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- Adipositas (1)
- Angeborene Immunität (1)
- Aspergillus fumigatus (1)
- Bacillus subtilis (1)
- Bacterial infection (1)
- Heubacillus (1)
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- Host-pathogen interaction (1)
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- Membranlipide (1)
- Neutrophils (1)
- Omega-3-Fettsäuren (1)
- Shigella flexneri (1)
- Spatiotemporal analysis (1)
- Staphylococcus aureus (1)
- Stress (1)
- lipid rafts (1)
- obesity (1)
- omega-3 fatty acids (1)
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- Medizinische Fakultät (4) (entfernen)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Bacterial functional membrane microdomains (FMMs) are membrane platforms that resemble lipid rafts of eukaryotic cells in certain functional and structural aspects. Lipid rafts are nanometer-sized, dynamic clusters of proteins and lipids in eukaryotic cell membranes that serve as signaling hubs and assembling platforms. Yet, studying these structures can often be hampered by the complexity of a eukaryotic cell. Thus, the analogous structures of prokaryotes are an attractive model to study molecular traits of this type of membrane organization.
Similar to eukaryotic lipid rafts, the bacterial FMMs are comprised of polyisoprenoid lipids, scaffold proteins and a distinct set of membrane proteins, involved in signaling or secretion. Investigating bacterial FMMs not only contributes to the understanding of the physiological importance of FMMs in bacteria, but also helps to elucidate general principles of rafts beyond prokaryotes.
In this work, a bacterial model organism was used to investigate effects of synthetic overproduction of the raft scaffolding proteins on bacterial physiology. This overexpression causes an unusual stabilization of the FMM-harbored protease FtsH and therefore the proteolytic targets of FtsH are not correctly regulated. Developmental defects and aberrances in shape are the consequence, which in turn negatively affects cell physiology. These findings may be adapted to better understand lipid raft processes in humans, where flotillin upregulation is detected along with development of neurological diseases.
Moreover, it was aimed at understanding the FMM-proteome of the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus. An in-depth quantitative mass-spectrometry analysis reveals adaption of the protein cargo during different conditions, while maintaining a distinct set of core FMM proteins. As a case study, the assembly of the type VII secretion system was shown to be dependent on FMM integrity and more specifically on the activity of the FMM-scaffold flotillin. This secretion system is important for the virulence of this pathogen and its secretion efficiency can be targeted by small molecules that inhibit flotillin activity. This opens new venues for non-conventional antimicrobial compounds to treat staphylococcal infections.
The human-bacterial pathogen interaction is a complex process that results from
a prolonged evolutionary arms race in the struggle for survival. The pathogen employs
virulence strategies to achieve host colonization, and the latter counteracts using defense
programs. The encounter of both organisms results in drastic physiological changes
leading to stress, which is an ancient response accompanying infection. Recent evidence
suggests that the stress response in the host converges with the innate immune pathways
and influences the outcome of infection. However, the contribution of stress and the exact
mechanism(s) of its involvement in host defense remain to be elucidated. Using the model
bacterial pathogen Shigella flexneri, and comparing it with the closely related pathogen
Salmonella Typhimurium, this study investigated the role of host stress in the outcome of
infection.
Shigella infection is characterized by a pronounced pro-inflammatory response
that causes intense stress in host tissues, particularly the intestinal epithelium, which
constitutes the first barrier against Shigella colonization. In this study, inflammatory
stress was simulated in epithelial cells by inducing oxidative stress, hypoxia, and cytokine
stimulation. Shigella infection of epithelial cells exposed to such stresses was strongly
inhibited at the adhesion/binding stage. This resulted from the depletion of sphingolipidrafts
in the plasma membrane by the stress-activated sphingomyelinases. Interestingly,
Salmonella adhesion was not affected, by virtue of its flagellar motility, which allowed the
gathering of bacteria at remaining membrane rafts. Moreover, the intracellular replication
of Shigella lead to a similar sphingolipid-raft depletion in the membrane across adjacent
cells inhibiting extracellular bacterial invasion.
Additionally, this study shows that Shigella infection interferes with the host stress
granule-formation in response to stress. Interestingly, infected cells exhibited a nuclear
depletion of the global RNA-binding stress-granule associated proteins TIAR and TIA-1
and their accumulation in the cytoplasm.
Overall, this work investigated different aspects of the host stress-response in the
defense against bacterial infection. The findings shed light on the importance of the host
stress-pathways during infection, and improve the understanding of different strategies
in host-pathogen interaction.
