Myeloid cell-specific type I interferon signaling mediates age-dependent inflammation and protection in Bordetella pertussis infection
Amit Kumar, Alicia Bukowski, Nicholas H. Carbonetti

TL;DR
This study shows how type I interferon signaling in myeloid cells affects inflammation and protection during whooping cough in mice, with age-specific differences.
Contribution
The study reveals a novel LPAR1-dependent pathway for IFN-λ induction in the absence of type I IFN signaling during B. pertussis infection.
Findings
Myeloid cell-specific IFNAR1 deficiency reduces lung inflammation and cytokine production in adult mice.
Infant mice lacking IFNAR1 in myeloid cells remain highly susceptible to B. pertussis infection through postnatal day 21.
IFNAR1-deficient macrophages produce IFN-λ in response to B. pertussis, dependent on LPAR1.
Abstract
Type I interferons (IFNs) play complex roles during bacterial infections. We previously found that type I IFNs were induced in Bordetella pertussis-infected adult mice but not in infant mice, a potentially relevant clinical dichotomy, since pertussis can be fatal in human infants. We investigated the role of type I IFNs and their cross-regulation with type III IFNs (IFN-λ) in B. pertussis infection across developmental stages. In contrast to global IFNAR1 knockout adult mice, in which lung inflammation was equivalent to that in wild-type mice, myeloid cell-specific deficiency of the type I IFN receptor protein IFNAR1 (LysMCreIFNAR1fl/fl) resulted in significantly reduced lung inflammation and pro-inflammatory cytokine production, despite elevated pulmonary IFN-λ levels. Mechanistically, we found that, in contrast to WT macrophages, IFNAR1-deficient macrophages produced IFN-λ in response…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImmune Response and Inflammation · interferon and immune responses · Bacterial Infections and Vaccines
