4.6 Article

Neonatal Innate TLR-Mediated Responses Are Distinct from Those of Adults

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 183, Issue 11, Pages 7150-7160

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0901481

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health [N01 AI50023]
  2. AllerGen NCE [07-A1A, 07-B2B]
  3. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research
  4. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  5. Canadian Institutes for Health Research Training
  6. Sick-Kids Foundation
  7. Child and Family Research Institute (British Columbia)
  8. Women and Children's Health Research Institute (Alberta)
  9. Manitoba Institute of Child Health

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The human neonate and infant are unduly susceptible to infection with a wide variety of microbes. This susceptibility is thought to reflect differences from adults in innate and adaptive immunity, but the nature of these differences is incompletely characterized. The innate immune response directs the subsequent adaptive immune response after integrating information from TLRs and other environmental sensors. We set out to provide a comprehensive analysis defining differences in response to TLR ligation between human neonates and adults. In response to most TLR ligands, neonatal innate immune cells, including monocytes and conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells produced less IL-12p70 and IFN-alpha (and consequently induced less IFN-gamma), moderately less TNF-alpha, but as much or even more IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-23, and IL-10 than adult cells. At the single-cell level, neonatal innate cells generally, were less capable of producing multiple cytokines simultaneously, i.e., were less polyfunctional. Overall, our data suggest a robust if not enhanced capacity of the neonate vs the adult white-blood cell TLR-mediated response to support Th17- and Th2-type immunity, which promotes defense against extracellular pathogens, but a reduced capacity to support Th1-type responses, which promote defense against intracellular pathogens. The Journal of Immunology 2009, 183: 7150-7160.

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