Abstract
Host defense peptides, abundantly secreted by colonic epithelial cells and leukocytes, are proposed to be critical components of an innate immune response in the colon against enteropathogenic bacteria, including Shigella spp., Salmonella spp., Clostridium difficile, and attaching and effacing Escherichia coli and Citrobacter rodentium. These short cationic peptides are bactericidal against both Gram-positive and -negative enteric pathogens, but may also exert killing effects on intestinal luminal microbiota. Simultaneously, these peptides modulate numerous cellular responses crucial for gut defenses, including leukocyte chemotaxis and migration, wound healing, cytokine production, cell proliferation, and pathogen sensing. This review discusses recent advances in our understanding of expression, mechanisms of action and microbicidal and immunomodulatory functions of major colonic host defense peptides, namely cathelicidins, β-defensins, and members of the Regenerating islet-derived protein III (RegIII) and Resistin-like molecule (RELM) families. In a theoretical framework where these peptides work synergistically, aspects of pathogenesis of infectious colitis reviewed herein uncover roles of host defense peptides aimed to promote epithelial defenses and prevent pathogen colonization, mediated through a combination of direct antimicrobial function and fine-tuning of host immune response and inflammation. This interactive host defense peptide network may decode how the intestinal immune system functions to quickly clear infections, restore homeostasis and avoid damaging inflammation associated with pathogen persistence during infectious colitis. This information is of interest in development of host defense peptides (either alone or in combination with reduced doses of antibiotics) as antimicrobial and immunomodulatory therapeutics for controlling infectious colitis.
Highlights
It has been proposed that RegIIIγ antimicrobial activity is critical to separate commensal bacteria from underlying intestinal epithelial cells [158], or modulate the intestinal microbiota population when stimulated by intestinal infection or inflammation
The presence of host defense peptides (HDPs) abundantly secreted into the intestinal lumen by epithelial cells and leukocytes during inflammation must be critical components of the innate immune response against enteropathogenic bacteria
Our understanding of HDP function in the colon is mostly limited to studies using mice genetically deficient in a single HDP, or via stimulation of mice with a specific exogenous peptide
Summary
Synthetic HDPs derived from bovine cathelicidin peptide sequences with direct bactericidal and immunomodulatory functions (named immune defense regulator peptides, IDRs) have been developed for the treatment of diverse bacterial infections [115]. Protective mechanisms of β-defensins during intestinal infection include direct bacterial killing and regulatory functions on immune and intestinal epithelial cells.
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