environmental toxins
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Regulation of neutrophil endoplasmic reticulum stress response by IRE1a
Project Summary/Abstract: The lungs are exposed to pathogens and environmental toxins that trigger stress and cause numerous respiratory diseases. Effective host defenses against lung infection by bacterial pathogens, including methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), rely on innate immune cells including neutrophils, prominent early responders to sites of infection. If host defenses are ineffective, MRSA causes serious lung infection, resulting in severe morbidity and a significant economic burden on healthcare facilities, where it is endemic. MRSA infections have a mortality rate of up to 14% and an estimated $500 million in healthcare costs in the US alone. Increasing resistance to vancomycin, the last resort antibiotic for MRSA infections, underscore the urgent need for innovative treatment approaches. Although directly targeting pathogens with antibiotics has been a successful approach for treating infections, many pathogens, including MRSA, eventually will become resistant to these drugs. As an alternative, immunomodulatory strategies to enhance host defenses, such as those shown to be effective against cancer cells, have the potential for treating drug-resistant pathogen infections. Recently, we showed that the inositol-requiring enzyme 1-α (IRE1α), an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress sensor, is required for clearance of MRSA in a murine skin abscess model, where neutrophils are robustly recruited to the site of infection. Further, IRE1α coordinates signaling events upstream of calcium (Ca2+) mobilization, histone citrullination, and production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mitoROS), all of which are important for neutrophil inflammatory responses including the formation of antimicrobial neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Because excessive neutrophil activation and NET release can be detrimental to vital organs, it is not clear whether neutrophil IRE1α-mediated stress responses aid or impede the resolution of infection in the lungs. While IRE1α activation has been linked to the development of lung fibrosis through the regulation of alveolar epithelial- to-mesenchymal transition in the context of chronic inflammatory diseases, its role in pulmonary neutrophil defenses is unknown. Thus, there is a gap in our knowledge of how cellular stress responses modulate pulmonary neutrophil defenses and infection outcomes in the lungs. The overarching goal of this proposal is to elucidate the mechanisms by which neutrophil IRE1α signaling influences production of mitoROS and Ca2+ mobilization to drive NET release, injure lungs, and regulate pulmonary host defense against MRSA. We will accomplish the following Aims: (1) Define the molecular mechanisms underlying IRE1α-mediated mitoROS hyperactivation of human and mouse primary neutrophils and excessive NET release, and (2) Elucidate the role of neutrophil IRE1α signaling in excessive NET release, lung injury, and immunity in vivo using a MRSA pneumonia infection mouse model. These studies will yield mechanistic insight into how IRE1α-driven ER stress responses impact pulmonary neutrophil defenses and lung injury revealing potential targets for anti-microbial immunotherapies.
Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders
Gestational exposure to environmental toxins, infections, and stressors are epidemiologically linked to neurodevelopmental disorders with strong male-bias, such as autism spectrum disorder. We modeled some of these prenatal risk factors in mice, by co-exposing pregnant dams to an environmental pollutant and limited-resource stress, which robustly dysregulated the maternal immune system. Male but not female offspring displayed long-lasting behavioral abnormalities and alterations in the activity of brain networks encoding social interactions, along with disruptions of gut structure and microbiome composition. Cellularly, prenatal stressors impaired microglial synaptic pruning in males during early postnatal development. Precise inhibition of microglial phagocytosis during the same critical period mimicked the impact of prenatal stressors on the male-specific social deficits. Conversely, modifying the gut microbiome rescued the social and cellular deficits, indicating that environmental stressors alter neural circuit formation in males via impairing microglia function during development, perhaps via a gut-brain disruption.
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