Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection

Helicobacter pylori has coexisted with humans for at least 60.000 years and has evolved persistence strategies that allow it to evade host immunity and colonize its host for life. The VacA protein is expressed by all H. pylori strains and is required for high-level persistent infection in experiment...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aleksandra Altobelli, Michael Bauer, Karelia Velez, Timothy L. Cover, Anne Müller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-03-01
Series:mBio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00261-19
id doaj-8ea49b39412b4b8bb08cda3cdac41b3b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8ea49b39412b4b8bb08cda3cdac41b3b2021-07-02T03:08:17ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112019-03-01102e00261-1910.1128/mBio.00261-19Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent InfectionAleksandra AltobelliMichael BauerKarelia VelezTimothy L. CoverAnne MüllerHelicobacter pylori has coexisted with humans for at least 60.000 years and has evolved persistence strategies that allow it to evade host immunity and colonize its host for life. The VacA protein is expressed by all H. pylori strains and is required for high-level persistent infection in experimental mouse models. Here, we show that VacA targets myeloid cells in the gastric mucosa to create a tolerogenic environment that facilitates regulatory T-cell differentiation, while suppressing effector T-cell priming and functionality. Tregs that are induced in the periphery during H. pylori infection can be found not only in the stomach but also in the lungs of infected mice, where they are likely to affect immune responses to allergens.The gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori causes a persistent infection that is directly responsible for gastric ulcers and gastric cancer in some patients and protective against allergic and other immunological disorders in others. The two outcomes of the Helicobacter-host interaction can be modeled in mice that are infected as immunocompetent adults and as neonates, respectively. Here, we have investigated the contribution of the Helicobacter immunomodulator VacA to H. pylori-specific local and systemic immune responses in both models. We found that neonatally infected mice are colonized at higher levels than mice infected as adults and fail to generate effector T-cell responses to the bacteria; rather, T-cell responses in neonatally infected mice are skewed toward Foxp3-positive (Foxp3+) regulatory T cells that are neuropilin negative and express RORγt. We found these peripherally induced regulatory T cells (pTregs) to be enriched, in a VacA-dependent manner, not only in the gastric mucosa but also in the lungs of infected mice. Pulmonary pTreg accumulation was observed in mice that have been infected neonatally with wild-type H. pylori but not in mice that have been infected as adults or mice infected with a VacA null mutant. Finally, we traced VacA to gastric lamina propria myeloid cells and show that it suppressed interleukin-23 (IL-23) expression by dendritic cells and induced IL-10 and TGF-β expression in macrophages. Taken together, the results are consistent with the idea that H. pylori creates a tolerogenic environment through its immunomodulator VacA, which skews T-cell responses toward Tregs, favors H. pylori persistence, and affects immunity at distant sites.https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00261-19T-cell immunityT cellsdendritic cellshost-cell interactionsimmunomodulationmucosal infectionregulatory T cellsmacrophages
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleksandra Altobelli
Michael Bauer
Karelia Velez
Timothy L. Cover
Anne Müller
spellingShingle Aleksandra Altobelli
Michael Bauer
Karelia Velez
Timothy L. Cover
Anne Müller
Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
mBio
T-cell immunity
T cells
dendritic cells
host-cell interactions
immunomodulation
mucosal infection
regulatory T cells
macrophages
author_facet Aleksandra Altobelli
Michael Bauer
Karelia Velez
Timothy L. Cover
Anne Müller
author_sort Aleksandra Altobelli
title Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
title_short Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
title_full Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
title_fullStr Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
title_full_unstemmed Helicobacter pylori VacA Targets Myeloid Cells in the Gastric Lamina Propria To Promote Peripherally Induced Regulatory T-Cell Differentiation and Persistent Infection
title_sort helicobacter pylori vaca targets myeloid cells in the gastric lamina propria to promote peripherally induced regulatory t-cell differentiation and persistent infection
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Helicobacter pylori has coexisted with humans for at least 60.000 years and has evolved persistence strategies that allow it to evade host immunity and colonize its host for life. The VacA protein is expressed by all H. pylori strains and is required for high-level persistent infection in experimental mouse models. Here, we show that VacA targets myeloid cells in the gastric mucosa to create a tolerogenic environment that facilitates regulatory T-cell differentiation, while suppressing effector T-cell priming and functionality. Tregs that are induced in the periphery during H. pylori infection can be found not only in the stomach but also in the lungs of infected mice, where they are likely to affect immune responses to allergens.The gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori causes a persistent infection that is directly responsible for gastric ulcers and gastric cancer in some patients and protective against allergic and other immunological disorders in others. The two outcomes of the Helicobacter-host interaction can be modeled in mice that are infected as immunocompetent adults and as neonates, respectively. Here, we have investigated the contribution of the Helicobacter immunomodulator VacA to H. pylori-specific local and systemic immune responses in both models. We found that neonatally infected mice are colonized at higher levels than mice infected as adults and fail to generate effector T-cell responses to the bacteria; rather, T-cell responses in neonatally infected mice are skewed toward Foxp3-positive (Foxp3+) regulatory T cells that are neuropilin negative and express RORγt. We found these peripherally induced regulatory T cells (pTregs) to be enriched, in a VacA-dependent manner, not only in the gastric mucosa but also in the lungs of infected mice. Pulmonary pTreg accumulation was observed in mice that have been infected neonatally with wild-type H. pylori but not in mice that have been infected as adults or mice infected with a VacA null mutant. Finally, we traced VacA to gastric lamina propria myeloid cells and show that it suppressed interleukin-23 (IL-23) expression by dendritic cells and induced IL-10 and TGF-β expression in macrophages. Taken together, the results are consistent with the idea that H. pylori creates a tolerogenic environment through its immunomodulator VacA, which skews T-cell responses toward Tregs, favors H. pylori persistence, and affects immunity at distant sites.
topic T-cell immunity
T cells
dendritic cells
host-cell interactions
immunomodulation
mucosal infection
regulatory T cells
macrophages
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00261-19
work_keys_str_mv AT aleksandraaltobelli helicobacterpylorivacatargetsmyeloidcellsinthegastriclaminapropriatopromoteperipherallyinducedregulatorytcelldifferentiationandpersistentinfection
AT michaelbauer helicobacterpylorivacatargetsmyeloidcellsinthegastriclaminapropriatopromoteperipherallyinducedregulatorytcelldifferentiationandpersistentinfection
AT kareliavelez helicobacterpylorivacatargetsmyeloidcellsinthegastriclaminapropriatopromoteperipherallyinducedregulatorytcelldifferentiationandpersistentinfection
AT timothylcover helicobacterpylorivacatargetsmyeloidcellsinthegastriclaminapropriatopromoteperipherallyinducedregulatorytcelldifferentiationandpersistentinfection
AT annemuller helicobacterpylorivacatargetsmyeloidcellsinthegastriclaminapropriatopromoteperipherallyinducedregulatorytcelldifferentiationandpersistentinfection
_version_ 1721342083959095296