Humans are continuously exposed to airborne spores of the saprophytic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus. In healthy individuals, local pulmonary host defence mechanisms can efficiently eliminate the fungus without any overt symptoms. In contrast, A. fumigatus causes devastating infections in immunocompromised patients. However, local host immune responses against A. fumigatus lung infections in immunocompromised conditions have remained largely elusive.
Given the dynamic changes in immune cell subsets within tissues upon immunosuppressive therapy, we dissected the spatiotemporal pulmonary immune response after A. fumigatus infection to reveal basic immunological events that fail to effectively control the invasive fungal disease. In different immunocompromised murine models, myeloid but not lymphoid cells were strongly recruited upon infection. Notably, neutrophils and macrophages were recruited to infected lungs in different immunosuppressed regimens. Other myeloid cells, particularly dendritic cells and monocytes were only recruited in the corticosteroid model after infection. Lymphoid cells, particularly CD4+ or CD8+ T-cells and NK cells were highly reduced upon immunosuppression and were not recruited after A. fumigatus infection. Importantly, adoptive CD11b+ myeloid cell transfer rescued immunosuppressed mice from lethal A. fumigatus infection. These findings illustrate that CD11b+ myeloid cells are critical for anti-A. fumigatus defence under immunocompromised conditions.
Despite improved antifungal agents, invasive A. fumigatus lung infections cause a high rate morbidity and mortality in neutropenic patients. Granulocyte transfusions have been tested as an alternative therapy for the management of high-risk neutropenic patients with invasive A. fumigatus infections. To increase the granulocyte yield for transfusion, donors are treated with corticosteroids. Yet, the efficacy of granulocyte transfusion and the functional defence mechanisms of granulocytes collected from corticosteroid treated donors remain largely elusive.
We aimed to assess the efficacy of granulocyte transfusion and functional defence mechanisms of corticosteroid treated granulocytes using mouse models.
In this thesis, we show that transfusion of granulocytes from corticosteroid treated mice did not protect cyclophosphamide immunosuppressed mice against lethal A. fumigatus infection in contrast to granulocytes from untreated mice. Upon infection, increased levels of inflammatory cytokines helped to recruit granulocytes to the lungs without any recruitment defects in corticosteroid treated and infected mice or in cyclophosphamide immunosuppressed and infected mice that have received the granulocytes from corticosteroid treated mice. However, corticosteroid treated human or mouse neutrophils failed to form neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in in vitro and in vivo conditions. Further, corticosteroid treated granulocytes exhibited impaired ROS production against A. fumigatus. Notably, corticosteroids impaired the β-glucan receptor Dectin-1 (CLEC7A) on mouse and human granulocytes to efficiently recognize and phagocytize A. fumigatus, which markedly impaired fungal killing. We conclude that corticosteroid treatment of granulocyte donors for increasing neutrophil yields or patients with ongoing corticosteroid treatment could result in deleterious effects on granulocyte antifungal functions, thereby limiting the benefit of granulocyte transfusion therapies against invasive fungal infections.
Obese children and adolescents are at high risk of developing cardiovascular diseases later in life. We hypothesized that cardiovascular prophylaxis with omega-3 fatty acids could benefit them. In our study, 20 children and adolescents (mean body mass index percentile: 99.1; mean age: 11.0 years) underwent two ambulatory 24 h Holter electrocardiography (ECG) recordings (before and after at least 3 months of omega-3 fatty acid supplementation). Time domain heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate (HR) were examined for these patients. As a control, we used 24 h Holter ECG recordings of 94 nonobese children and adolescents. Time domain HRV parameters, which are indicators of vagal stimulation, were significantly lower in obese patients than in healthy controls, but HR was higher (standard deviation of the normal-to-normal [SDNN] interbeat intervals: −34.02%; root mean square of successive differences [RMSSD] between normal heartbeats: −40.66%; percentage of consecutive RR intervals [pNN50]: −60.24%; HR: +13.37%). After omega-3 fatty acid supplementation, time domain HRV parameters and HR of obese patients were similar to the values of healthy controls (SDNN interbeat intervals: −21.73%; RMSSD: −19.56%; pNN50: −25.59%; HR: +3.94%). Therefore, omega-3 fatty acid supplementation may be used for cardiovascular prophylaxis in obese children and adolescents.