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Infection and Immunity, July 2000, p. 4207-4216, Vol. 68, No. 7
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effects of Estradiol and Progesterone on Susceptibility and Early
Immune Responses to Chlamydia trachomatis Infection in
the Female Reproductive Tract
Charu
Kaushic,1,*
Fan
Zhou,2
Andrew D.
Murdin,3 and
Charles
R.
Wira1
Department of Physiology1 and
Department of Pathology,2 Dartmouth
Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire 03756, and
Aventis-Pasteur Ltd., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M2R
3T43
Received 27 January 2000/Returned for modification 15 March
2000/Accepted 31 March 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
We have used a previously described rodent model to examine the
influence of hormonal environment on susceptibility and immune responses to genital Chlamydia infection. Ovariectomized
rats were administered estradiol, progesterone, or a combination of both, infected with Chlamydia trachomatis via the
intrauterine route, and sacrificed 5 days later. Histopathological
examination showed severe inflammation in the uteri and vaginae of
progesterone-treated animals, whereas animals receiving estradiol or a
combination of both hormones showed no inflammation. Large numbers of
chlamydiae were found in vaginal secretions of progesterone-treated and
combination-treated animals, while estradiol-treated animals had none.
Tissue localization showed that numerous chlamydial inclusions were
present in the uterine epithelium of the progesterone group and the
cervicovaginal epithelium of the combination group. Examination of the
acute immune responses of the infected animals showed that maximum
activation was present in the draining lymph node cells from the
progesterone-treated group, and these cells were producing large
amounts of interleukin-10 and gamma interferon compared to other
hormone-treated groups. In contrast, spleen cell proliferation was
suppressed in progesterone-treated animals compared to other
hormone-treated groups. We conclude that progesterone increases and
estradiol decreases susceptibility to intrauterine chlamydial infection
in this rat model. Our data demonstrate that hormone environment, at
the time of infection, has a profound effect on the outcome of
microbial infection in the female reproductive tract.
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INTRODUCTION |
Mucosal surfaces represent the
largest area of contact of microbial agents with the body's immune
system. Among the mucosal surfaces, the reproductive tract has possibly
the most specialized immune system, since it has evolved to meet the
dual challenge of providing continuous protection against potential
pathogens while providing a receptive environment for allogeneic sperm
and embryo. These requirements are met partly by the precise and
differential regulation of the immune system in the reproductive tract
by the ovarian hormones estradiol and progesterone. Studies from our laboratory have shown that antigen presentation, immunoglobulin A (IgA)
transport, and presence of immune cells in the uterus and vagina are
under organ-specific hormonal regulation (5, 6, 9, 29-31).
Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular,
gram-negative bacteria and the cause of the world's most common
sexually transmitted bacterial infection (20). Genital
chlamydial infections are a major public health concern because of the
severe pathologic sequelae of the infection, including pelvic
inflammatory disease, scarring of the fallopian tubes, infertility, and
ectopic pregnancy. Clinical symptoms range from acute asymptomatic
infection to chronic conditions characterized by a severe inflammatory
response (13).
In the last decade there has been an exponential growth in our
understanding of immune responses to chlamydial infection. Studies in
mouse models have shown that the immune response to genital chlamydial
infection is very complex: it clears infection and confers short-term
protection but at the same time sensitizes the host for development of
immunopathological changes (13). There is strong evidence
that CD4 T-cell-mediated immunity plays a critical role in clearing
infection (3, 18, 21). Other studies in the mouse as well as
other animal models also show that hormones play an important role in
controlling immune responses to chlamydial infection and in determining
the outcome of infection (17). In general, mouse models
require pretreatment with progesterone prior to exposure, to enhance
infections, especially with human serovars (16). Others have
shown that in the absence of progesterone pretreatment, establishment
of infection is dependent on stage of the estrous cycle or requires
high infectious doses (4). Guinea pigs do not require
progesterone and are easily infected with C. psittaci, but
develop heavier infection following estradiol treatment (2,
15). In human studies, an association has been observed between
onset of chlamydial infection and stage of menstrual cycle
(24). Enhanced susceptibility was observed in the
proliferative part of the menstrual cycle when estradiol levels were
high. Oral contraceptives have also been shown to increase
susceptibility to chlamydial infections and other sexually transmitted
diseases (27).
