Cellular Immune Response against Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae Infecting the Preinflamed Middle Ear of the Junbo Mouse [Host Response and Inflammation]

Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is a major pathogen causing acute otitis media (AOM). The pathology of AOM increases during long-term infection in the middle ear (ME), but the host cellular immune response to bacterial infection in this inflamed environment is poorly understood. Using the Junbo mouse, a characterized NTHi infection model, we analyzed the cellular response to NTHi infection in the Junbo mouse middle ear fluid (MEF). NTHi infection increased the total cell number and significantly decreased the proportion of live cells in the MEF at day 1, and this further decreased gradually on each day up to day 7. Flow cytometry analysis showed that neutrophils were the dominant immune cell population in the MEF and that NTHi infection significantly increased their proportion whereas it decreased the monocyte, macrophage, and dendritic cell proportions. Neutrophil and macrophage numbers increased in blood and spleen after NTHi infection. The T-cell population was dominated by T-helper (Th) cells in noninoculated MEF, and the effector Th (CD44+) cell population increased at day 2 of NTHi infection with an increase in IL-12p40 levels. Sustained NTHi infection up to 3 days increased the transforming growth factor β levels, decreasing the effector cell population and increasing the T-regulatory (T-reg) cell population. In the preinflamed ME environment of the Junbo mouse, neutrophils are the first responder to NTHi infection followed by T-reg immune suppressive ce...
Source: Infection and Immunity - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Tags: Host Response and Inflammation Source Type: research