Disruption of TNF-alpha/TNFR1 Function in Resident Skin Cells Impairs Host Immune Response against Cutaneous Vaccinia Virus Infection

作者:Tian Tian; Dubin Krista; Jin Qiushuang; Qureshi Ali; King Sandra L; Liu Luzheng; Jiang Xiaodong; Murphy George F; Kupper Thomas S; Fuhlbrigge Robert C*
来源:Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 2012, 132(5): 1425-1434.
DOI:10.1038/jid.2011.489

摘要

One strategy adopted by vaccinia virus (VV) to evade the host immune system is to encode homologs of TNF receptors (TNFRs) that block TNF-alpha function. The response to VV skin infection under conditions of TNF-alpha deficiency, however, has not been reported. We found that TNFR1-/- mice developed larger primary lesions, numerous satellite lesions, and higher skin virus levels after VV scarification. Following their recovery, VV-scarified TNFR1-/- mice were fully protected against challenge with a lethal intranasal dose of VV, suggesting these mice had developed an effective memory immune response. A functional systemic immune response was further demonstrated by enhanced production of VV-specific IFN-gamma and VV-specific CD8(+) T cells in spleens and draining lymph nodes. Interestingly, bone marrow (BM)-reconstitution studies using wild-type (WT) BM in TNFR1-/- host mice, but not TNFR1-/- BM in WT host mice, reproduced the original results seen in TNFR1-/- mice, indicating that TNFR1 deficiency in resident skin cells, rather than hematopoietic cells, accounts for the impaired cutaneous immune response. Our data suggest that lack of TNFR1 leads to a skin-specific immune deficiency, and that resident skin cells have a crucial role in mediating an optimal immune defense to VV cutaneous infection via TNF-alpha/TNFR1 signaling.

  • 出版日期2012-5