학술논문

Cathepsin L protects mice from mycoplasmal infection and is essential for airway lymphangiogenesis.
Document Type
article
Source
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology. 49(3)
Subject
Lung
Lymphatic Vessels
Animals
Mice
Mycoplasma pulmonis
Mycoplasma Infections
Acute Disease
Chronic Disease
Antibodies
Bacterial
Antigens
Bacterial
Severity of Illness Index
Survival Analysis
Gene Expression
Lymphangiogenesis
Interferon-gamma
Cathepsin L
Bacterial Load
cathepsin L
mycoplasma
pneumonia
bronchitis
lymphangiogenesis
Antibodies
Bacterial
Antigens
Respiratory System
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Language
Abstract
Cathepsin L (Ctsl) is a proposed therapeutic target to control inflammatory responses in a number of disease states. However, Ctsl is thought to support host defense via its involvement in antigen presentation pathways. Hypothesizing that Ctsl helps combat bacterial infection, we investigated its role in Mycoplasma pulmonis-infected mice as a model of acute and chronic infectious airway inflammation. Responses to the airway inoculation of mycoplasma were compared in Ctsl(-/-) and Ctsl(+/+) mice. After infection, Ctsl(-/-) mice demonstrated more body weight loss, greater mortality (22% versus 0%, respectively), and heavier lungs than Ctsl(+/+) mice, but had smaller bronchial lymph nodes. The burden of live mycoplasma in lungs was 247-fold greater in Ctsl(-/-) mice than in Ctsl(+/+) mice after infection for 3 days. Ctsl(-/-) mice exhibited more severe pneumonia and neutrophil-rich, airway-occlusive exudates, which developed more rapidly than in Ctsl(+/+) mice. Compared with the conspicuous remodeling of lymphatics after infection in Ctsl(+/+) mice, little lymphangiogenesis occurred in Ctsl(-/-) mice, but blood vessel remodeling and tissue inflammation were similarly severe. Titers of mycoplasma-reactive IgM, IgA, and IgG in blood in response to live and heat-killed organisms were similar to those in Ctsl(+/+) mice. However, enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot assays revealed profound reductions in the cellular IFN-γ response to mycoplasma antigen. These findings suggest that Ctsl helps contain mycoplasma infection by supporting lymphangiogenesis and cellular immune responses to infection, and our findings predict that the therapeutic inhibition of Ctsl could increase the severity of mycoplasmal infections.