1. Pathogen-Specific Circulating Plasmablasts in Patients with Pneumonia
- Author
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Anu Kantele, Niina Rossi, Ritvaleena Puohiniemi, Sari H. Pakkanen, Jussi M. Kantele, Nina V. Palkola, Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Infektiosairauksien yksikkö, and Department of Medicine
- Subjects
Male ,Bacterial Diseases ,Pulmonology ,lcsh:Medicine ,STREPTOCOCCUS-PNEUMONIAE ,medicine.disease_cause ,0302 clinical medicine ,HUMAN B-CELLS ,lcsh:Science ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Respiratory tract infections ,biology ,SALMONELLA-TYPHI ,ELISPOT ,LYMPHOID-TISSUE BALT ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Pneumococcal infections ,Streptococcus pneumoniae ,Infectious Diseases ,Medicine ,Female ,Antibody ,Research Article ,Adult ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN-A ,Immune Cells ,education ,Plasma Cells ,Pneumococcal Infections ,HOMING RECEPTORS ,03 medical and health sciences ,URINARY-TRACT-INFECTION ,Immune system ,Antigen ,medicine ,Humans ,INVASIVE PNEUMOCOCCAL DISEASE ,Aged ,030304 developmental biology ,lcsh:R ,ANTIBODY-SECRETING CELLS ,Immunity ,Pneumonia ,Immunologic Subspecialties ,medicine.disease ,3121 General medicine, internal medicine and other clinical medicine ,Immunoglobulin G ,Respiratory Infections ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,MUCOSAL IMMUNE-SYSTEM ,Clinical Immunology ,3111 Biomedicine ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are the leading cause of death world-wide, with Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pnc) as the most prevalent pathogen. Local immune mechanisms appear central to protection against the disease, yet they are poorly characterized. Infections at other, non-respiratory mucosal sites are associated with a transient circulation of mucosa-originating lymphocytes from the mucosal site to blood and back to the mucosa. The present study explored whether pathogen-specific plasmablasts appear in the circulation also in patients with infection of the lower respiratory tract. 16 patients with bacteremic Pnc pneumonia and 14 healthy volunteers were explored for circulating plasmablasts secreting antibodies against their own pathogenic Pnc strain isolated in blood cultures (patients) or against several pathogenic strains from pneumonia patients (14 controls) or a mixture of nine different purified pneumococcal polysaccharides (8 controls). Both patients and volunteers were studied for all plasmablasts. The cells were identified with ELISPOT as Pnc-specific antibody-secreting cells (ASC) and as all immunoglobulin-secreting cells (ISC). High numbers of circulating Pnc-specific ASC were found in the acute phase of the disease in all patients with pneumonia (median 97 ASC/10(6) PBMC), but in none of the controls. IgG isotype predominated in 9/16 patients. The numbers of ISC were significantly higher in the patients than in the healthy controls, yet Pnc-specific ASC only accounted for 0.7% of all the patients' ISC.The present study is the first to show that antigen-specific plasmablasts appear in the circulation in pneumonia, suggesting that pulmonary lypmhocytes recirculate in humans. Assessing these cells provides a novel tool for studying immune response to antigens encountered at the LRT.
- Published
- 2012
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