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Apoptosis, Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like Receptors Are Pathways Jointly Induced by Diverse Respiratory Bacterial and Viral Pathogens

Authors :
Isidoro Martínez
Juan C. Oliveros
Isabel Cuesta
Jorge de la Barrera
Vicente Ausina
Casals Carro, María Cristina
Alba de Lorenzo
Ernesto García
García-Fojeda García-Valdecasas, María Belén
Junkal Garmendia
Mar González-Nicolau
Alicia Lacoma
Margarita Menéndez
David Moranta
Amelia Nieto
Juan Ortín
Alicia Pérez-González
Cristina Prat
Elisa Ramos-Sevillano
Verónica Regueiro
Ariel Rodriguez-Frandsen
Dolores Solís
José Yuste
José A. Bengoechea
José A. Melero
Isidoro Martínez
Juan C. Oliveros
Isabel Cuesta
Jorge de la Barrera
Vicente Ausina
Casals Carro, María Cristina
Alba de Lorenzo
Ernesto García
García-Fojeda García-Valdecasas, María Belén
Junkal Garmendia
Mar González-Nicolau
Alicia Lacoma
Margarita Menéndez
David Moranta
Amelia Nieto
Juan Ortín
Alicia Pérez-González
Cristina Prat
Elisa Ramos-Sevillano
Verónica Regueiro
Ariel Rodriguez-Frandsen
Dolores Solís
José Yuste
José A. Bengoechea
José A. Melero
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Lower respiratory tract infections are among the top five leading causes of human death. Fighting these infections is therefore a world health priority. Searching for induced alterations in host gene expression shared by several relevant respiratory pathogens represents an alternative to identify new targets for wide-range host-oriented therapeutics. With this aim, alveolar macrophages were independently infected with three unrelated bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus) and two dissimilar viral (respiratory syncytial virus and influenza A virus) respiratory pathogens, all of them highly relevant for human health. Cells were also activated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a prototypical pathogen-associated molecular pattern. Patterns of differentially expressed cellular genes shared by the indicated pathogens were searched by microarray analysis. Most of the commonly up-regulated host genes were related to the innate immune response and/or apoptosis, with Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like receptors among the top 10 signaling pathways with over-expressed genes. These results identify new potential broad-spectrum targets to fight the important human infections caused by the bacteria and viruses studied here.<br />Instituto de Salud Carlos III<br />Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad<br />Sociedad Española de Neumología y Cirugía Torácica<br />European Union<br />Depto. de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular<br />TRUE<br />pub

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, 1664-302X, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1429625260
Document Type :
Electronic Resource