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Successive influenza virus infection and Streptococcus pneumoniae stimulation alter human dendritic cell function
Authors
A Boonstra
A Didierlaurent
+49 more
AM LeVine
C-L Small
Centre of Disease Control and Prevention
D Xie
D Xie
DM Morens
DM Morens
G Engelich
G Qin
H Kono
H Mao
Huawei Mao
I Moret
IC Michelow
J Brundage
J Brundage
J Colino
J Savill
J Zheng
J Zheng
JA McCullers
JA McCullers
K Grabowska
K Klugman
Kin-Hung Chow
KL O'Brien
KL Rock
KP Klugman
KP Klugman
M Grayson
M Littmann
Man-To Ling
MW Smith
N Bhat
N Noske
ND Walter
Pak-Leung Ho
Q Huang
R Gupta
SA Madhi
SS Diebold
VM Borges
W Tu
W Tu
W-K Ip
Wenwei Tu
Y-W Chien
Yu-Lung Lau
Yuet Wu
Publication date
1 January 2011
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: Influenza virus is a major cause of respiratory disease worldwide and Streptococcus pneumoniae infection associated with influenza often leads to severe complications. Dendritic cells are key antigen presenting cells but its role in such co-infection is unclear.Methods: In this study, human monocyte derived-dentritic cells were either concurrently or successively challenged with the combination of live influenza virus and heat killed pneumococcus to mimic the viral pneumococcal infection. Dendritic cell viability, phenotypic maturation and cytokine production were then examined.Results: The challenge of influenza virus and pneumococcus altered dendritic cell functions dependent on the time interval between the successive challenge of influenza virus and pneumococcus, as well as the doses of pneumococcus. When dendritic cells were exposed to pneumococcus at 6 hr, but not 0 hr nor 24 hr after influenza virus infection, both virus and pneumococcus treated dendritic cells had greater cell apoptosis and expressed higher CD83 and CD86 than dendritic cells infected with influenza virus alone. Dendritic cells produced pro-inflammatory cytokines: TNF-α, IL-12 and IFN-γ synergistically to the successive viral and pneumococcal challenge. Whereas prior influenza virus infection suppressed the IL-10 response independent of the timing of the subsequent pneumococcal stimulation.Conclusions: Our results demonstrated that successive challenge of dendritic cells with influenza virus and pneumococcus resulted in synergistic up-regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines with simultaneous down-regulation of anti-inflammatory cytokine, which may explain the immuno-pathogenesis of this important co-infection. © 2011 Wu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.published_or_final_versio
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oai:hub.hku.hk:10722/139573
Last time updated on 01/06/2016
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info:doi/10.1186%2F1471-2334-1...
Last time updated on 19/02/2019