFN-alpha, signaling. In mice deficient in the IFN-gamma signaling pathway, we observed an increase in myeloid progenitor cells and CDllb(lo)Gr1(lo) promyelocytic cells within the bone marrow, as well as reduced frequencies of mature granulocytes and monocytes. Furthermore, E. muris-infected IFN-gammaR-deficient mice did not exhibit anemia or an increase in circulating monocytes, and they succumbed to infection. Gene transcription studies revealed that IFN-gammaR-deficient CDllb(lo)Gr1(lo) promyelocytes from E. muris-infected mice exhibited significantly reduced expression of irf-1 and irf-8, both key transcription factors that regulate the differentiation of granulocytes and monocytes. Finally, using mixed bone marrow chimeric mice, we show that IFN-gamma-dependent infection-induced myelopoiesis occurs via the direct effect of the cytokine on developing myeloid cells. We propose that, in addition to its many other known roles, IFN-gamma acts to control infection by directly promoting the differentiation of myeloid cells that contribute to host defense.
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