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Publication : MyD88-dependent signaling prolongs survival and reduces bacterial burden during pulmonary infection with virulent Francisella tularensis.

First Author  Russo BC Year  2013
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  183
Issue  4 Pages  1223-32
PubMed ID  23920326 Mgi Jnum  J:200915
Mgi Id  MGI:5510266 Doi  10.1016/j.ajpath.2013.06.013
Citation  Russo BC, et al. (2013) MyD88-Dependent Signaling Prolongs Survival and Reduces Bacterial Burden during Pulmonary Infection with Virulent Francisella tularensis. Am J Pathol 183(4):1223-32
abstractText  Francisella tularensis is the causative agent of the debilitating febrile illness tularemia. The severe morbidity associated with F. tularensis infections is attributed to its ability to evade the host immune response. Innate immune activation is undetectable until more than 48 hours after infection. The ensuing inflammatory response is considered pathological, eliciting a septic-like state characterized by hypercytokinemia and cell death. To investigate potential pathological consequences of the innate immune response, mice deficient in a key innate immune signaling molecule, MyD88, were studied. MyD88 knockout (KO) mice were infected with the prototypical virulent F. tularensis strain, Schu S4. MyD88 KO mice succumbed to infection more rapidly than wild-type mice. The enhanced pathogenicity of Schu S4 in MyD88 KO mice was associated with greater bacterial burdens in lungs and distal organs, and the absence of IFN-gamma in the lungs, spleens, and sera. Cellular infiltrates were not observed on histological evaluation of the lungs, livers, or spleens of MyD88 KO mice, the first KO mouse described with this phenotype to our knowledge. Despite the absence of cellular infiltration, there was more cell death in the lungs of MyD88 KO mice. Thus, the host proinflammatory response is beneficial, and MyD88 signaling is required to limit bacterial burden and prolong survival during pulmonary infection by virulent F. tularensis.
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