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Cellular effectors mediating Th17-dependent
clearance of pneumococcal colonization in mice
Zhang Z, Clarke TB, Weiser JN.
(2009) J Clin Invest. 2009 119:1899-909
Microbial colonization of mucosal surfaces may be an initial
event in the progression to disease, and it is often a
transient process. For the extracellular pathogen Streptococcus
pneumoniae studied in a mouse model, nasopharyngeal carriage
is eliminated over a period of weeks and requires cellular
rather than humoral immunity. Here, we demonstrate that
primary infection led to TLR2-dependent recruitment of
monocyte/macrophages into the upper airway lumen, where
they engulfed pneumococci. Pharmacologic depletion of luminal
monocyte/macrophages by intranasal instillation of liposomal
clodronate diminished pneumococcal clearance. Efficient
clearance of colonization required TLR2 signaling to generate
a population of pneumococcal-specific IL-17-expressing
CD4+ T cells. Depletion of either IL-17A or CD4+ T cells
was sufficient to block the recruitment of monocyte/macrophages
that allowed for effective late pneumococcal clearance.
In contrast with naive mice, previously colonized mice
showed enhanced early clearance that correlated with a
more robust influx of luminal neutrophils. As for primary
colonization, these cellular responses required Th17 immunity.
Our findings demonstrate that monocyte/macrophages and
neutrophils recruited to the mucosal surface are key effectors
in clearing primary and secondary bacterial colonization,
respectively.
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