[HTML][HTML] Neutrophil-derived IL-1β Is Sufficient for Abscess Formation in Immunity against Staphylococcus aureus in Mice

JS Cho, Y Guo, RI Ramos, F Hebroni, SB Plaisier… - PLoS …, 2012 - journals.plos.org
JS Cho, Y Guo, RI Ramos, F Hebroni, SB Plaisier, C Xuan, JL Granick, H Matsushima…
PLoS pathogens, 2012journals.plos.org
Neutrophil abscess formation is critical in innate immunity against many pathogens. Here,
the mechanism of neutrophil abscess formation was investigated using a mouse model of
Staphylococcus aureus cutaneous infection. Gene expression analysis and in vivo
multispectral noninvasive imaging during the S. aureus infection revealed a strong
functional and temporal association between neutrophil recruitment and IL-1β/IL-1R
activation. Unexpectedly, neutrophils but not monocytes/macrophages or other MHCII …
Neutrophil abscess formation is critical in innate immunity against many pathogens. Here, the mechanism of neutrophil abscess formation was investigated using a mouse model of Staphylococcus aureus cutaneous infection. Gene expression analysis and in vivo multispectral noninvasive imaging during the S. aureus infection revealed a strong functional and temporal association between neutrophil recruitment and IL-1β/IL-1R activation. Unexpectedly, neutrophils but not monocytes/macrophages or other MHCII-expressing antigen presenting cells were the predominant source of IL-1β at the site of infection. Furthermore, neutrophil-derived IL-1β was essential for host defense since adoptive transfer of IL-1β-expressing neutrophils was sufficient to restore the impaired neutrophil abscess formation in S. aureus-infected IL-1β-deficient mice. S. aureus-induced IL-1β production by neutrophils required TLR2, NOD2, FPR1 and the ASC/NLRP3 inflammasome in an α-toxin-dependent mechanism. Taken together, IL-1β and neutrophil abscess formation during an infection are functionally, temporally and spatially linked as a consequence of direct IL-1β production by neutrophils.
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