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Immune activation during

Authors :
Albert M, Isaacs
Sarah U, Morton
Mercedeh, Movassagh
Qiang, Zhang
Christine, Hehnly
Lijun, Zhang
Diego M, Morales
Shamim A, Sinnar
Jessica E, Ericson
Edith, Mbabazi-Kabachelor
Peter, Ssenyonga
Justin, Onen
Ronnie, Mulondo
Mady, Hornig
Benjamin C, Warf
James R, Broach
R Reid, Townsend
David D, Limbrick
Joseph N, Paulson
Steven J, Schiff
Source :
iScience
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Summary Inflammation during neonatal brain infections leads to significant secondary sequelae such as hydrocephalus, which often follows neonatal sepsis in the developing world. In 100 African hydrocephalic infants we identified the biological pathways that account for this response. The dominant bacterial pathogen was a Paenibacillus species, with frequent cytomegalovirus co-infection. A proteogenomic strategy was employed to confirm host immune response to Paenibacillus and to define the interplay within the host immune response network. Immune activation emphasized neuroinflammation, oxidative stress reaction, and extracellular matrix organization. The innate immune system response included neutrophil activity, signaling via IL-4, IL-12, IL-13, interferon, and Jak/STAT pathways. Platelet-activating factors and factors involved with microbe recognition such as Class I MHC antigen-presenting complex were also increased. Evidence suggests that dysregulated neuroinflammation propagates inflammatory hydrocephalus, and these pathways are potential targets for adjunctive treatments to reduce the hazards of neuroinflammation and risk of hydrocephalus following neonatal sepsis.<br />Graphical abstract<br />Highlights • There is a characteristic immune response to Paenibacillus brain infection • There is a characteristic immune response to CMV brain infection • The matching immune response validates pathogen genomic presence • The combined results support molecular infection causality<br />Immunology; Proteomics; Transcriptomics

Details

ISSN :
25890042
Volume :
24
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
iScience
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........c3b06aeb0a2fcec259146770f5673a94