Interferon-gamma receptor signaling regulates innate immunity during Staphylococcus aureus craniotomy infection

被引:0
|
作者
Zachary Van Roy [1 ]
Gunjan Kak [1 ]
Rachel W. Fallet [1 ]
Tammy Kielian [1 ]
机构
[1] University of Nebraska Medical Center,Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology
[2] Nebraska Medical Center,undefined
关键词
IFN-γR; T cells; Th1; Th17; Craniotomy; Biofilm; Infection; Macrophage; Microglia; Granulocyte;
D O I
10.1186/s12974-025-03376-9
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A craniotomy is a neurosurgical procedure performed to access the intracranial space. In 3–5% of cases, infections can develop, most caused by Staphylococcus aureus biofilm formation on the skull surface. Medical management of this infection is difficult, as biofilm properties confer immune and antimicrobial recalcitrance to the infection and necessitate additional surgical procedures. Furthermore, treatment failure rates can be appreciably high. These factors, compounded with rapidly expanding rates of antimicrobial resistance, highlight the need to develop alternative treatment strategies to target and reverse the immune dysfunction that occurs during biofilm infection. Our recent work has identified CD4+ Th1 and Th17 cells as potent regulators of innate immune cell activation during craniotomy infection. Here, we report the role of IFN-γ, versus other Th1- and Th17-derived cytokines, in programing the immune response to biofilm infection using both global and cell type-specific IFN-γR1-deficient (Ifngr1−/−) mice. Bacterial burdens were significantly higher in Ifngr1−/− relative to WT animals despite few changes in immune cell abundance. Single-cell transcriptomics identified candidate explanations for this phenotype as alterations in cell death pathways, innate immune cell activation, MHC-II expression, and T cell responses were significantly reduced in Ifngr1−/− mice. While caspase-1 activation in PMNs and macrophage/microglial MHC-II expression were regulated by IFN-γ signaling, no phenotypes were observed with either granulocyte- or macrophage/microglia Ifngr1−/− conditional knockout mice, suggestive of redundancy. Instead, a decreased Th1/Th17 ratio was identified in Ifngr1−/− animals that was corroborated by elevated IL-17 levels and correlated with dysfunctional T cell-innate immune communication. Further, Th17 cells were less effective than Th1 cells in promoting S. aureus bactericidal activity in microglia and macrophages. Collectively, this work identifies a key protective role for IFN-γ during craniotomy infection by enhancing macrophage and microglial antibacterial activity. Therefore, controlled programming of IFN-γ responses may represent a novel therapeutic strategy for chronic craniotomy infections.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Skin infection with Staphylococcus aureus is decided by both early mechanisms of innate immunity and T cell response in specific immunity
    Nippe, N.
    Varga, G.
    Medina, E.
    Becker, K.
    Roth, J.
    Ehrchen, J.
    Sunderkoetter, C.
    JOURNAL DER DEUTSCHEN DERMATOLOGISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT, 2014, 12 (10): : 952 - 952
  • [32] Neutrophil-intrinsic TNF receptor signaling directs immunity against staphylococcus aureus
    Youn, C.
    Wang, Y.
    Dikeman, D. A.
    Alphonse, M. P.
    Nolan, S. J.
    Joyce, D. P.
    Pontaza, C.
    Ahmadi, M.
    Tocaj, A.
    Miller, L. S.
    Archer, N.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2022, 142 (08) : S91 - S91
  • [33] Successful treatment of invasive mycobacterium infection with interferon beta in a patient with Interferon-Gamma Receptor 1 deficiency
    Alroqi, Fayhan
    Almutairi, Abduarahman
    Alhammadi, Moza
    Alhamdi, Shatha
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 17 (08)
  • [34] Interferon-gamma, a Th1 Cytokine, Regulates Fat Inflammation: A Role for Adaptive Immunity in Obesity
    Rocha, Viviane Z.
    Folco, Eduardo J.
    Sukhova, Galina
    Shimizu, Koichi
    Gotsman, Israel
    Vernon, Ashley H.
    Libby, Peter
    CIRCULATION, 2008, 118 (18) : S467 - S467
  • [35] The Role Of Interferon Lambda During Influenza, Staphylococcus Aureus Super-Infection
    Rich, H. E.
    Robinson, K. M.
    McHugh, K. J.
    Mandalapu, S.
    Clay, M. E.
    Alcorn, J. F.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2017, 195
  • [36] THE INTERFERON-GAMMA RECEPTOR EXTRACELLULAR DOMAIN - NONIDENTICAL REQUIREMENTS FOR LIGAND-BINDING AND SIGNALING
    AXELROD, A
    GIBBS, VC
    GOEDDEL, DV
    JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1994, 269 (22) : 15533 - 15539
  • [37] Post-translational modification of the interferon-gamma receptor alters its stability and signaling
    Londino, James D.
    Gulick, Dexter L.
    Lear, Travis B.
    Suber, Tomeka L.
    Weathington, Nathaniel M.
    Masa, Luke S.
    Chen, Bill B.
    Mallampalli, Rama K.
    BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 2017, 474 : 3543 - 3557
  • [38] The role of interferon lambda during influenza, Staphylococcus aureus super-infection.
    Rich, Helen
    Robinson, Keven M.
    McHugh, Kevin J.
    Clay, Michelle E.
    Alcorn, John F.
    JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2017, 198 (01):
  • [39] The synergistic action of Interferon-gamma and Interleukin-17 increases cutaneous innate immunity by the induction of antimicrobial proteins
    Simanski, M.
    Schumacher, H.
    Harder, J.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2009, 129 : S14 - S14
  • [40] PRODUCTION OF INTERFERON-GAMMA DURING INFECTION OF MICE WITH PLASMODIUM CHABAUDI-CHABAUDI
    SLADE, SJ
    LANGHORNE, J
    IMMUNOBIOLOGY, 1989, 179 (4-5) : 353 - 365