543 research outputs found
A broad-spectrum antibiotic, DCAP, reduces uropathogenic Escherichia coli infection and enhances vorinostat anticancer activity by modulating autophagy
ATG16L1 and pathogenesis of urinary tract infections
Autophagy is generally considered to be antipathogenic. The autophagy gene ATG16L1 has a commonly occurring mutation associated with Crohn disease (CD) and intestinal cell abnormalities. Mice hypomorphic for ATG16L1 (ATG16L1(HM)) recreate specific features of CD. Our recent study shows that the same ATG16L1(HM) mice that are susceptible to intestinal inflammatory disease are protected from urinary tract infections (UTI), a common and important human disease primarily caused by uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC). UPEC colonize the bladder and exhibit both luminal and intra-epithelial stages. The host responds by recruiting innate immune cells and shedding infected epithelial cells to clear infection. Despite these countermeasures, UPEC can persist within the bladder epithelium as membrane-enclosed quiescent intracellular reservoirs (QIRs) that can seed recurrent UTI. The mechanisms of persistence remain unknown. In this study, we show that ATG16L1 deficiency protects the host against acute UTI and UPEC latency. ATG16L1(HM) mice clear urinary bacterial loads more rapidly and thoroughly due to ATG16L1-deficient innate immune components. Furthermore, ATG16L1(HM) mice exhibit superficial urothelial cell-autonomous architectural aberrations that also result in significantly reduced QIR numbers. Our findings reveal a host-protective effect of ATG16L1 deficiency in vivo against a common pathogen
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Polyploid superficial cells that maintain the urothelial barrier are produced via incomplete cytokinesis and endoreplication
Summary: The urothelium is an epithelia barrier lined by a luminal layer of binucleated, octoploid, superficial cells. Superficial cells are critical for production and transport of uroplakins, a family of proteins that assemble into a waterproof crystalline plaque that helps protect against infection and toxic substances. Adult urothelium is nearly quiescent, but rapidly regenerates in response to injury. Yet the mechanism by which binucleated, polyploid, superficial cells are produced remains unclear. Here, we show that superficial cells are likely to be derived from a population of binucleated intermediate cells, which are produced from mononucleated intermediate cells via incomplete cytokinesis. We show that binucleated intermediate and superficial cells increase DNA content via endoreplication, passing through S phase without entering mitosis. The urothelium can be permanently damaged by repetitive or chronic injury or disease. Identification of the mechanism by which superficial cells are produced may be important for developing strategies for urothelial repair. : Binucleated superficial cells are critical for urothelial barrier function. Wang et al. show that they derive from binucleated intermediate cells that form via incomplete cytokinesis. Both superficial and intermediate cells increase ploidy via endoreplication, a feature likely to be important for repair and response to environmental changes. Keywords: endoreplication, urothelium, polyploidy, epithelial barrier, regeneratio
Estrogenic modulation of uropathogenic Escherichia coli infection pathogenesis in a murine menopause model
Recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs), primarily caused by uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), annually affect over 13 million patients in the United States. Menopausal women are disproportionally susceptible, suggesting estrogen deficiency is a significant risk factor for chronic and recurrent UTI. How estrogen status governs susceptibility to UTIs remains unknown, and whether hormone therapy protects against UTIs remains controversial. Here, we used a mouse model of surgical menopause by ovariectomy and demonstrate a protective role for estrogen in UTI pathogenesis. We found that ovariectomized mice had significantly higher bacteriuria, a more robust inflammatory response, and increased production of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) upon UPEC infection compared to sham-operated controls. We further show that response of the urothelial stem cell niche to infection, normally activated to restore homeostasis after infection, was aberrant in ovariectomized mice with defective superficial urothelial cell differentiation. Finally, UPEC-infected ovariectomized mice showed a significant increase in quiescent intracellular bacterial reservoirs, which reside in the urothelium and can seed recurrent infections. Importantly, this and other ovariectomy-induced outcomes of UTI were reversible upon estrogen supplementation. Together, our findings establish ovariectomized mice as a model for UTIs in menopausal women and pinpoint specific events during course of infection that are most susceptible to estrogen deficiency. These findings have profound implications for the understanding of the role of estrogen and estrogen therapy in bladder health and pathogen defense mechanisms and open the door for prophylaxis for menopausal women with recurrent UTIs
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