Our studies in the rat model have shown that under the influence of
progesterone, intrauterine exposure to C. trachomatis can
induce infection in the genital tract (7). Immune responses were detected locally and systemically, and the results indicated that
clearance of infection in this model involves immune cells from the
lymph nodes draining the reproductive tract. In the present study, we examined the role played by the endocrine
environment in determining susceptibility of the genital tract and if
this in turn could have an effect on the outcome of infection. We also examined early immune responses locally and systemically to assess whether the hormonal environment influences the immune responses at the
time when infection was induced.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animal and hormone administration.
Adult female Lewis rats
(Charles River Laboratories, Kingston, N.Y.) weighing 150 to 200 g
were maintained under standard temperature-controlled conditions on a
12-h light:12-h dark cycle. Ovariectomies were performed 7 to 10 days
before each experiment as previously described (8).
Estradiol and progesterone were purchased from Calbiochem (La Jolla,
Calif.). Estradiol was initially dissolved in ethanol, evaporated to
dryness, and then resuspended in 0.9% saline. Progesterone was
suspended in saline by glass-glass homogenization. Control
ovariectomized animals received only saline. All hormones were
administered by subcutaneous injection. To correct for the alcohol
present in estradiol preparation, an equivalent amount of ethanol was
evaporated in flasks used to prepare progesterone and saline.
Infection of animals.
C. trachomatis (mouse
pneumonitis nigg-II strain [MoPn]) was purchased from the American
Type Culture Collection (Manassas, Va.). Females were administered
either 2 mg of progesterone, 10 µg of estradiol, or a combination of
both for 3 consecutive days. On the second day of the hormone
treatment, animals were infected with MoPn (5 × 106
inclusion-forming units [IFU]/uterine horn) via the intrauterine route as described elsewhere (7).
In vitro infectivity assay to quantitate chlamydial shedding in
vaginal washes.
Vaginal swabs from infected animals were collected
in 0.5 ml of sucrose-phosphate-glutamate (SPG) buffer at various days
postinfection. McCoy cells were grown to confluency in 24-well plates.
Vaginal washing samples were diluted starting at 1:50 and added to
monolayers in duplicate. A positive control consisting of a previously
titrated MoPn stock, as well as mock infection as a negative control,
was included on each plate. Infected monolayers were incubated for 72 h and then stained with rabbit anti-Chlamydia
antibody (Biodesign Inc., Kennebunk, Maine) and an Immunopure ABC
Rabbit Ig staining kit (Pierce Inc., Rockford, Ill.). Inclusions were
revealed using an Immunopure Metal Enhanced DAB kit (Pierce) and
counted under a light microscope. Four to eight fields of vision were
counted for each sample, and IFU per milliliter was calculated.
Immunohistochemical staining.
For immunohistochemical
analysis, reproductive tract tissues were excised, rinsed in cold
saline (0.9%) prior to processing with acetone, methyl alcohol, and
xylene, paraffin embedded, and stained as previously described
(9). Briefly, 6- to 8-µm sections were cut with a
microtome and placed on silane-coated slides. Sections were
deparaffinized in xylene, rehydrated, and washed in 0.01 M
phosphate-buffered saline-bovine serum albumin (1 mg/ml). Nonspecific
staining was blocked by incubating sections with 1% rabbit serum for
20 min at room temperature. To detect chlamydial infection, sections
were stained with rabbit anti-C. trachomatis (Biodesign)
polyclonal antiserum (1:200) for 60 min. Antiserum from normal rabbits
was substituted for primary antibody at an equivalent concentration for
control staining. Avidin-biotin coupled to alkaline phosphatase (ABC
Elite kit; Vector Laboratories, Burlinghame, Calif.) followed by Vector
Red (alkaline phosphatase kit; Vector Laboratories) was used to reveal
antigen localization. Monoclonal antibody ED1 (Serotec Laboratories,
Oxford, England) was used for staining myeloid cells (macrophages and
blood granulocytes) in the reproductive tract. A horse anti-mouse Ig
coupled to biotin was used as a secondary antibody. Slides were
counterstained with methyl green and mounted in Permount medium prior
to microscopic examination.
