Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation
Leishmania parasites are the causative agents of human leishmaniases. They infect professional phagocytes of their mammalian hosts, including dendritic cells (DCs) that are essential for the initiation of adaptive immune responses. These immune functions strictly depend on the DC's capacity to...
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Frontiers Media S.A.
2020-06-01
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Online Access: | https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01098/full |
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Article |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Thibault Rosazza Thibault Rosazza Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Hugo Varet Jean-Yves Coppée Arezou Lari Pierre-Henri Commère Robert Weil Guangxun Meng Guangxun Meng Genevieve Milon Gerald F. Späth Gerald F. Späth Eric Prina Eric Prina |
spellingShingle |
Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Thibault Rosazza Thibault Rosazza Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Hugo Varet Jean-Yves Coppée Arezou Lari Pierre-Henri Commère Robert Weil Guangxun Meng Guangxun Meng Genevieve Milon Gerald F. Späth Gerald F. Späth Eric Prina Eric Prina Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation Frontiers in Immunology dendritic cell Leishmania amazonensis amastigote transcription factor NF-κB NLRP3 |
author_facet |
Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Hervé Lecoeur Thibault Rosazza Thibault Rosazza Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Kossiwa Kokou Hugo Varet Jean-Yves Coppée Arezou Lari Pierre-Henri Commère Robert Weil Guangxun Meng Guangxun Meng Genevieve Milon Gerald F. Späth Gerald F. Späth Eric Prina Eric Prina |
author_sort |
Hervé Lecoeur |
title |
Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation |
title_short |
Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation |
title_full |
Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation |
title_fullStr |
Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall Maturation |
title_sort |
leishmania amazonensis subverts the transcription factor landscape in dendritic cells to avoid inflammasome activation and stall maturation |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Immunology |
issn |
1664-3224 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Leishmania parasites are the causative agents of human leishmaniases. They infect professional phagocytes of their mammalian hosts, including dendritic cells (DCs) that are essential for the initiation of adaptive immune responses. These immune functions strictly depend on the DC's capacity to differentiate from immature, antigen-capturing cells to mature, antigen-presenting cells—a process accompanied by profound changes in cellular phenotype and expression profile. Only little is known on how intracellular Leishmania affects this important process and DC transcriptional regulation. Here, we investigate these important open questions analyzing phenotypic, cytokine profile and transcriptomic changes in murine, immature bone marrow-derived DCs (iBMDCs) infected with antibody-opsonized and non-opsonized Leishmania amazonensis (L.am) amastigotes. DCs infected by non-opsonized amastigotes remained phenotypically immature whereas those infected by opsonized parasites displayed a semi-mature phenotype. The low frequency of infected DCs in culture led us to use DsRed2-transgenic parasites allowing for the enrichment of infected BMDCs by FACS. Sorted infected DCs were then subjected to transcriptomic analyses using Affymetrix GeneChip technology. Independent of parasite opsonization, Leishmania infection induced expression of genes related to key DC processes involved in MHC Class I-restricted antigen presentation and alternative NF-κB activation. DCs infected by non-opsonized parasites maintained an immature phenotype and showed a small but significant down-regulation of gene expression related to pro-inflammatory TLR signaling, the canonical NF-kB pathway and the NLRP3 inflammasome. This transcriptomic profile was further enhanced in DCs infected with opsonized parasites that displayed a semi-mature phenotype despite absence of inflammasome activation. This paradoxical DC phenotype represents a Leishmania-specific signature, which to our knowledge has not been observed with other opsonized infectious agents. In conclusion, systems-analyses of our transcriptomics data uncovered important and previously unappreciated changes in the DC transcription factor landscape, thus revealing a novel Leishmania immune subversion strategy directly acting on transcriptional control of gene expression. Our data raise important questions on the dynamic and reciprocal interplay between trans-acting and epigenetic regulators in establishing permissive conditions for intracellular Leishmania infection and polarization of the immune response. |
topic |
dendritic cell Leishmania amazonensis amastigote transcription factor NF-κB NLRP3 |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01098/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
