Dendritic cells (DCs) carry antigen from peripheral tissues via lymphatics to lymph nodes. We report here that differentiated DCs can also travel from the periphery into the blood. Circulating DCs migrated to the spleen, liver and lung but not lymph nodes. They also homed to the bone marrow, where they were retained better than in most other tissues. Homing of DCs to the bone marrow depended on constitutively expressed vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 and endothelial selectins in bone marrow microvessels. Two-photon intravital microscopy in bone marrow cavities showed that DCs formed stable antigen-dependent contacts with bone marrow-resident central memory T cells. Moreover, using this previously unknown migratory pathway, antigen-pulsed DCs were able to trigger central memory T cell-mediated recall responses in the bone marrow.
The enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium induces apoptosis in infected macrophages. This process is rapid, specific, and depends on the type III protein secretion system encoded within Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1). Here, we demonstrate that serotype Typhimurium can activate programmed macrophage cell death independently of SPI1. SPI1 independent induction of apoptosis in infected macrophages is observed as early as 12 to 13 h postinfection, even in the absence of intracellular bacterial replication. Delayed activation of programmed macrophage cell death is not observed with serotype Typhimurium strains mutated in ompR or SPI2. Even though SPI2 mutants have a defect in intracellular proliferation, our results indicate that long-term intracellular survival and growth are not required for delayed macrophage killing per se, since Salmonella mutants that are severely defective in intracellular growth still induce delayed apoptosis. Inactivation of genes required for either rapid or delayed induction of apoptosis results in a conditional noncytotoxic phenotype, whereas simultaneous inactivation of genes required for both rapid and delayed induction of apoptosis renders serotype Typhimurium noncytotoxic under all conditions tested. Our hypothesis is that differential activation of programmed macrophage cell death by serotype Typhimurium occurs under discrete physiological conditions at distinct locations within an infected host.
Dendritic cells provide a critical link between innate and acquired immunity. In this study, we demonstrate that the bacterial pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium can efficiently kill these professional phagocytes via a mechanism that is dependent on sipB and the Salmonella pathogenicity island 1-encoded type III protein secretion system. Rapid phosphatidylserine redistribution, caspase activation, and loss of plasma membrane integrity were characteristic of dendritic cells infected with wild-type Salmonella, but not sipB mutant bacteria. Caspase-1 was particularly important in this process because Salmonella-induced dendritic cell death was dramatically reduced in the presence of a caspase-1-specific inhibitor. Furthermore, dendritic cells obtained from caspase-1-deficient mice, but not heterozygous littermate control mice, were resistant to Salmonella-induced cytotoxicity. We hypothesize that Salmonella have evolved the ability to selectively kill professional APCs to combat, exploit, or evade immune defense mechanisms.
Only certain serotypes of Salmonella represent 99% of all human clinical isolates. We determined whether the phylogenetic distribution of fimbrial operons would account for the host adaptations observed for Salmonella serotypes. We found that three fimbrial operons, fim, lpf, and agf, were present in a lineage ancestral to Salmonella. While the fim and agf fimbrial operons were highly conserved among all Salmonella serotypes, sequence analysis suggested that the lpf operon was lost from many distantly related lineages. As a consequence, the distribution of the lpf operon cannot be explained easily and may be a consequence of positive and negative selection in different hosts for the presence of these genes. Two other fimbrial operons, sef and pef, each entered two distantly related Salmonella lineages and each is present only in a small number of serotypes. These results show that horizontal gene transfer and deletion events have created unique combinations of fimbrial operons among Salmonella serotypes. The presence of sef and pef correlated with serotypes frequently isolated from common domesticated animals.The genus Salmonella and the species Escherichia coli are phylogenetically closely related, diverging from a common ancestor between 100 and 160 million years ago (21, 40). The gene order on the chromosome has been highly conserved between these two organisms (45), and corresponding genes have an average of 84% sequence identity (50). These properties make E. coli and the genus Salmonella a unique pair with which to identify evolutionary changes in genomes. A comparison of the genetic map of E. coli K-12 with that of serotype Salmonella typhimurium, which identified some 30 large DNA segments present only in one of these organisms, provided the first evidence that horizontal gene transfer mediated by plasmids or phage was a major driving force during the evolution of these bacteria (45). The genetic material received by the genus Salmonella by way of horizontal gene transfer includes several segments encoding virulence factors. The transferred DNA may vary in size from large genetic elements, such as the pathogenicity islands SPI 1 (34) and SPI 2 (51), phage (38), and virulence plasmids (27), to fimbrial operons located on the chromosome (5), or even single genes inserted in a housekeeping operon (52). Although acquisition of these virulence genes has significantly influenced the evolution of Salmonella serotypes, little is known about their ancestry. The first step in understanding how these virulence factors contributed to shape this successful pathogen is to determine the point in evolution when they were acquired.The classification of the genus Salmonella into serotypes according to the Kauffmann and White scheme is not particularly useful for evolutionary studies since it is based on three surface markers and therefore does not provide a good basis for estimating genetic relatedness among strains (43). The inherent weakness of this system was pointed out by Selander and coworkers, who showed by multilo...
SUMMARY Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium avoids clearance by the host immune system by suppressing T cell responses; however, the mechanisms that mediate this immunosuppression remain unknown. We show that S. Typhimurium inhibit T cell responses by producing L-Asparaginase II, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of L-asparagine to aspartic acid and ammonia. L-Asparaginase II is necessary and sufficient to suppress T cell blastogenesis, cytokine production, and proliferation and to downmodulate expression of the T cell receptor. Furthermore, S. Typhimurium-induced inhibition of T cells in vitro is prevented upon addition of L-asparagine. S. Typhimurium lacking the L-Asparaginase II gene (STM3106) are unable to inhibit T cell responses and exhibit attenuated virulence in vivo. L-Asparaginases are used to treat acute lymphoblastic leukemia through mechanisms that likely involve amino acid starvation of leukemic cells, and these findings indicate that pathogens similarly use L-asparagine deprivation to limit T cell responses.
Mechanism-based probes are providing new tools to evaluate the enzymatic activities of protein families in complex mixtures and to assign protein function. The application of these chemical probes for the visualization of protein labeling in cells and proteomic analysis is still challenging. As a consequence, imaging and proteomic analysis often require different sets of chemical probes. Here we describe a mechanism-based probe, azido-E-64, that can be used for both imaging and proteomics. Azido-E-64 covalently modifies active Cathepsin (Cat) B in living cells, an abundant cysteine protease involved in microbial infections, apoptosis, and cancer. Furthermore, azido-E-64 contains an azide chemical handle that can be selectively derivatized with phosphine reagents via the Staudinger ligation, which enables the imaging and proteomic analysis of Cat B. We have utilized azido-E-64 to visualize active Cat B during infection of primary macrophages with Salmonella typhimurium , an facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen. These studies demonstrated that active Cat B is specifically excluded from Salmonella -containing vacuoles, which suggests that inhibition of protease activity within bacteria-containing vacuoles may contribute to bacterial virulence.
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