Lymphocyte proliferation assays.
To measure lymph node and
spleen cell proliferation, para-aortic lymph nodes (PALN) draining the
genital tract and spleens were removed aseptically from animals.
Single-cell suspensions were prepared by teasing with sterile forceps.
Debris was allowed to settle for 2 min, and supernatant containing
single cells was recovered and spun down at 500 × g
for 10 min. Spleen cells were treated with ammonium chloride solution
for 10 min to lyse the erythrocytes as previously described
(7). Cells were washed three times with RPMI 1640 medium
containing 10% bovine serum albumin and plated at a concentration of
105 cells/well in a 96-well plate together with either 1 µg of concanavalin A (ConA) per ml, 5 µg of phytohemagglutinin
(PHA) per ml, 10 µg of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) per ml, or 1 and 5 µg of major outer membrane protein (MOMP) per ml. Proliferative
responses were measured by uptake of 1 µCi of
[3H]thymidine per well for the last 18 to 24 h of a
3-day culture. Results are reported as mean counts per minute ± standard error of triplicate cultures. Each experiment was repeated at
least two times. Data were analyzed using Student's t test.
Cytokine analysis.
Cytokine levels were measured using
commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kits from Endogen
Inc. (Woburn, Mass.) according to the protocol recommended in the kits.
Briefly, 50- to 100-µl aliquots of supernatants were collected from
spleen or lymph node cultures 48 h after the start of incubation.
Supernatants were run in duplicates in ELISA assays for rat interleukin
(IL-10) and rat gamma interferon (IFN-
). Absorbency was read at 450 nm in an ELISA reader (Dynex Technologies), and data were analyzed by
Dynex Revelation software. The sensitivity of both assays was <10
pg/ml with an inter- and intra-assay coefficient of variation of
<10%.
 |
RESULTS |
Histopathological evaluation of rats infected with
Chlamydia following hormone treatment.
Female Lewis
rats were injected with either saline, estradiol, progesterone, or
estradiol plus progesterone for 3 consecutive days. On the second day
of hormone treatment, rats were infected with C. trachomatis
MoPn (5 × 106 IFU/uterine horn) via the intrauterine
route. Rats were sacrificed 5 days later and examined for infection,
tissue pathology, and immune response. Control rats (hormone treated,
not infected) were also examined (results not shown). Figure
1 shows the histology of the uterus (A to
D) and vagina (E to F) from the four groups of animals given hormone
treatment and infected with Chlamydia. The control group
(ovariectomized, saline treated, infected) (Fig. 1A and E) showed mild
to moderate inflammation in the uterus and vagina characterized by an
infiltration of granulocytes and a few lymphocytes into the
subepithelial stroma. Rats that were estradiol treated and infected
with Chlamydia had no inflammation in either uterus or
vagina (Fig. 1B and F). The progesterone-treated, Chlamydia-infected group had the most severe inflammation.
The uterine lumen of these rats had massive infiltrations of
polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells (Fig. 1C). The glandular lumen (not
shown) and the subepithelial stroma also had PMN infiltration. The
vaginae of these animals had moderate inflammation with PMN
infiltration (Fig. 1G). As was the case with the estradiol-treated
group, no inflammation was observed in the combined hormone treatment
group (Fig. 1D and H). Control rats (hormone treated, not infected) did
not show any inflammatory infiltration in any of the treatment groups
(data not shown). In the hormone-treated, uninfected control groups, a
slight increase in number of leukocytes in the uteri of
estradiol-treated rats and vaginae of progesterone-treated rats was
noted. This was an expected effect of hormones, described by us
previously (5), not part of an inflammatory process; we took
these increases into account when grading for inflammation in infected
rats. Results from two separate experiments where the uterus and vagina
of each infected animal treated with hormone were histopathologically
evaluated are summarized in Table 1.

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FIG. 1.
Histopathology of uteri (A to D) and vaginae
(E to F) of rats infected with C. trachomatis following
intrauterine treatment with saline (A and E), estradiol (B and F),
progesterone (C and G), or estradiol and progesterone (D and H).
