The Immune System Does Battle in the Intestines to Keep Bacteria in Check
Published:29 Mar.2023 Source:University of Pennsylvania
These two pathogens, as well as a third close cousin, Y. enterocolitica, which affects swine and can cause food-borne illness if people consume infected meat, have many traits in common, particularly their knack for interfering with the immune system's ability to respond to infection.
The plague pathogen is blood-borne and transmitted by infected fleas. Infection with the other two depends on ingestion. Yet the focus of much of the work in the field had been on interactions of Yersinia with lymphoid tissues, rather than the intestine. A new study of Y. pseudotuberculosis led by a team from Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine and published in Nature Microbiology demonstrates that, in response to infection, the host immune system forms small, walled-off lesions in the intestines called granulomas. It's the first time these organized collections of immune cells have been found in the intestines in response to Yersinia infections.
The team went on to show that monocytes, a type of immune cell, sustain these granulomas. Without them, the granulomas deteriorated, allowing the mice to be overtaken by Yersinia.
"Our data reveal a previously unappreciated site where Yersinia can colonize and the immune system is engaged," says Igor Brodsky, senior author on the work and a professor and chair of pathobiology at Penn Vet. "These granulomas form in order to control the bacterial infection in the intestines. And we show that if they don't form or fail to be maintained, the bacteria are able to overcome the control of the immune system and cause greater systemic infection."
The findings have implications for developing new therapies that leverage the host immune system, Brodsky says. A drug that harnessed the power of immune cells to not only keep Yersinia in check but to overcome its defenses, they say, could potentially eliminate the pathogen altogether.