Lymphocytes are detrimental during the early innate immune response against Listeria monocytogenes

淋巴细胞在针对单核细胞增生李斯特菌的早期先天免疫反应中起有害作用。

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Abstract

Mice deficient in lymphocytes are more resistant than normal mice to Listeria monocytogenes infection during the early innate immune response. This paradox remains unresolved: lymphocytes are required for sterilizing immunity, but their presence during the early stage of the infection is not an asset and may even be detrimental. We found that lymphocyte-deficient mice, which showed limited apoptosis in infected organs, were resistant during the first four days of infection but became susceptible when engrafted with lymphocytes. Engraftment with lymphocytes from type I interferon receptor-deficient (IFN-alphabetaR(-/-)) mice, which had reduced apoptosis, did not confer increased susceptibility to infection, even when the phagocytes were IFN-alphabetaR(+/+). The attenuation of innate immunity was due, in part, to the production of the antiinflammatory cytokine interleukin 10 by phagocytic cells after the apoptotic phase of the infection. Thus, immunodeficient mice were more resistant relative to normal mice because the latter went through a stage of lymphocyte apoptosis that was detrimental to the innate immune response. This is an example of a bacterial pathogen creating a cascade of events that leads to a permissive infective niche early during infection.

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