<p>The mammalian urinary bladder is a highly specialized organ that must be able to withstand considerable amounts of osmotic pressure at its mucosal surface, in addition to maintaining an impenetrable barrier against potential pathogens. The lower urinary tract's virtually inevitable exposure to external microbial pathogens warrants efficient tissue-specialized defenses to maintain sterility. The observation that the bladder can become chronically infected with uropathogenic E.coli (UPEC) in combination with clinical observations that antibody responses following bladder infections are not detectable, suggest defects in the formation of adaptive immunity and immunological memory. We have identified a broadly immunosuppressive transcriptional program specific to the bladder, but not the kidney, during infection of the urinary tract that is dependent on tissue-resident mast cells. This mast cell-dependent phenomenon involves localized production of IL-10 and results in suppressed humoral and cell-mediated responses and bacterial persistence. Therefore, in addition to the previously described role of mast cells orchestrating the early innate immune responses in the bladder during infection, they subsequently play a tissue-specific immunosuppressive role. These findings may explain the prevalent recurrence of bladder infections and suggest the bladder as a site exhibiting an intrinsic degree of mast cell-maintained immune privilege.</p><p> Interestingly, though the bladder is not capable of initiating an effective adaptive immune response during bladder infections, we have generated data showing that it was possible to circumvent the immune limitations of the bladder to provoke a strong adaptive and protective immune response by vaccinating against UPEC at an alternate mucosal site. We reasoned that by immunizing the nasal regions of mice with a vaccine formulation comprising of FimH adhesin, a highly conserved adhesive moiety of type 1 fimbriae expressed on UPEC, and an effective mucosal adjuvant we would evoke protective immunity against UPEC infections. We found that a FimH vaccine coupled with either a mast cell activating adjuvant c48/80 or CpG oligodeoxynucleotide, a TLR9 agonist, evoked high levels of FimH specific IgG antibody in the serum and IgA in the urine of immunized mice. We also observed that following UPEC challenge, these FimH/adjuvant immunized mice exhibited significantly reduced bacterial load in the bladders compared to mice challenged with just FimH. These studies reveal that immunization of nasal regions with a FimH vaccine is an effective strategy to overcome the limitation in adaptive immunity observed in the bladder.</p> / Dissertation
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/5603 |
Date | January 2012 |
Creators | Chan, Cheryl Yuen Yu |
Contributors | Abraham, Soman N |
Source Sets | Duke University |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Dissertation |
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