Animals were sacrificed 5 days postinfection; reproductive tract
tissues were removed, fixed, processed for histology, and stained with
hematoxylin and eosin. Representative tissue sections from each
treatment groups are shown. Estrogenic effects on epithelial cells of
uteri and vaginae of rats receiving estradiol can be observed (B, D, F,
and H). Note the acute inflammation in the uterus of a
progesterone-treated rat, characterized by large number of infiltrating
leukocytes (C). s, stroma; l, lumen; e, epithelium. Original
magnification, ×100.
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Cervicovaginal shedding of C. trachomatis in
hormone-treated animals.
In vitro infectivity assays, described in
Materials and Methods, were carried out to assess the level of
infection in hormone-treated rats. The detection of inclusion bodies is
illustrated in Fig. 2. As can be seen,
cultures which received vaginal washes from estradiol-treated animals
(Fig. 2D) were essentially similar to negative control cultures (Fig.
2B). Cultures exposed to washes from saline-treated infected animals
showed inclusion bodies in large numbers (Fig. 2C). All cultures which
were exposed to vaginal washes from the progesterone and combination
groups, at the same dilution as for estradiol- and saline-treated
groups, had either partially destroyed or completely destroyed
monolayers demonstrating large numbers of shed IFU (Fig. 2E and F).
These assays were repeated with further dilutions of vaginal flushes,
and the quantitative results are shown in Table
2. Six of the eight saline-treated animals had titers of 109 IFU/ml or less. Titers higher
than 1010 IFU/ml were observed in the cervicovaginal
washings of all of eight animals from the progesterone-treated group
and in seven of the eight animals in the combined hormone treatment
group. We detected no organisms in the vaginal secretions from rats in the estradiol-treated group. These results are from two separate experiments, each time with four rats per group; vaginal secretions of
each rat were monitored separately.

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FIG. 2.
In vitro infectivity assay to assess bacterial shedding
in vaginal washes of hormone-treated, infected rats. Vaginal washes
from day 5 postinfection were layered on monolayers of McCoy cells and
stained with an anti-Chlamydia antibody as described in
Materials and Methods. Micrographs show stained monolayers from
cultures layered with washings (all at same dilution) from animals
infected with Chlamydia after treatment with saline (C), estradiol (D),
progesterone (E), and estradiol plus progesterone (F). Positive
(previously titered stock; A) and negative (mock infection; B) controls
are also shown. Darkly stained inclusion bodies can be clearly
distinguished in infected monolayers. Note that panels E and F are
partially destroyed monolayers, indicating presence of too many IFU.
These and similar samples were diluted further and retitered to obtain
final titers. Results from estradiol-treated animals (D) were found to
be similar to negative control results in all samples. The dark
staining seen in panels B and D was due to staining of dead cells and
was subtracted as background when titers were calculated.
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Tissue localization of chlamydial infection.
Immunohistochemical staining was done to localize chlamydial inclusion
bodies in the tissue sections from hormone-treated rats, using a rabbit
polyclonal antibody to Chlamydia (Fig.
3). While occasional chlamydial
inclusions were detected in the uteri of saline-treated, infected rats
(Fig. 3A), the uterine epithelium of progesterone-treated rats had
extensive infection (Fig. 3C). Numerous inclusions were localized in
the cervicovaginal epithelium of the combined hormone treatment group
(Fig. 3D). There was no sign of infection in the uterine and vaginal
epithelium of the estradiol-treated rats, as evidenced by lack of any
detectable staining of inclusion bodies (Fig. 3B). The results from
immunohistochemical assessment of all animals are summarized in
Table 3. No specific staining for
chlamydial antigens was observed below the epithelium in any of
the groups.

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FIG. 3.
Localization of infection in the reproductive tracts of
hormone-treated, infected rats by immunohistochemical staining of
chlamydial antigens. Polyclonal antibody was used to detect
Chlamydia-specific staining as described in Materials and
Methods. Representative tissue sections showing typical staining for
each group are shown in the micrographs. Positive (pink) staining can
be seen in the uterine epithelium of progesterone-treated animals (C)
and cervicovaginal epithelium of estradiol-progesterone-treated animals
(D). Very little positive staining was seen in saline-treated animals
(A). Uteri and vaginae of estradiol-treated animals were negative in
all sections examined. s, stroma; l, lumen; e, epithelium. Original
magnification, ×100.
