Abstract

Whooping cough remains a significant disease worldwide and its re-emergence in highly vaccinated populations has been attributed to a combination of imperfect vaccines and evolution of the pathogen. The focus of this study was to examine the role of IL-1α/β and the inflammasome in generation of the interleukin-1 (IL-1) response, which is required for the clearance of Bordetella pertussis. We show that IL-1β but not IL-1α is required for mediating the clearance of B. pertussis from the lungs of mice. We further found that IL-1β and IL-1R deficient mice, compared to wild-type, have similar but more persistent levels of inflammation, characterized by immune cell infiltration, with significantly increased IFNγ and a normal IL-17A response during B. pertussis infection. Contrary to expectations, the cleavage of precursor IL-1β to its mature form did not require caspase-1 during primary infections within the lung despite being required by bone marrow-derived macrophages exposed to live bacteria. We also found that the caspase-1 inflammasome was not required for protective immunity against a B. pertussis challenge following vaccination with heat-killed whole cell B. pertussis, despite IL-1R signaling being required. These findings demonstrate that caspase-1-independent host factors are involved in the processing of protective IL-1β responses that are critical for bacterial clearance and vaccine-mediated immunity.

Highlights

  • One of the critical initial mediators of inflammation is interleukin-1 (IL-1), which has pleiotropic effects in the body

  • B. pertussis infection leads to the recruitment of specific Th17 cells that were recently shown to be dependent upon IL-1R signaling [10,15,16]

  • In this study we focus on the factors upstream of the IL-1R during B. pertussis infection

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Summary

Introduction

One of the critical initial mediators of inflammation is interleukin-1 (IL-1), which has pleiotropic effects in the body. IL-1 is not required for recruitment of immune cells to lung During B. pertussis infection, initial inflammatory events lead to the recruitment of macrophage and dendritic cell populations followed by a peak of neutrophils approximately seven days postinoculation, when bacterial numbers are highest [37].

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