生物
染色体易位
细菌易位
败血症
肿瘤坏死因子α
细胞生物学
信号转导
细胞
微生物学
免疫学
遗传学
基因
作者
Charlotte Wallaeys,Natalia García-González,Steven Timmermans,Jolien Vandewalle,Tineke Vanderhaeghen,Somara De Beul,Hester Dufoor,Melanie Eggermont,Elise Moens,Victor Bosteels,Riet De Rycke,Fabien Théry,Francis Impens,Serge Verbanck,Stefan Lienenklaus,Sophie Janssens,Richard S. Blumberg,Takao Iwawaki,Claude Libert
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2024.08.007
摘要
The cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) plays important roles in limiting infection but is also linked to sepsis. The mechanisms underlying these paradoxical roles are unclear. Here, we show that TNF limits the antimicrobial activity of Paneth cells (PCs), causing bacterial translocation from the gut to various organs. This TNF-induced lethality does not occur in mice with a PC-specific deletion in the TNF receptor, P55. In PCs, TNF stimulates the IFN pathway and ablates the steady-state unfolded protein response (UPR), effects not observed in mice lacking P55 or IFNAR1. TNF triggers the transcriptional downregulation of IRE1 key genes Ern1 and Ern2, which are key mediators of the UPR. This UPR deficiency causes a significant reduction in antimicrobial peptide production and PC antimicrobial activity, causing bacterial translocation to organs and subsequent polymicrobial sepsis, organ failure, and death. This study highlights the roles of PCs in bacterial control and therapeutic targets for sepsis.
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