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Characterization of tissue inflammation in
hormone-treated, Chlamydia-infected rats.
To
characterize the inflammatory response seen in the hormone-treated
animals infected with C. trachomatis, we examined
tissue sections from the uteri and vaginae of the four experimental
groups, using immunohistochemical staining for ED1, a marker for
macrophages and blood granulocytes, as described in Materials and
Methods (Fig. 4). Very few ED1-positive
cells were found within the uterine subepithelial stroma of
saline-treated, infected rats (Fig. 4A). Chlamydia-infected
rats from the estradiol-treated group and combined hormone group had an
increased numbers of ED1-positive cells compared to the saline group
(Fig. 4B and D). These cells were uniformly scattered throughout the
stroma and did not appear to be part of a localized inflammatory
response. Increase in the local immune cell population under the
influence of estradiol has been previously reported (5). In
contrast, progesterone-treated, Chlamydia-infected animals
had large numbers of ED1-positive cells in the tissue and in the
uterine lumen (Fig. 4C). These cells were concentrated in the
subepithelial layer (Fig. 4C, a) and in the leukocytic infiltration
present in the lumen (Fig. 4C, b). A similar increase in the
distribution of ED1 cells was observed in the subepithelial stroma of
the vagina of saline-treated rats (not shown) and progesterone-treated infected rats (Fig. 4F), while no increase in ED1-positive cells was
observed in the vaginal mucus of estradiol-treated (Fig. 4E) and
combination-treated (not shown) groups. These results indicate that an acute inflammatory response characterized by the presence of
granulocytes and macrophages is present in the genital tract of
progesterone-treated, infected animals and to a lesser extent in
saline-treated, infected animals.

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FIG. 4.
Localization of ED1-positive cells (macrophages and
blood granulocytes) in the uteri (A to D) and vaginae (E and F) of
hormone-treated, infected rats. Positively stained cells (pink) can be
seen in uteri of animals treated with saline (A), estradiol (B),
progesterone (C), or estradiol and progesterone (D). Micrographs of
representative tissue sections from vaginae of estradiol-treated (E)
and progesterone-treated (F) animals stained for ED1-positive cells are
also shown. Note the accumulation of large number of positively stained
cells in the subepithelial stroma (C, a) and the leukocytic
infiltration in the lumen (C, b) of uteri of progesterone-treated
animals. s, stroma; l, lumen; e, epithelium. Original magnification,
×100.
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Lymphocytic proliferation in hormone-treated,
Chlamydia-infected rats.
To examine the immune
response in hormone-treated, Chlamydia-infected rats, PALN,
which drain the genital tract, and spleen cells were isolated and
stimulated by mitogens or chlamydial MOMP antigen. Figure
5A shows the lymphocyte proliferation
response by the PALN cells of the different experimental groups.
Maximum mitogenic as well as MOMP-specific responses were observed in PALN cells from progesterone-treated, infected rats. Enhanced mitogenic
proliferation was also observed in the estradiol and combination groups
compared to lymph node cells from saline-treated, infected rats
that were the least activated. Spleen cells (Fig. 5B), on the other
hand, gave much lower proliferation to both mitogens (ConA, LPS,
and PHA) and MOMP compared to PALN cells. Proliferation was
significantly suppressed in spleen cell cultures from
progesterone-treated, Chlamydia-infected rats. Spleen cells from estradiol-treated and combined hormone treatment rats had the
highest proliferation to mitogens as well as MOMP-specific challenge.

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FIG. 5.
Lymph node (A) and spleen (B) cell proliferation assay
in response to mitogens and MOMP in hormone-treated, infected animals.
Four animals were used for each treatment group. Results shown are
representative of two separate experiments. Spleen or lymph node cells
were isolated as described in Materials and Methods and incubated in
the presence of medium alone (control), ConA (1 µg/ml), PHA (5 µg/ml), LPS (10 µg/ml), MOMP-1 (1 µg/ml), and MOMP-2 (5 µg/ml).
