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1.
Virulence ; 13(1): 1558-1572, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36082929

ABSTRACT

Influenza A virus (IAV) infection poses a substantial challenge and causes high morbidity and mortality. Exacerbated pulmonary inflammatory responses are the major causes of extensive diffuse alveolar immunopathological damage. However, the relationship between the extent of cytokine storm, neutrophils/macrophages infiltration, and different IAV infection dose and time still needs to be further elucidated, and it is still unclear whether the signal transduction and transcriptional activator 1/3 (STAT1/3) signalling pathway plays a beneficial or detrimental role. Here, we established a mouse model of high- and low-dose pH1N1 infection. We found that pH1N1 infection induced robust and early pathological damage and cytokine storm in an infection dose- and time-dependent manner. High-dose pH1N1 infection induced massive and sustained recruitment of neutrophils as well as a higher ratio of M1:M2, which may contribute to severe lung immunopathological damage. pH1N1 infection activated dose- and time-dependent STAT1 and STAT3. Inhibition of STAT1 and/or STAT3 aggravated low-dose pH1N1 infection, induced lung damage, and decreased survival rate. Appropriate activation of STAT1/3 provided survival benefits and pathological improvement during low-dose pH1N1 infection. These results demonstrate that high-dose pH1N1 infection induces robust and sustained neutrophil infiltration, imbalanced macrophage polarization, excessive and earlier cytokine storm, and STAT1/3 activation, which are associated with pulmonary dysregulated proinflammatory responses and progress of acute lung injury. The severe innate immune responses may be the threshold at which protective functions give way to immunopathology, and assessing the magnitude of host innate immune responses is necessary in adjunctive immunomodulatory therapy for alleviating influenza-induced pneumonia.


Subject(s)
Immunity, Innate , Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype , Influenza, Human , Orthomyxoviridae Infections , Animals , Cytokine Release Syndrome , Humans , Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype/immunology , Influenza, Human/immunology , Lung/immunology , Lung/pathology , Lung Injury/etiology , Lung Injury/pathology , Mice , STAT1 Transcription Factor/metabolism , STAT3 Transcription Factor/metabolism , Signal Transduction
3.
Immunol Cell Biol ; 98(7): 595-606, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32339310

ABSTRACT

Ficolins are important and widely distributed pattern recognition molecules that can induce lectin complement pathway activation and initiate the innate immune response. Although ficolins can bind lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in vitro, the sources, dynamic changes and roles of local ficolins in LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation and injury remain poorly understood. In this study, we established a ficolin knockout mouse model by clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (CRISPR/Cas9) technology, and used flow cytometry and hematoxylin and eosin staining to study the expressions and roles of local ficolins in LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation and injury. Our results show that besides ficolin B (FcnB), ficolin A (FcnA) is also expressed in leukocytes from the bone marrow, peripheral blood, lung and spleen. Further analyses showed that macrophages and neutrophils are the main sources of FcnA and FcnB, and T and B cells also express a small amount of FcnB. The intranasal administration of LPS induced local pulmonary inflammation with the increased recruitment of macrophages and neutrophils. LPS stimulation induced increased expression of FcnA and FcnB in neutrophils at the acute stage and in macrophages at the late stage. The severity of the lung injury and local inflammation of Fcna-/- mice was increased by the induction of extracellular complement activation. The recovery of LPS-induced local lung inflammation and injury was delayed in Fcnb-/- mice. Hence, these findings suggested that the local macrophage- and neutrophil-derived FcnA protects against LPS-induced acute lung injury by mediating extracellular complement activation.


Subject(s)
Acute Lung Injury , Complement System Proteins/immunology , Lectins/immunology , Macrophages/immunology , Neutrophils/immunology , Acute Lung Injury/chemically induced , Acute Lung Injury/immunology , Animals , Lipopolysaccharides , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Ficolins
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