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Microbiota-dependent sequelae of acute infection compromise tissue-specific immunity

Denise Morais da Fonseca, Timothy W Hand, Seong-Ji Han, Michael Y Gerner, Arielle Glatman Zaretsky, Allyson L Byrd, Oliver J Harrison, Alexandra M Ortiz, Mariam Quinones, Giorgio Trinchieri, Jason M Brenchley, Igor E Brodsky, Ronald N Germain, Gwendalyn J Randolph, Yasmine Belkaid
Gut microbiome / Immunity
Key takeaways
  1. 01An acute infection can have long-term consequences for immunity
  2. 02Sustained inflammation can disrupt normal immune cell function
  3. 03Gut microbiota can help maintain post-infection inflammation
  4. 04This may compromise future immune responses in the affected tissue

A single gut infection can disrupt local immunity long-term, a process that is maintained by the body's own gut microbiota.

Abstract

IInfections have been proposed as initiating factors for inflammatory disorders; however, identifying associations between defined infectious agents and the initiation of chronic disease has remained elusive. Here, we report that a single acute infection can have dramatic and long-term consequences for tissue-specific immunity. Following clearance of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, sustained inflammation and associated lymphatic leakage in the mesenteric adipose tissue deviates migratory dendritic cells to the adipose compartment, thereby preventing their accumulation in the mesenteric lymph node. As a consequence, canonical mucosal immune functions, including tolerance and protective immunity, are persistently compromised. Post-resolution of infection, signals derived from the microbiota maintain inflammatory mesentery remodeling and consequently, transient ablation of the microbiota restores mucosal immunity. Our results indicate that persistent disruption of communication between tissues and the immune system following clearance of an acute infection represents an inflection point beyond which tissue homeostasis and immunity is compromised for the long-term.

Cite this study
APA
Denise Morais da Fonseca, Timothy W Hand, Seong-Ji Han, Michael Y Gerner, Arielle Glatman Zaretsky, Allyson L Byrd, Oliver J Harrison, Alexandra M Ortiz, Mariam Quinones, Giorgio Trinchieri, Jason M Brenchley, Igor E Brodsky, Ronald N Germain, Gwendalyn J Randolph, & Yasmine Belkaid (2016). Microbiota-dependent sequelae of acute infection compromise tissue-specific immunity. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/microbiota-dependent-sequelae-of-acute-infection-compromise-tissue-specific-immunity/
MLA
Denise Morais da Fonseca, et al. "Microbiota-dependent sequelae of acute infection compromise tissue-specific immunity." 2016, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/microbiota-dependent-sequelae-of-acute-infection-compromise-tissue-specific-immunity/.
Chicago
Denise Morais da Fonseca et al. 2016. "Microbiota-dependent sequelae of acute infection compromise tissue-specific immunity.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/microbiota-dependent-sequelae-of-acute-infection-compromise-tissue-specific-immunity/