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Sex-hormone-driven innate antibodies protect females and infants against EPEC infection

Authors :
Madeleine Wyss
Paul Kubes
Bas G.J. Surewaard
Graham C. Thompson
Kathy D. McCoy
Hervé Le Moual
Björn Petri
Regula Burkhard
Rebekah DeVinney
Connie H.Y. Wong
Christopher Guettler
Craig N. Jenne
Zhutian Zeng
Jaime Blackwood
Ari R. Joffe
Source :
Nature immunology. 19(10)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Females have an overall advantage over males in resisting Gram-negative bacteremias, thus hinting at sexual dimorphism of immunity during infections. Here, through intravital microscopy, we observed a sex-biased difference in the capture of blood-borne bacteria by liver macrophages, a process that is critical for the clearance of systemic infections. Complement opsonization was indispensable for the capture of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) in male mice; however, a faster complement component 3-independent process involving abundant preexisting antibodies to EPEC was detected in female mice. These antibodies were elicited predominantly in female mice at puberty in response to estrogen regardless of microbiota-colonization conditions. Estrogen-driven antibodies were maternally transferrable to offspring and conferred protection during infancy. These antibodies were conserved in humans and recognized specialized oligosaccharides integrated into the bacterial lipopolysaccharide and capsule. Thus, an estrogen-driven, innate antibody-mediated immunological strategy conferred protection to females and their offspring.

Details

ISSN :
15292916
Volume :
19
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....88ce0a184970fde7b10a504e79a92844