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T Cells Are Essential for Bacterial Clearance, and Gamma Interferon, Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha, and B Cells Are Crucial for Disease Development in Coxiella burnetii Infection in Mice

Authors :
Masako Andoh
Kasi E. Russell-Lodrigue
Brad R. Weeks
Guoquan Zhang
Heather R. Shive
James E. Samuel
Source :
Infection and Immunity. 75:3245-3255
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2007.

Abstract

Coxiella burnetii , the etiological agent of Q fever, has two phase variants. Phase I has a complete lipopolysaccharide (LPS), is highly virulent, and causes Q fever in humans and pathology in experimental animals. Phase II lacks an LPS O side chain, is avirulent, and does not grow well in immunocompetent animals. To understand the pathogenicity of Q fever, we investigated the roles of immune components in animals infected with Nine Mile phase I (NM I) or Nine Mile phase II (NM II) bacteria. Immunodeficient mice, including SCID mice (deficient in T and B cells), SCIDbg mice (deficient in T, B, and NK cells), nude mice (deficient in T cells), muMT mice (deficient in B cells), bg mice (deficient in NK cells), mice deficient in tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α −/− mice), and mice deficient in gamma interferon (IFN-γ −/− mice), were compared for their responses to infection. SCID, SCIDbg, nude, and IFN-γ −/− mice showed high susceptibility to NM I, and TNF-α −/− mice showed modest susceptibility. Disease caused by NM I in SCID, SCIDbg, and nude mice progressed slowly, while disease in IFN-γ −/− and TNF-α −/− mice advanced rapidly. B- and NK-cell deficiencies did not enhance clinical disease development or alter bacterial clearance but did increase the severity of histopathological changes, particularly in the absence of B cells. Mice infected with NM II showed no apparent clinical disease, but T-cell-deficient mice had histopathological changes. These results suggest that T cells are critical for clearance of C. burnetii , either NM I or NM II, that IFN-γ and TNF-α are essential for the early control of infection, and that B cells are important for the prevention of tissue damage.

Details

ISSN :
10985522 and 00199567
Volume :
75
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Infection and Immunity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b036a47d1abbc63465fdeaf44d41d507