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Strain-and host species-specific inflammasome activation, IL-1β release, and cell death in macrophages infected with uropathogenic Escherichia coli

Authors :
Ambika M. V. Murthy
Katryn J. Stacey
Kolja Schaale
Makrina Totsika
Mark E. Cooper
Minh-Duy Phan
Kate M. Peters
A. Fritzsche
Katie B. Nichols
Avril A. B. Robertson
Kate Schroder
Matthew J. Sweet
Mark A. Schembri
Glen C. Ulett
Schaale, K
Peters, KM
Murthy, AM
Fritzsche, AK
Phan, MD
Totsika, M
Robertson, AAB
Nichols, KB
Cooper, MA
Stacey, KJ
Ulett, GC
Schroder, K
Schembri, MA
Sweet, MJ
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
US : Nature, 2016.

Abstract

Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) is the main etiological agent of urinary tract infections (UTIs). Little is known about interactions between UPEC and the inflammasome, a key innate immune pathway. Here we show that UPEC strains CFT073 and UTI89 trigger inflammasome activation and lytic cell death in human macrophages. Several other UPEC strains, including two multidrug-resistant ST131 isolates, did not kill macrophages. In mouse macrophages, UTI89 triggered cell death only at a high multiplicity of infection, and CFT073-mediated inflammasome responses were completely NLRP3-dependent. Surprisingly, CFT073- and UTI89-mediated responses only partially depended on NLRP3 in human macrophages. In these cells, NLRP3 was required for interleukin-1β (IL-1β) maturation, but contributed only marginally to cell death. Similarly, caspase-1 inhibition did not block cell death in human macrophages. In keeping with such differences, the pore-forming toxin α-hemolysin mediated a substantial proportion of CFT073-triggered IL-1β secretion in mouse but not human macrophages. There was also a more substantial α-hemolysin-independent cell death response in human vs. mouse macrophages. Thus, in mouse macrophages, CFT073-triggered inflammasome responses are completely NLRP3-dependent, and largely α-hemolysin-dependent. In contrast, UPEC activates an NLRP3-independent cell death pathway and an α-hemolysin-independent IL-1β secretion pathway in human macrophages. This has important implications for understanding UTI in humans. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0abde3edd8d4d7e90b94ac3289b42732