Product Citations: 4

Leptospirosis is a globally neglected re-emerging zoonosis affecting all mammals, albeit with variable outcomes. Humans are susceptible to leptospirosis; infection with Leptospira interrogans species can cause severe disease in humans, with multi-organ failure, mainly affecting kidney, lung and liver function, leading to death in 10% of cases. Mice and rats are more resistant to acute disease and can carry leptospires asymptomatically in the kidneys and act as reservoirs, shedding leptospires into the environment. The incidence of leptospirosis is higher in tropical countries, and countries with poor sanitation, where heavy rainfall and flooding favour infection. Diagnosis of leptospirosis is difficult because of the many different serovars and the variety of clinical symptoms that can be confused with viral infections. The physiopathology is poorly understood, and leptospirosis is often regarded as an inflammatory disease, like sepsis.
To investigate the causes of death in lethal leptospirosis, we compared intraperitoneal infection of male and female C57BL6/J mice with 108Leptospira of two strains of pathogenic L. interrogans. One strain, L. interrogans Manilae L495, killed the mice 4 days after infection, whereas the other strain, L. interrogans Icterohaemorrhagiae Verdun, did not induce any major symptoms in the mice. On day 3 post infection, the mice were humanely euthanised and blood and organs were collected. Bacterial load, biochemical parameters, cytokine production and leucocyte population were assessed by qPCR, ELISA, cytometry and immunohistochemistry.
Neither lung, liver, pancreas or kidney damage nor massive necroptosis or cytokine storm could explain the lethality. Although we did not find pro-inflammatory cytokines, we did find elevated levels of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 and the chemokine RANTES in the serum and organs of Leptospira-infected mice. In contrast, severe leptospirosis was associated with neutrophilia and vascular permeability, unexpectedly due to neutrophils and not only due to Leptospira infection. Strikingly, the main cause of death was myocarditis, an overlooked complication of human leptospirosis.
Despite clinical similarities between bacterial sepsis and leptospirosis, striking differences were observed, in particular a lack of cytokine storm in acute leptospirosis. The fact that IL-10 was increased in infected mice may explain the lack of pro-inflammatory cytokines, emphasising the covert nature of Leptospira infections. Neutrophilia is a hallmark of human leptospirosis. Our findings confirm the ineffective control of infection by neutrophils and highlight their deleterious role in vascular permeability, previously only attributed to the ability of leptospires to damage and cross endothelial junctions. Finally, the identification of death due to myocarditis rather than kidney, liver or liver failure may reflect an overlooked but common symptom associated with poor prognosis in human leptospirosis. These features of neutrophilia and myocarditis are also seen in patients, making this mouse model a paradigm for better understanding human leptospirosis and designing new therapeutic strategies.
The Boneca laboratory was supported by the following programmes: Investissement d'Avenir program, Laboratoire d'Excellence "Integrative Biology of Emerging Infectious Diseases" (ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID) and by R&D grants from Danone and MEIJI. CW received an ICRAD/ANR grant (S-CR23012-ANR 22 ICRD 0004 01). SP received a scholarship by Université Paris Cité (formerly Université Paris V - Descartes) through Doctoral School BioSPC (ED562, BioSPC). SP has additionally received a scholarship "Fin de Thèse de Science" number FDT202404018322 granted by "Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale (FRM)". The funders had no implication in the design, analysis and reporting of the study.
Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  • Veterinary Research

Pathogenic Leptospires Limit Dendritic Cell Activation Through Avoidance of TLR4 and TRIF Signaling.

In Frontiers in Immunology on 12 July 2022 by Cagliero, J., Vernel-Pauillac, F., et al.

