4.5 Review

Immunomodulation therapy offers new molecular strategies to treat UTI

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS UROLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 7, Pages 419-437

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41585-022-00602-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Swedish Cancer Society
  3. HJ Forssman Foundations
  4. Medical Faculty (Lund University)
  5. osterlund
  6. Royal Physiographic Society
  7. Network of Excellence: Infect-ERA
  8. ALF grants from the Medical Faculty and Regional Laboratories (Labmedicin Skane)
  9. European Union [954360]

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Innovative solutions are needed for the treatment of bacterial infections and exploring the immune system for therapeutic strategies is a promising approach. However, the immune system has a dual role and excessive immune responses can cause disease. Modulating innate immunity shows promise as a therapy for urinary tract infections, but further research is required.
Innovative solutions are needed for the treatment of bacterial infections, and a range of antibacterial molecules have been explored as alternatives to antibiotics. A different approach is to investigate the immune system of the host for new ways of making the antibacterial defence more efficient. However, the immune system has a dual role as protector and cause of disease: in addition to being protective, increasing evidence shows that innate immune responses can become excessive and cause acute symptoms and tissue pathology during infection. This role of innate immunity in disease suggests that the immune system should be targeted therapeutically, to inhibit over-reactivity. The ultimate goal is to develop therapies that selectively attenuate destructive immune response cascades, while augmenting the protective antimicrobial defence but such treatment options have remained underexplored, owing to the molecular proximity of the protective and destructive effects of the immune response. The concept of innate immunomodulation therapy has been developed successfully in urinary tract infections, based on detailed studies of innate immune activation and disease pathogenesis. Effective, disease-specific, immunomodulatory strategies have been developed by targeting specific immune response regulators including key transcription factors. In acute pyelonephritis, targeting interferon regulatory factor 7 using small interfering RNA or treatment with antimicrobial peptide cathelicidin was protective and, in acute cystitis, targeting overactive effector molecules such as IL-1 beta, MMP7, COX2, cAMP and the pain-sensing receptor NK1R has been successful in vivo. Furthermore, other UTI treatment strategies, such as inhibiting bacterial adhesion and vaccination, have also shown promise. Hyperactivation of innate immunity is a disease determinant in urinary tract infections (UTIs). Modulation of innate immunity has promise as a therapy for UTIs. In this Review, the authors discuss potential mechanisms and immunomodulatory therapeutic strategies in UTIs.

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