Respective Il-17a Production By Gamma Delta T And Th17 Cells And Its Implication In Host Defense Against Chlamydial Lung Infection

CELLULAR & MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY(2017)

引用 23|浏览27
暂无评分
摘要
The role of IL-17A is important in protection against lung infection with Chlamydiae, an obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen. In this study, we explored the producers of IL-17A in chlamydial lung infection and specifically tested the role of major IL-17A producers in protective immunity. We found that gamma delta T cells and Th17 cells are the major producers of IL-17A at the early and later stages of chlamydial infection, respectively. Depletion of gamma delta T cells in vivo at the early postinfection (p.i.) stage, when most gamma delta T cells produce IL-17A, failed to alter Th1 responses and bacterial clearance. In contrast, the blockade of IL-17A at the time when IL-17A was mainly produced by Th17 (day 7 p.i.) markedly reduced the Th1 response and increased chlamydial growth. The data suggest that the gamma delta T cell is the highest producer of IL-17A in the very early stages of infection, but the protection conferred by IL-17A is mainly mediated by Th17 cells. In addition, we found that depletion of gamma delta T cells reduced IL-1 alpha production by dendritic cells, which was associated with a reduced Th17 response. This finding is helpful to understand the variable role of IL-17A in different infections and to develop preventive and therapeutic approaches against infectious diseases by targeting IL-17A.
更多
查看译文
关键词
chlamydia, IL-17A, gamma delta T cell, infection, Th17
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要