Back to Search Start Over

Diabetes alters immune response patterns to acute melioidosis in humans

Authors :
Kronsteiner, B
Chaichana, P
Sumonwiriya, M
Jenjaroen, K
Chowdhury, F
Chumseng, S
Teparrukkul, P
Limmathurotsakul, D
Day, N
Klenerman, P
Dunachie, S
Source :
European Journal of Immunology
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a serious global health problem currently affecting over 450million people worldwide. Defining its interaction with major global infections is an international public health priority. Melioidosis is caused byBurkholderia pseudomallei, an exemplar pathogen for studying intracellular bacterial infection in the context of DM due to the 12‐fold increased risk in this group. We characterized immune correlates of survival in peripheral blood of acute melioidosis patients with and without DM and highlight different immune response patterns. We demonstrate the importance of circulating NK cells and show that CX3CR1 expression on lymphocytes is a novel correlate of survival from acute melioidosis. Furthermore, excessive serum levels of IL‐15 and IL‐18BP contribute to poor outcome independent of DM comorbidity. CD8+Tcells and granzyme B expression in NK cells are important for survival of non‐DM patients, whereas high antibody titers againstB. pseudomalleiand double‐negative Tcells are linked to survival of DM patients. Recall responses support a role of γδ T‐cell‐derived IFN‐γ in the establishment of protective immunity in the DM group. Defining the hallmarks of protection in people with DM is crucial for the design of new therapies and vaccines targeting this rapidly expanding risk group.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15214141 and 00142980
Volume :
49
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....7a627ad633ab5703e64c361415db5e32