Leptospira interrogans is a bacterial species responsible for leptospirosis, a neglected worldwide zoonosis. Mice and rats are resistant and can become asymptomatic carriers, whereas humans and some other mammals may develop severe forms of leptospirosis. Uncommon among spirochetes, leptospires contain lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in their outer membrane. LPS is highly immunogenic and forms the basis for a large number of serovars. Vaccination with inactivated leptospires elicits a protective immunity, restricted to serovars with related LPS. This protection that lasts in mice, is not long lasting in humans and requires annual boosts. Leptospires are stealth pathogens that evade the complement system and some pattern recognition receptors from the Toll-like (TLR) and Nod-Like families, therefore limiting antibacterial defense. In macrophages, leptospires totally escape recognition by human TLR4, and escape the TRIF arm of the mouse TLR4 pathway. However, very little is known about the recognition and processing of leptospires by dendritic cells (DCs), although they are crucial cells linking innate and adaptive immunity. Here we tested the activation of primary DCs derived from human monocytes (MO-DCs) and mouse bone marrow (BM-DCs) 24h after stimulation with saprophytic or different pathogenic virulent or avirulent L. interrogans. We measured by flow cytometry the expression of DC-SIGN, a lectin involved in T-cell activation, co-stimulation molecules and MHC-II markers, and pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines by ELISA. We found that exposure to leptospires, live or heat-killed, activated dendritic cells. However, pathogenic L. interrogans, especially from the Icterohaemorraghiae Verdun strain, triggered less marker upregulation and less cytokine production than the saprophytic Leptospira biflexa. In addition, we showed a better activation with avirulent leptospires, when compared to the virulent parental strains in murine BM-DCs. We did not observe this difference in human MO-DCs, suggesting a role for TLR4 in DC stimulation. Accordingly, using BM-DCs from transgenic deficient mice, we showed that virulent Icterohaemorraghiae and Manilae serovars dampened DC activation, at least partly, through the TLR4 and TRIF pathways. This work shows a novel bacterial immune evasion mechanism to limit DC activation and further illustrates the role of the leptospiral LPS as a virulence factor.
Copyright © 2022 Cagliero, Vernel-Pauillac, Murray, Adler, Matsui and Werts.

  • Immunology and Microbiology

Batf3 selectively determines acquisition of CD8+ dendritic cell phenotype and function.

In Immunology and Cell Biology on 1 February 2017 by Chandra, J., Kuo, P. T., et al.

Batf3 is a transcription factor that impacts the development of CD103+ tissue-resident dendritic cells (DCs). However, whether Batf3 is absolutely required for the development of CD8+ DCs remains controversial. Id2 is required for CD8+ DC development. Here we show that bone marrow chimeric mice with a deletion of Id2 in the CD11c compartment lose the ability to reject a skin graft expressing a non-self protein antigen or mount a delayed hypersensitivity response. In contrast, Batf3-/- mice remained competent for skin graft rejection and delayed hypersensitivity, and retained a CD8+ DC population with markers characteristic of the CD11b+ DC lineage, including CD11b, CD4 and CD172α, as well as the key regulator transcription factor IRF4, but lacked IRF8 expression. CD8+ DCs in Batf3-/- mice took up and cleaved protein antigen and larger particles but were unable to phagocytose dying cells, a characteristic feature to the CD8+ DC lineage. These data clarify a requirement for CD8+ lineage DCs to induce effectors of neo-antigen-driven skin graft rejection, and improve our understanding of DC subtype commitment by demonstrating that in the absence of Batf3 CD8+ DCs can change their fate and become CD11b+ DCs.

  • FC/FACS
  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

A regulatory role for the C5a anaphylatoxin in type 2 immunity in asthma.

In The Journal of Clinical Investigation on 1 March 2006 by Köhl, J., Baelder, R., et al.

Complement component 5 (C5) has been described as either promoting or protecting against airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in experimental allergic asthma, suggesting pleomorphic effects of C5. Here we report that local pharmacological targeting of the C5a receptor (C5aR) prior to initial allergen sensitization in murine models of inhalation tolerance or allergic asthma resulted in either induction or marked enhancement of Th2-polarized immune responses, airway inflammation, and AHR. Importantly, C5aR-deficient mice exhibited a similar, increased allergic phenotype. Pulmonary allergen exposure in C5aR-targeted mice resulted in increased sensitization and accumulation of CD4+ CD69+ T cells associated with a marked increase in pulmonary myeloid, but not plasmacytoid, DC numbers. Pulmonary DCs from C5aR-targeted mice produced large amounts of CC chemokine ligand 17 (CCL17) and CCL22 ex vivo, suggesting a negative impact of C5aR signaling on pulmonary homing of Th2 cells. In contrast, C5aR targeting in sensitized mice led to suppressed airway inflammation and AHR but was still associated with enhanced production of Th2 effector cytokines. These data suggest a dual role for C5a in allergic asthma, i.e., protection from the development of maladaptive type 2 immune responses during allergen sensitization at the DC/T cell interface but enhancement of airway inflammation and AHR in an established inflammatory environment.

  • Immunology and Microbiology
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