*, P < 0.01; #, P < 0.05 compared
to progesterone-treated group. E, estradiol; P, progesterone.
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Cytokine secretion by lymph node and spleen cells of
hormone-treated, Chlamydia-infected rats.
In
experiments run in parallel with the proliferation assays, PALN cells
and spleen cells were cultured from the four groups of infected rats,
sacrificed 5 days postinfection. The cells were cultured for 48 h
in the presence or absence of MOMP and the supernatants examined for
IL-10 and IFN-
. As shown in Fig. 6,
large amounts of IL-10 and IFN-
were produced by PALN cells from
progesterone-treated, infected rats, following MOMP challenge relative
to other hormone-treated groups. Cells from the progesterone-treated
rats also had elevated IFN-
production in the absence of MOMP
compared to cells from other groups. PALN cells from estrogen and
combined hormone-treated rats produced IFN-
at levels similar to
untreated controls. PALN cells produced very little IL-10 in the
absence of MOMP. Supernatants from spleen cells showed elevated levels
of IL-10 in all three hormone-treated group following MOMP challenge.
The highest IFN-
levels were seen with MOMP challenge of spleen
cells from progesterone-treated, Chlamydia-infected rats.
IFN-
produced by spleen cells taken from the estrogen or combined
hormone treatment rats was similar to that produced by spleen cells
from untreated, infected rats. These results indicate that
Chlamydia infection in progesterone-treated rats increased
the Chlamydia-specific production of IFN-
and IL-10 in
the draining nodes and to a lesser extent IFN-
production by spleen
cells.

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FIG. 6.
IFN- and IL-10 measurements in supernatants from PALN
and spleen cells of hormone-treated, infected animals. Both IFN- and
IL-10 were in measured in PALN and spleen cell cultures from day 5 postinfection, incubated with or without MOMP (1 µg/ml). E,
estradiol; P, progesterone.
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DISCUSSION |
These studies provide direct evidence that the hormonal
environment at the time of pathogen exposure can have a distinct effect on the outcome of a microbial infection in the genital tract. We found
that in the absence of any endogenous hormones, ovariectomized rats
were susceptible to genital chlamydial infection, as indicated by mild
infection and low-grade inflammation in uterus and vagina. Giving
estradiol to ovariectomized rats led to complete protection from
chlamydial infection, and none of the animals showed any signs of
inflammation in the uterus or the vagina. When progesterone alone was
administered, animals became heavily infected, and infection was
accompanied by an acute inflammatory response. In marked contrast, in
the presence of both estradiol and progesterone, the rats became heavily infected but did not show any inflammatory response. These results suggest that estradiol and progesterone have separate and
distinct effects on susceptibility to infection and inflammation. While
estradiol decreases susceptibility, it also seems to have a strong
anti-inflammatory response. This effect seems to be distinct from the
protective effect, because inflammation was absent even in the presence
of infection in the combination hormone group. Progesterone, on the
other hand, seems to enhance both susceptibility and inflammatory
responses. Alternatively, progesterone may enhance infection,
leading to increased inflammation. With the combination of hormones
used in these experiments, estradiol effect on inflammation predominates whereas progesterone affects primarily susceptibility. These findings have important implications in view of the fact that in
women, chlamydial infections are often silent, and subsequent reinfections lead to inflammatory responses with pathological sequelae
such as pelvic inflammatory disease, scarring of fallopian tubes, and
ectopic pregnancy (12, 13). Further characterization of this
model could provide a new approach to understanding asymptomatic chlamydial infections, which have been difficult to study because of
the lack of an appropriate animal model.
