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Publication : Salmonella Typhimurium Co-Opts the Host Type I IFN System To Restrict Macrophage Innate Immune Transcriptional Responses Selectively.

First Author  Perkins DJ Year  2015
Journal  J Immunol Volume  195
Issue  5 Pages  2461-71
PubMed ID  26202980 Mgi Jnum  J:330988
Mgi Id  MGI:6869075 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1500105
Citation  Perkins DJ, et al. (2015) Salmonella Typhimurium Co-Opts the Host Type I IFN System To Restrict Macrophage Innate Immune Transcriptional Responses Selectively. J Immunol 195(5):2461-71
abstractText  Innate immune inflammatory responses are subject to complex layers of negative regulation at intestinal mucosal surfaces. Although the type I IFN system is critical for amplifying antiviral immunity, it has been shown to play a homeostatic role in some models of autoimmune inflammation. Type I IFN is triggered in the gut by select bacterial pathogens, but whether and how the type I IFN might regulate innate immunity in the intestinal environment have not been investigated in the context of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (ST). ST infection of human or murine macrophages reveals that IFN-beta selectively restricts the transcriptional responses mediated by both the TLRs and the NOD-like receptors. Specifically, IFN-beta potently represses ST-dependent innate induction of IL-1 family cytokines and neutrophil chemokines. This IFN-beta-mediated transcriptional repression was independent of the effects of IFN-beta on ST-induced macrophage cell death, but significantly dependent on IL-10 regulation. We further evaluated ST pathogenesis in vivo following oral inoculation of mice lacking IFN-beta. We show that IFN-beta(-/-) mice exhibit greater resistance to oral ST infection and a slower spread of ST to distal sterile sites. This work provides mechanistic insight into the relationship between ST and type I IFN, and demonstrates an additional mechanism by which IFN-beta may promote spread of enteric pathogens.
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