High mobility group box 1 prolongs inflammation and worsens disease in pneumococcal meningitis

被引:25
作者
Hoehne, Christopher [1 ]
Wenzel, Michael [1 ]
Angele, Barbara [1 ]
Hammerschmidt, Sven [2 ]
Haecker, Hans [3 ]
Klein, Matthias [1 ]
Bierhaus, Angelika [4 ]
Sperandio, Markus [5 ]
Pfister, Hans-Walter [1 ]
Koedel, Uwe [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Munich, Dept Neurol, Klinikum Grosshadern, D-81377 Munich, Germany
[2] Ernst Moritz Arndt Univ Greifswald, Interfac Inst Genet & Funct Genom, Dept Genet Microorganisms, Greifswald, Germany
[3] St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, Memphis, TN 38105 USA
[4] Univ Heidelberg Hosp, Dept Med & Clin Chem 1, Heidelberg, Germany
[5] Univ Munich, Walter Brendel Ctr Expt Med, Munich, Germany
关键词
meningitis; danger-associated molecular pattern; persistent inflammation; GLYCATION END-PRODUCTS; ACUTE BACTERIAL-MENINGITIS; CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID; STREPTOCOCCUS-PNEUMONIAE; HMGB1; RELEASE; CELL-DEATH; IN-VIVO; HOST-DEFENSE; RECEPTOR; CASPASE-1; ACTIVATION;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awt064
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Neutrophilic inflammation, which often persists over days despite appropriate antibiotic therapy, contributes substantially to brain damage in bacterial meningitis. We hypothesized that persistent inflammation is the consequence of a vicious cycle in which inflammation-induced cell injury leads to the release of endogenous danger molecules (e.g. high mobility group box 1) that drive the inflammatory response, causing further damage. The present study aimed to assess the mechanisms of high mobility group box 1 protein release and its functional relevance for the development and progression of pneumococcal meningitis. High mobility group box 1 was found in large quantities in cerebrospinal fluid samples of patients and mice with pneumococcal meningitis (predominantly in advanced stages of the disease). By using macrophages, we demonstrated that the release of high mobility group box 1 from macrophages following pneumococcal challenge is passive in nature and probably not connected with inflammasome- and oxidative stress-dependent inflammatory cell death forms. In a mouse meningitis model, treatment with the high mobility group box 1 antagonists ethyl pyruvate or Box A protein had no effect on the development of meningitis, but led to better resolution of inflammation during antibiotic therapy, which was accompanied by reduced brain pathology and better disease outcome. Additional experiments using gene-deficient mice and murine neutrophils provided evidence that high mobility group box 1 acts as a chemoattractant for neutrophils in a receptor for advanced glycosylation end products-dependent fashion. In conclusion, the present study implicated high mobility group box 1, likely released from dying cells, as a central propagator of inflammation in pneumococcal meningitis. Because persistent inflammation contributes to meningitis-associated brain damage, high mobility group box 1 may represent a promising target for adjunctive therapy of this disease.
引用
收藏
页码:1746 / 1759
页数:14
相关论文
共 78 条
[31]   MyD88 is required for mounting a robust host immune response to Streptococcus pneumoniae in the CNS [J].
Koedel, U ;
Rupprecht, T ;
Angele, B ;
Heesemann, J ;
Wagner, H ;
Pfister, HW ;
Kirschning, CJ .
BRAIN, 2004, 127 :1437-1445
[32]   Superoxide production by primary rat cerebral endothelial cells in response to pneumococci [J].
Koedel, U ;
Pfister, HW .
JOURNAL OF NEUROIMMUNOLOGY, 1999, 96 (02) :190-200
[33]   Role of caspase-1 in experimental pneumococcal meningitis: Evidence from pharmacologic caspase inhibition and caspase-1-deficient mice [J].
Koedel, U ;
Winkler, F ;
Angele, B ;
Fontana, A ;
Flavell, RA ;
Pfister, HW .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2002, 51 (03) :319-329
[34]   Modulation of brain injury as a target of adjunctive therapy in bacterial meningitis [J].
Koedel U. ;
Klein M. ;
Pfister H.-W. .
Current Infectious Disease Reports, 2010, 12 (4) :266-273
[35]   Apoptosis Is Essential for Neutrophil Functional Shutdown and Determines Tissue Damage in Experimental Pneumococcal Meningitis [J].
Koedel, Uwe ;
Frankenberg, Tobias ;
Kirschnek, Susanne ;
Obermaier, Bianca ;
Haecker, Hans ;
Paul, Robert ;
Haecker, Georg .
PLOS PATHOGENS, 2009, 5 (05)
[36]   How dying cells alert the immune system to danger [J].
Kono, Hajime ;
Rock, Kenneth L. .
NATURE REVIEWS IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 8 (04) :279-289
[37]   Inflammasome-Dependent Release of the Alarmin HMGB1 in Endotoxemia [J].
Lamkanfi, Mohamed ;
Sarkar, Anasuya ;
Vande Walle, Lieselotte ;
Vitari, Alberto C. ;
Amer, Amal O. ;
Wewers, Mark D. ;
Tracey, Kevin J. ;
Kanneganti, Thirumala-Devi ;
Dixit, Vishva M. .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2010, 185 (07) :4385-4392
[38]   High mobility group protein-1 inhibits phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils through binding to phosphatidylserine [J].
Liu, Gang ;
Wang, Jing ;
Park, Young-Jun ;
Tsuruta, Yuko ;
Lorne, Emmanuel F. ;
Zhao, Xia ;
Abraham, Edward .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 181 (06) :4240-4246
[39]   Anti-high mobility group box 1 monoclonal antibody ameliorates brain infarction induced by transient ischemia in rats [J].
Liu, Keyue ;
Mori, Shuji ;
Takahashi, Hideo K. ;
Tomono, Yasuko ;
Wake, Hidenori ;
Kanke, Toru ;
Sato, Yasuharu ;
Hiraga, Norihito ;
Adachi, Naoto ;
Yoshino, Tadashi ;
Nishibori, Masahiro .
FASEB JOURNAL, 2007, 21 (14) :3904-3916
[40]   Peroxynitrite induces HMGB1 release by cardiac cells in vitro and HMGB1 upregulation in the infarcted myocardium in vivo [J].
Loukili, Noureddine ;
Rosenblatt-Velin, Nathalie ;
Li, Jianhui ;
Clerc, Stephanie ;
Pacher, Pal ;
Feihl, Francois ;
Waeber, Bernard ;
Liaudet, Lucas .
CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH, 2011, 89 (03) :586-594