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Publication : Tissue-specific patterning of host innate immune responses by Staphylococcus aureus α-toxin.

First Author  Becker RE Year  2014
Journal  J Innate Immun Volume  6
Issue  5 Pages  619-31
PubMed ID  24820433 Mgi Jnum  J:273875
Mgi Id  MGI:6286178 Doi  10.1159/000360006
Citation  Becker RE, et al. (2014) Tissue-specific patterning of host innate immune responses by Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin. J Innate Immun 6(5):619-31
abstractText  Immunomodulatory cytotoxins are prominent virulence factors produced by Staphylococcus aureus, a leading cause of bacterial sepsis, skin infection, and pneumonia. S. aureus alpha-toxin is a pore-forming toxin that utilizes a widely expressed receptor, ADAM10, to injure the host epithelium, endothelium, and immune cells. As each host tissue is characterized by a unique composition of resident cells and recruited immune cells, the outcome of alpha-toxin-mediated injury may depend on the infected tissue environment. Utilizing myeloid lineage-specific Adam10 knockout mice, we show that alpha-toxin exerts tissue-specific effects on innate immunity to staphylococcal infection. Loss of ADAM10 expression exacerbates skin infection, yet affords protection against lethal pneumonia. These diverse outcomes are not related to altered immune cell recruitment, but rather correlate with a defect in toxin-induced IL-1beta production. Extension of these studies through analysis of ADAM10 double-knockout mice affecting both the myeloid lineage and either the skin or lung epithelium highlight the prominence of toxin-induced injury to the epithelium in governing the outcome of infection. Together, these studies provide evidence of tissue specificity of pore-forming cytotoxin action in the modulation of host immunity, and illustrate that the outcome of infection is a collective manifestation of all effects of the toxin within the tissue microenvironment.
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