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Publication : Serglycin-Deficiency Causes Reduced Weight Gain and Changed Intestinal Cytokine Responses in Mice Infected With <i>Giardia intestinalis</i>.

First Author  Li Z Year  2021
Journal  Front Immunol Volume  12
Pages  677722 PubMed ID  34335577
Mgi Jnum  J:312795 Mgi Id  MGI:6729311
Doi  10.3389/fimmu.2021.677722 Citation  Li Z, et al. (2021) Serglycin-Deficiency Causes Reduced Weight Gain and Changed Intestinal Cytokine Responses in Mice Infected With Giardia intestinalis. Front Immunol 12:677722
abstractText  The proteoglycan serglycin (SG) is expressed by different innate and adaptive immune cells, e.g. mast cells, macrophages, neutrophils, and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, where SG contributes to correct granule storage and extracellular activity of inflammatory mediators. Here the serglycin-deficient (SG(-/-)) mouse strain was used to investigate the impact of SG on intestinal immune responses during infection with the non-invasive protozoan parasite Giardia intestinalis. Young ( approximately 11 weeks old) oral gavage-infected congenic SG(-/-) mice showed reduced weight gain as compared with the infected SG(+/+) littermate mice and the PBS-challenged SG(-/-) and SG(+/+) littermate mice. The infection caused no major morphological changes in the small intestine. However, a SG-independent increased goblet cell and granulocyte cell count was observed, which did not correlate with an increased myeloperoxidase or neutrophil elastase activity. Furthermore, infected mice showed increased serum IL-6 levels, with significantly reduced serum IL-6 levels in infected SG-deficient mice and decreased intestinal expression levels of IL-6 in the infected SG-deficient mice. In infected mice the qPCR analysis of alarmins, chemokines, cytokines, and nitric oxide synthases (NOS), showed that the SG-deficiency caused reduced intestinal expression levels of TNF-alpha and CXCL2, and increased IFN-gamma, CXCL1, and NOS1 levels as compared with SG-competent mice. This study shows that SG plays a regulatory role in intestinal immune responses, reflected by changes in chemokine and cytokine expression levels and a delayed weight gain in young SG(-/-) mice infected with G. intestinalis.
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