The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection

2017
Authors
Filipović, AnaGhasemian, Ehsan

Inić-Kanada, Aleksandra

Lukić, Ivana

Stein, Elisabeth

Marinković, Emilija
Đokić, Radmila

Kosanović, Dejana

Schuerer, Nadine

Chalabi, Hadeel
Belij-Rammerstorfer, Sandra

Stojanović, Marijana

Barisani-Asenbauer, Talin

Article (Published version)
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Following infection, the balance between protective immunity and immunopathology often depends on the initial infectious load. Several studies have investigated the effect of infectious dose; however, the mechanism by which infectious dose affects disease outcomes and the development of a protective immune response is not known. The aim of this study was to investigate how the infectious dose modulates the local and systemic humoral and the cellular immune responses during primary ocular chlamydial infection in the guinea pig animal model. Guinea pigs were infected by ocular instillation of a Chlamydophila caviae-containing eye solution in the conjunctival sac in three different doses: 1x10(2), 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) inclusion forming units (IFUs). Ocular pathology, chlamydial clearance, local and systemic C. caviae-specific humoral and cellular immune responses were assessed. All inocula of C. caviae significantly enhanced the local production of C. caviae-specific IgA in tears, but onl...y guinea pigs infected with the higher doses showed significant changes in C. caviae-specific IgA levels in vaginal washes and serum. On complete resolution of infection, the low dose of C. caviae did not alter the ratio of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within guinea pigs' submandibular lymph node (SMLN) lymphocytes while the higher doses increased the percentages of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within the SMLN lymphocytes. A significant negative correlation between pathology intensity and the percentage of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within SMLN lymphocyte pool at selected time points post-infection was recorded for both 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) IFU infected guinea pigs. The relevance of the observed dose-dependent differences on the immune response should be further investigated in repeated ocular chlamydial infections.
Source:
PLoS One, 2017, 12, 7Publisher:
- Public Library Science, San Francisco
Funding / projects:
- Laura Bassi Centers of Expertise (FFG) [822768] - Austrian Research Promotion Agency
- Allergens, antibodies, enzymes and small physiologically important molecules: design, structure, function and relevance (RS-172049)
- OeAD - die osterreichische Agentur fur internationale Mobilitat und Kooperation in Bildung, Wissensc
- 451-03-01039/2015-09/04
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180551
ISSN: 1932-6203
PubMed: 28678871
WoS: 000405272200073
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85022080375
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TorlakTY - JOUR AU - Filipović, Ana AU - Ghasemian, Ehsan AU - Inić-Kanada, Aleksandra AU - Lukić, Ivana AU - Stein, Elisabeth AU - Marinković, Emilija AU - Đokić, Radmila AU - Kosanović, Dejana AU - Schuerer, Nadine AU - Chalabi, Hadeel AU - Belij-Rammerstorfer, Sandra AU - Stojanović, Marijana AU - Barisani-Asenbauer, Talin PY - 2017 UR - http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/477 AB - Following infection, the balance between protective immunity and immunopathology often depends on the initial infectious load. Several studies have investigated the effect of infectious dose; however, the mechanism by which infectious dose affects disease outcomes and the development of a protective immune response is not known. The aim of this study was to investigate how the infectious dose modulates the local and systemic humoral and the cellular immune responses during primary ocular chlamydial infection in the guinea pig animal model. Guinea pigs were infected by ocular instillation of a Chlamydophila caviae-containing eye solution in the conjunctival sac in three different doses: 1x10(2), 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) inclusion forming units (IFUs). Ocular pathology, chlamydial clearance, local and systemic C. caviae-specific humoral and cellular immune responses were assessed. All inocula of C. caviae significantly enhanced the local production of C. caviae-specific IgA in tears, but only guinea pigs infected with the higher doses showed significant changes in C. caviae-specific IgA levels in vaginal washes and serum. On complete resolution of infection, the low dose of C. caviae did not alter the ratio of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within guinea pigs' submandibular lymph node (SMLN) lymphocytes while the higher doses increased the percentages of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within the SMLN lymphocytes. A significant negative correlation between pathology intensity and the percentage of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within SMLN lymphocyte pool at selected time points post-infection was recorded for both 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) IFU infected guinea pigs. The relevance of the observed dose-dependent differences on the immune response should be further investigated in repeated ocular chlamydial infections. PB - Public Library Science, San Francisco T2 - PLoS One T1 - The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection IS - 7 VL - 12 DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0180551 ER -
@article{ author = "Filipović, Ana and Ghasemian, Ehsan and Inić-Kanada, Aleksandra and Lukić, Ivana and Stein, Elisabeth and Marinković, Emilija and Đokić, Radmila and Kosanović, Dejana and Schuerer, Nadine and Chalabi, Hadeel and Belij-Rammerstorfer, Sandra and Stojanović, Marijana and Barisani-Asenbauer, Talin", year = "2017", abstract = "Following infection, the balance between protective immunity and immunopathology often depends on the initial infectious load. Several studies have investigated the effect of infectious dose; however, the mechanism by which infectious dose affects disease outcomes and the development of a protective immune response is not known. The aim of this study was to investigate how the infectious dose modulates the local and systemic humoral and the cellular immune responses during primary ocular chlamydial infection in the guinea pig animal model. Guinea pigs were infected by ocular instillation of a Chlamydophila caviae-containing eye solution in the conjunctival sac in three different doses: 1x10(2), 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) inclusion forming units (IFUs). Ocular pathology, chlamydial clearance, local and systemic C. caviae-specific humoral and cellular immune responses were assessed. All inocula of C. caviae significantly enhanced the local production of C. caviae-specific IgA in tears, but only guinea pigs infected with the higher doses showed significant changes in C. caviae-specific IgA levels in vaginal washes and serum. On complete resolution of infection, the low dose of C. caviae did not alter the ratio of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within guinea pigs' submandibular lymph node (SMLN) lymphocytes while the higher doses increased the percentages of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within the SMLN lymphocytes. A significant negative correlation between pathology intensity and the percentage of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells within SMLN lymphocyte pool at selected time points post-infection was recorded for both 1x10(4), and 1x10(6) IFU infected guinea pigs. The relevance of the observed dose-dependent differences on the immune response should be further investigated in repeated ocular chlamydial infections.", publisher = "Public Library Science, San Francisco", journal = "PLoS One", title = "The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection", number = "7", volume = "12", doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0180551" }
Filipović, A., Ghasemian, E., Inić-Kanada, A., Lukić, I., Stein, E., Marinković, E., Đokić, R., Kosanović, D., Schuerer, N., Chalabi, H., Belij-Rammerstorfer, S., Stojanović, M.,& Barisani-Asenbauer, T.. (2017). The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection. in PLoS One Public Library Science, San Francisco., 12(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180551
Filipović A, Ghasemian E, Inić-Kanada A, Lukić I, Stein E, Marinković E, Đokić R, Kosanović D, Schuerer N, Chalabi H, Belij-Rammerstorfer S, Stojanović M, Barisani-Asenbauer T. The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection. in PLoS One. 2017;12(7). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0180551 .
Filipović, Ana, Ghasemian, Ehsan, Inić-Kanada, Aleksandra, Lukić, Ivana, Stein, Elisabeth, Marinković, Emilija, Đokić, Radmila, Kosanović, Dejana, Schuerer, Nadine, Chalabi, Hadeel, Belij-Rammerstorfer, Sandra, Stojanović, Marijana, Barisani-Asenbauer, Talin, "The effect of infectious dose on humoral and cellular immune responses in Chlamydophila caviae primary ocular infection" in PLoS One, 12, no. 7 (2017), https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180551 . .