4.4 Article

Stages of meningococcal sepsis simulated in vitro, with emphasis on complement and Toll-like receptor activation

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 76, Issue 9, Pages 4183-4189

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00195-08

Keywords

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Funding

  1. The Regional Health Organization Helse Ost
  2. The Research Council of Norway
  3. The Research Council of Rikshospitalet University Hospital
  4. The Family Blix Foundation
  5. Anders Jahre's Fund [GM-62134, AI-068730]

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The clinical presentation of meningococcal disease is closely related to the number of meningococci in the circulation. This study aimed to examine the activation of the innate immune system after being exposed to increasing and clinically relevant concentrations of meningococci. We incubated representative Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B (ST-32) and serogroup C (ST-11) strains and a lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-deficient mutant (the 44/76 lpxA mutant) in human serum and whole blood and measured complement activation and cytokine secretion and the effect of blocking these systems. HEK293 cells transfected with Toll-like receptors (TLRs) were examined for activation of NF-kappa B. The threshold for cytokine secretion and activation of NF-kappa B was 103 to 104 meningococci/ml. LPS was the sole inflammation-inducing molecule at concentrations up to 105 to 106 meningococci/ml. The activation was dependent on TLR4-MD2-CD14. Complement contributed to the inflammatory response at >= 10(5) to 106 meningococci/ml, and complement activation increased exponentially at >= 10(7) bacteria/ml. Non-LPS components initiated TLR2-mediated activation at >= 10(7) bacteria/ml. As the bacterial concentration exceeded 10(7)/ml, TLR4 and TLR2 were increasingly activated, independent of CD14. In this model mimicking human disease, the inflammatory response to N. meningitidis was closely associated with the bacterial concentration. Therapeutically, CD14 inhibition alone was most efficient at a low bacterial concentration, whereas addition of a complement inhibitor may be beneficial when the bacterial load increases.

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