牙龈卟啉单胞菌
生物
TLR2型
炎症
微生物学
失调
免疫学
先天免疫系统
串扰
替代补体途径
吞噬作用
牙周炎
免疫
细菌
补体系统
免疫系统
肠道菌群
医学
遗传学
物理
内科学
光学
作者
Tomoki Maekawa,Jennifer L. Krauss,Toshiharu Abe,Ravi Jotwani,Martha Triantafilou,Kathy Triantafilou,Ahmed Hashim,Shifra Hoch,Michael A. Curtis,Gabriel Nussbaum,John D. Lambris,George Hajishengallis
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2014.05.012
摘要
Certain low-abundance bacterial species, such as the periodontitis-associated oral bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis, can subvert host immunity to remodel a normally symbiotic microbiota into a dysbiotic, disease-provoking state. However, such pathogens also exploit inflammation to thrive in dysbiotic conditions. How these bacteria evade immunity while maintaining inflammation is unclear. As previously reported, P. gingivalis remodels the oral microbiota into a dysbiotic state by exploiting complement. Now we show that in neutrophils P. gingivalis disarms a host-protective TLR2-MyD88 pathway via proteasomal degradation of MyD88, whereas it activates an alternate TLR2-Mal-PI3K pathway. This alternate TLR2-Mal-PI3K pathway blocks phagocytosis, provides "bystander" protection to otherwise susceptible bacteria, and promotes dysbiotic inflammation in vivo. This mechanism to disengage bacterial clearance from inflammation required an intimate crosstalk between TLR2 and the complement receptor C5aR and can contribute to the persistence of microbial communities that drive dysbiotic diseases.
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