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doaj-c15b5a0f1de84692ba3a78623bdbd5b22020-11-25T02:51:30ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242020-06-011110.3389/fimmu.2020.01098538541Leishmania amazonensis Subverts the Transcription Factor Landscape in Dendritic Cells to Avoid Inflammasome Activation and Stall MaturationHervé Lecoeur0Hervé Lecoeur1Hervé Lecoeur2Thibault Rosazza3Thibault Rosazza4Kossiwa Kokou5Kossiwa Kokou6Kossiwa Kokou7Hugo Varet8Jean-Yves Coppée9Arezou Lari10Pierre-Henri Commère11Robert Weil12Guangxun Meng13Guangxun Meng14Genevieve Milon15Gerald F. Späth16Gerald F. Späth17Eric Prina18Eric Prina19Institut Pasteur, INSERM U1201, Unité de Parasitologie Moléculaire et Signalisation, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FrancePasteur Institute of Shanghai, Innate Immunity Unit, Key Laboratory of Molecular Virology and Immunology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, ChinaPasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur, INSERM U1201, Unité de Parasitologie Moléculaire et Signalisation, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FrancePasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur, INSERM U1201, Unité de Parasitologie Moléculaire et Signalisation, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FrancePasteur Institute of Shanghai, Innate Immunity Unit, Key Laboratory of Molecular Virology and Immunology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, ChinaPasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceHub de Bioinformatique et Biostatistique – Département Biologie Computationnelle, Institut Pasteur, USR 3756 CNRS, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur - Transcriptome and Epigenome Platform - Biomics Pole - C2RT, Paris, FranceSystems Biomedicine Unit, Institut Pasteur of Iran, Teheran, IranInstitut Pasteur, Plate-Forme de Cytométrie, Paris, FranceSorbonne Universités, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (Inserm, UMR1135), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS, ERL8255), Centre d'Immunologie et des Maladies Infectieuses CIMI, Paris, FrancePasteur Institute of Shanghai, Innate Immunity Unit, Key Laboratory of Molecular Virology and Immunology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, ChinaPasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur, Laboratoire Immunophysiologie et Parasitisme, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur, INSERM U1201, Unité de Parasitologie Moléculaire et Signalisation, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FrancePasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceInstitut Pasteur, INSERM U1201, Unité de Parasitologie Moléculaire et Signalisation, Département des Parasites et Insectes Vecteurs, Paris, FrancePasteur International Unit “Inflammation and Leishmania Infection”, Paris, FranceLeishmania parasites are the causative agents of human leishmaniases. They infect professional phagocytes of their mammalian hosts, including dendritic cells (DCs) that are essential for the initiation of adaptive immune responses. These immune functions strictly depend on the DC's capacity to differentiate from immature, antigen-capturing cells to mature, antigen-presenting cells—a process accompanied by profound changes in cellular phenotype and expression profile. Only little is known on how intracellular Leishmania affects this important process and DC transcriptional regulation. Here, we investigate these important open questions analyzing phenotypic, cytokine profile and transcriptomic changes in murine, immature bone marrow-derived DCs (iBMDCs) infected with antibody-opsonized and non-opsonized Leishmania amazonensis (L.am) amastigotes. DCs infected by non-opsonized amastigotes remained phenotypically immature whereas those infected by opsonized parasites displayed a semi-mature phenotype. The low frequency of infected DCs in culture led us to use DsRed2-transgenic parasites allowing for the enrichment of infected BMDCs by FACS. Sorted infected DCs were then subjected to transcriptomic analyses using Affymetrix GeneChip technology. Independent of parasite opsonization, Leishmania infection induced expression of genes related to key DC processes involved in MHC Class I-restricted antigen presentation and alternative NF-κB activation. DCs infected by non-opsonized parasites maintained an immature phenotype and showed a small but significant down-regulation of gene expression related to pro-inflammatory TLR signaling, the canonical NF-kB pathway and the NLRP3 inflammasome. This transcriptomic profile was further enhanced in DCs infected with opsonized parasites that displayed a semi-mature phenotype despite absence of inflammasome activation. This paradoxical DC phenotype represents a Leishmania-specific signature, which to our knowledge has not been observed with other opsonized infectious agents. In conclusion, systems-analyses of our transcriptomics data uncovered important and previously unappreciated changes in the DC transcription factor landscape, thus revealing a novel Leishmania immune subversion strategy directly acting on transcriptional control of gene expression. Our data raise important questions on the dynamic and reciprocal interplay between trans-acting and epigenetic regulators in establishing permissive conditions for intracellular Leishmania infection and polarization of the immune response.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01098/fulldendritic cellLeishmania amazonensisamastigotetranscription factorNF-κBNLRP3 |