1. Kidney Dendritic Cells Induce Innate Immunity against Bacterial Pyelonephritis
- Author
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Daniel R. Engel, Christian Kurts, Christoph Heuser, Percy A. Knolle, André P. Tittel, and Christina Ohliger
- Subjects
Chemokine ,Virulence Factors ,Phagocytosis ,CD11c ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Kidney ,Mice ,Immune system ,Immunity ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Humans ,Urinary Tract ,Phagocytes ,Innate immune system ,Pyelonephritis ,biology ,Incidence ,Macrophages ,Dendritic Cells ,General Medicine ,Dendritic cell ,Immunity, Innate ,CD11c Antigen ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,CXCL2 ,Nephrology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Brief Communications - Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) are the most abundant immune cells in the kidney and form an intricate network in the tubulointerstitium, suggesting that they may play an important role in interstitial infections such as pyelonephritis. Here, we optimized a murine pyelonephritis model by instilling uropathogenic Escherichia coli two times at a 3-hour interval, which produced an infection rate of 84%. By 3 hours after the second instillation, resident kidney DCs began secreting the chemokine CXCL2, which recruits neutrophilic granulocytes. During the time studied, DCs remained responsible for most of the CXCL2 production. Neutrophils began infiltrating the kidney 3 hours after the second instillation and phagocytozed bacteria. Macrophages followed 3 hours later and contributed much less to both CXCL2 production and bacterial phagocytosis. To investigate whether DCs recruit neutrophils into the kidney for antibacterial defense, we used CD11c.DTR mice allowing conditional depletion of CD11c(+) dendritic cells. The absence of CD11c(+) DCs markedly delayed neutrophil recruitment and bacterial clearance. In conclusion, these findings suggest that the tubulointerstitial dendritic cell network serves an innate immune sentinel function against bacterial pyelonephritis.
- Published
- 2011
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