Upregulation of p75 Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha Receptor in Mycobacterium avium-Infected Mice: Evidence for a Functional Role

A Corti, L Fattorini, OF Thoresen, ML Ricci… - Infection and …, 1999 - Am Soc Microbiol
A Corti, L Fattorini, OF Thoresen, ML Ricci, A Gallizia, M Pelagi, Y Li, G Orefici
Infection and immunity, 1999Am Soc Microbiol
The bacterial growth and the production of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and TNF
receptors (TNF-Rs) in the spleen and blood of BALB/c mice challenged with Mycobacterium
avium complex (MAC) were monitored. Infection developed in two phases: the first, up to day
21, was associated with rapid MAC multiplication in the spleen and a drop in the
mycobacteremia, and the second was associated with control of the infection in both
compartments. In the spleen, TNF-α and TNF-RII mRNA levels peaked on day 21 and then …
Abstract
The bacterial growth and the production of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and TNF receptors (TNF-Rs) in the spleen and blood of BALB/c mice challenged with Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) were monitored. Infection developed in two phases: the first, up to day 21, was associated with rapid MAC multiplication in the spleen and a drop in the mycobacteremia, and the second was associated with control of the infection in both compartments. In the spleen, TNF-α and TNF-RII mRNA levels peaked on day 21 and then slowly decreased; however, no increase in the level of TNF-RI mRNA was observed throughout these experiments. The level of circulating soluble TNF-RII (sTNF-RII) was transiently increased after day 21. In a model in which overproduction of bioactive TNF-α was triggered in response to a second infection with MAC, an increased production of sTNF-RII by cultured splenocytes was also observed. Administration of an antagonist anti-TNF-RII monoclonal antibody (MAb 6G1) to infected mice inhibited the bacterial growth in the spleen, suggesting that the TNF-RII and/or sTNF-RII was functionally involved in the mechanisms that control the infection. Overall, these observations suggest that upregulation of TNF-RII or sTNF-RII contributes to modulation of the TNF-α antibacterial activity in MAC infections.
American Society for Microbiology