INVESTIGADORES
SALVA Maria Susana
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Immunobiotic Lactobacillus strains reduce small intestinal injury induced by intraepithelial lymphocytes after toll-like receptor 3 activation
Autor/es:
ZELAYA, HORTENSIA; TADA, ASUKA; CLUA, PATRICIA; SALVA, SUSANA; ALVAREZ, SUSANA; KITASAWA, HARUKI; VILLENA, JULIO
Lugar:
Buenos Aires
Reunión:
Congreso; IV LASID Meeting-LXIII Argentinean Society for Immunology Meeting-II French-Argentinean Immunology Meeting; 2015
Institución organizadora:
Sociedad Argentina de Inmunología
Resumen:
Background: intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) play critical roles in disrupting epitelial homeostasis after TLR3 activation with genomic rotavirus dsRNA or the synthetic dsRNA analog poly(I:C). The capacity of immnunobiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus CRL1505 (Lr05) or Lactobacillus plantarum CRL1506 (Lp06) to beneficilly modulate IELs response after TLR3 activation was investigated.Methods: L05 or Lp06 mice were administered to different groups of adult BALB/c mice in the drinking water. The treated groups and the untreated control group were them injected intraperitoneally with poly(I:C). Intestinal tissue damage and innate immune response were studied.Results: poly(I:C) induced inflammatory-mediated intestinal tissue damage through the increase of inflammatory cells (CD3+NK1.1+, CD3+CD8aa+, CD8aa+NKG2D+) and proinflammatory mediators (TNF-a,IL-1b, INF-g, IL-15, RAE1, IL-8). Increased expression of intestinal TLR3, MDA5 and RIG-I were also observed after poly(I:C) challenge. Treatment with Lr05 or Lp06 prior to TLR3 activation significantly reduced the levels of TNF-a, IL-15, RAE1, and increased serum and intestinal IL-10. CD3+NK1.1+, CD3+CD8aa+, and CD8aa+NKG2D+ cells were also lower in lactobacilli treated mice. The immunomodulatory capacities of lactobacilli allowed a significant reduction of intestinal tissue damage.Conclusions: this work is the first demostration of the reduction of TLR3-mediated intestinal tissue injury by immunobiotic lactobacilli through the modulation of intraepithelial lymphocytes response. It is a step forward in the understanding of the cellular mechanisms involved in the antiviral capabilities of immunobiotic strains.