Previous studies have shown that sex hormones influence susceptibility
to microbial infections in the reproductive tract in a number of
species. Mice treated with progesterone were found to have higher
mortality rates when infected intravaginally with herpes simplex virus
type 2 (1). In other studies, genital tract susceptibility
to Neisseria gonorrhoeae was enhanced in mice at proestrus,
when estrogen levels are high (10). Rank et al. have shown
that guinea pigs are more susceptible to chlamydial infection following
estradiol treatment, while other studies show that infection can be
established in mice only after progesterone pretreatment (17,
19). Studies of humans show that women are also more susceptible
to infection under estradiol influence, since more chlamydial organisms
can be isolated from the proliferative part of the cycle
(24). The exact mechanism by which different hormones affect
susceptibility in a species-specific manner is not understood. In our
studies, rats infected at estrus and diestrus stages of the cycle
without prior progesterone priming did not show any signs of active
infection, although enhanced local immune response was noted
(7). However, following progesterone priming, rats are
susceptible to genital C. trachomatis infection. Chlamydial inclusions were detected in the uteri and vaginas of infected animals,
and at the same time immune responses could be detected locally and
systemically (7). In other studies, we have found that rats
are susceptible to genital chlamydial infection when exposed by both
intrauterine and intravaginal route, following progesterone
pretreatment (C. Kaushic and C. R. Wira, unpublished data).
However, intravaginal exposure led to a lower infection and a faster
clearance compared to intrauterine exposure.
The mechanisms by which progesterone enhances susceptibility and
estradiol protects against genital tract infections in rodents are not
clear. It has been suggested that under the influence of progesterone,
the epithelial lining of the genital tract is thinned and stabilized in
a diestrus condition, allowing infection to become established. While
this is possible, there may be additional factors influencing
susceptibility and type of immune response following infection. Studies
from our laboratory have shown that sex hormones have profound effects,
on both the inductive and the effector arm of the mucosal immune system
in the reproductive tract, that may affect the outcome of infections
(29). We have shown that antigen presentation in the uterus
and vagina is influenced by estradiol and progesterone (30,
31). IgA and IgG levels, IgA transport, and immune cell
trafficking in the genital tract are also regulated by estradiol and
progesterone (5, 6, 8, 32). Moreover, this regulation is
tissue specific because, while estradiol enhances and progesterone
suppresses immune response in the uterus, they affect the lower
reproductive tract in opposite manners. Recently similar results have
been reported for the reproductive tract of women. Antigen-independent
CD3+ T-lymphocyte cytolytic activity was found to be higher
during the proliferative phase under the influence of estradiol and
absent in the secretory phase of the menstrual cycle when progesterone levels are high (28). Thus, depending on hormonal
environment at the site of exposure in the reproductive tract, the
local mucosal immune system may be altered, which could lead to
increased or decreased protection, with or without inflammation as seen
in the present study.
One of the possible mechanisms which may account for the differences in
susceptibility seen under different hormone influences may be
differential expression of receptors on epithelial cells in the genital
tract which mediate chlamydial entry (33). Chlamydial infection is initiated by contact, attachment and entry of infectious elementary bodies (EBs) into the host epithelial cell. The exact mechanism of attachment and entry is still not clear, although several
likely possibilities have been suggested. Of these, the most promising
one involves a glycosaminglycan-mediated mechanism (36). Studies show that a heparan sulfate-like
glycosaminglycan on the surface of EBs binds to a heparan sulfate
receptor on the epithelial cells. Other studies have provided evidence
for the possibility that chlamydial MOMP is the adhesion molecule that binds to heparan sulfate proteoglycans on the epithelial surface (22). Interestingly, reproductive tract tissues have been
shown to express a whole family of proteoglycans belonging to epidermal growth factor (EGF) family, including EGF, transforming growth factor
, heparin-binding EGF, and their receptors (11, 26, 34).
Some of these, like heparin-binding EGF and heparin affin regulatory
peptide, HARP have been demonstrated to be under estradiol and/or
progesterone regulation (11, 34, 35). Examining the expression of these proteoglycans in this system under different hormone conditions and correlating with infection could provide important information on the mechanism of chlamydial susceptibility in
the reproductive tract.
When early immune responses were examined in the present study,
lymphocyte activation and enhanced cytokine release were observed in
the draining lymph node cells of progesterone-treated animals, in
response to both mitogenic and chlamydial antigen-specific stimulation.
