4.6 Article

Flagellin suppresses epithelial apoptosis and limits disease during enteric infection

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 169, Issue 5, Pages 1686-1700

Publisher

AMER SOC INVESTIGATIVE PATHOLOGY, INC
DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2006.060345

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI51282, R01 AI051282] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK071604, DK061417, R01 DK061417, R24 DK064399, DK071604] Funding Source: Medline

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Flagellin, the primary component of bacterial flagella, is a potent activator of toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) signaling and is a major proinflammatory determinant of enteropathogenic Salmonella. In accordance with this, we report here that aflagellate Salmonella mutants are impaired in their ability to upregulate proinflammatory and anti-apoptotic effector molecules in murine models of salmonellosis and that these mutants elicit markedly reduced early mucosal inflammation relative to their isogenic parent strains. Conversely, aflagellate bacteria were more potent activators of epithelial caspases and subsequent apoptosis. These phenomena correlated with a delayed but markedly exacerbated mucosal inflammation at the later stages of infection as well as elevated extraintestinal and systemic bacterial load, culminating in a more severe clinical outcome. Systemic administration of exogenous flagellin primarily reversed the deleterious effects of in vivo Salmonella infection. These observations indicate that in Salmonella infection, flagellin plays a dominant role in activation of not only innate immunity but also anti-apoptotic processes in epithelial cells. These latter TLR-mediated responses that delay epithelial apoptosis may be as critical to mucosal defense as the classic acute inflammatory response. This notion is consistent with the emerging paradigm that specific TLR ligands; may have a fundamental cytoprotective effect during inflammatory stress.

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