At the same time, proliferation of spleen cells was suppressed. These
results show that in the absence of any other hormone effect, infection
with Chlamydia, following progesterone pretreatment, leads
to induction of local immune response (seen in draining lymph nodes)
while at the same time there is a systemic suppression (seen in the
spleen). That progesterone enhanced local immune response in the uterus
and draining lymph nodes is somewhat surprising, since others have
shown that it is associated with immunosuppressive effects on immune
responses (for a review, see reference 14). We have
shown in previous studies that progesterone treatment of ovariectomized
animals leads to decreased IgA and polymeric Ig receptor mRNA and
protein levels in the uterus (8). Under the influence of
progesterone, antigen presentation by uterine cells is decreased; fewer
immune cells are present in the rat uterus at diestrus when
progesterone levels are high (5, 31). An alternate
explanation to the contrast observed in local lymph node and spleen
cell responses in this study may be that while progesterone has a
suppressive effect on both, the suppressive effect is obvious only in
the spleen; in the lymph nodes, it is masked by the local immune
response to Chlamydia. The present data show that any local
immunosuppression by progesterone is overridden in the presence of
microbial infection in the genital tract. These results extend our
previous finding that nonovariectomized, intact rats infected with
chlamydia exhibited a modest activation of local immune system and
suppression of the systemic immune system following progesterone
treatment (7).
The present study also indicates that under the influence of estradiol,
there is a greater systemic immune response to genital infection
whereas progesterone leads to a specific local immune activation
(7). This can be concluded from the results where enhanced
mitogenic responses were found in the draining lymph node cells of the
estradiol and combination hormone-treated group, but these cells did
not show enhanced activation or produce significant amounts of the
cytokines IFN-
and IL-10 in response to chlamydial challenge. On the
other hand, spleen cells from both groups that received estradiol
showed high proliferation rates as well as enhanced IFN-
and IL-10
secretion in response to chlamydial challenge.
Studies in murine models of MoPn infection have shown that resistance
to and clearance of infection are heavily dependent on Th1-like
cytokines. IL-12 is important for initial clearance of bacteria, while
IFN-
is important for long-term resolution of infection
(18). Other studies have demonstrated that while cell-mediated immune responses are capable of resolving chlamydial infection, mice are more susceptible to reinfection in the absence of
specific antibody (23). It is less clear if there is an
association between a Th1 response and immunopathology. One study
showed that in a monkey model, repeated C. trachomatis
infection of fallopian tubes led to a Th1 cytokine response associated
with fibrosis and scarring (25). Chlamydial LPS, endotoxin,
and heat shock hsp60 and -70 have also been implicated with
inflammation and pathological consequences (25). The results
of the present study show that the early immune response in
progesterone-treated rats infected with Chlamydia appears to
be a mixed type, with both IFN-
and IL-10 being secreted by the
local lymph nodes in large amounts on day 5 postinfection. Further
studies are needed to characterize the cytokine profile at a later
stage in infection under different hormonal conditions to see if
inflammation persists and correlates with Th1-type profile in this model.
To summarize, our results show that estradiol decreases susceptibility
to genital chlamydial infection and reduces accompanying inflammation,
while progesterone increases susceptibility and promotes an
inflammatory response following infection. The differences seen under
different hormone conditions in the infectivity, inflammation, and
early immune responses in the present study make this a very useful
system to identify the mechanism of susceptibility and inflammation.
These findings have important implications for future vaccine
strategies against genital infections. Using knowledge about the
hormonal environment most likely to induce protective immune responses
without the associated immunopathology may lead to more effective vaccines.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Richard Rossoll and Dathao Ho for technical
assistance; we thank Denis P. Snider for valuable suggestions and
critical reading of the manuscript.
Photomicroscopy was done in the Herbert C. Englert Cell Analysis
Laboratory, which is supported in part by a core grant from Norris
Cotton Cancer Center (CA 23108) and by equipment grants from the Fannie
E. Rippel Foundation. This work was supported by research grant
AI-13541 from NIH (C.R.W.) and a research grant from the Hitchcock
Foundation (C.K.).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Present address: McMaster
University, Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, 1200 Main
St. West, Hamilton, Ontario L8N 3Z5, Canada. Phone: (905) 525-9140, ext. 22988. Fax: (905) 522-6750. E-mail:
kaushic{at}mcmaster.ca.
Editor:
J. D. Clements
 |
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