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Infection and Immunity, May 2003, p. 2430-2438, Vol. 71, No. 5
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.5.2430-2438.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Intestinal Disease Research Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario Canada,1 Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Brussels Branch and Christian de Duve Institute of Cellular Pathology, Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium,2 School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom3
Received 22 August 2002/ Returned for modification 12 November 2002/ Accepted 4 February 2003
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Infection of mice or rats with nematode parasites is associated with a variety of alterations in intestinal physiology, including enhanced contractility of small intestinal muscle (13, 36; J. M. Goldhill, F. Finkelman, J. Urban, S. Morris, C. R. Maliszewski, and T. Shea-Donohue, Gastroenterology 108, abstr. A286, 1995) and intestinal goblet cell hyperplasia (9, 19, 23). Previously, Vallance et al. demonstrated that nematode infection-induced intestinal muscle hypercontractility is, at least in part, immune mediated, as it was attenuated in infected athymic CD4-/- and major histocompatibility complex class II-deficient mice (38). Recently, Khan et al. also reported that the Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 are present in the muscularis externa during nematode infection and contribute to changes in intestinal muscle function through a process dependent on signal transducer and activator of transcription factor 6 (Stat6) (24). In contrast, the Th2 cytokine IL-5 contributes little to these responses (37).
There is growing interest in the Th2 cytokine IL-9, which acts on various cell types, including T and B lymphocytes, mast cells, eosinophils, lung epithelial cells, and hematopoietic progenitors (7, 8, 31, 39). IL-9 has been shown to protect mice from gram-negative bacterial shock, and this effect was correlated with the down-regulation of tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL-12, and gamma interferon production and with the up-regulation of IL-10 production (21). The generation of transgenic mice overexpressing IL-9 has suggested a critical role for this cytokine in a variety of immunological responses, including intestinal mastocytosis and enhanced resistance to nematode infection (14, 15). Nevertheless, neither the role of IL-9 in intestinal muscle function nor the precise effector mechanism by which IL-9 contributes to host protection during intestinal nematode infection is known.
In the present study, using two different nematode species, T. spiralis and T. muris, which inhabit the small intestine and the large intestine, respectively, we have assessed the contribution of IL-9 to infection-induced enteric muscle hypercontractility and worm expulsion from the gut. For the first time, we demonstrate that IL-9 influences muscle hypercontractility during nematode parasite infections. While the administration of IL-9 enhanced infection-induced jejunal muscle contraction and worm expulsion in T. spiralis infection, the neutralization of IL-9 had no significant effect on muscle contraction or worm expulsion. In contrast, the neutralization of IL-9 significantly attenuated colonic muscle contraction and worm expulsion in T. muris infection. These results suggest a role for IL-9 in intestinal muscle hypercontractility and highlight differences in the contributions of this cytokine to host protection against different nematode infections.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Parasitological techniques. The T. spiralis parasites used in this study originated in the Department of Zoology at the University of Toronto, and the colony was maintained through serial infections alternating between male Sprague-Dawley rats and male CD1 mice. The larvae were obtained from infected rodents 60 to 90 days postinfection (p.i.) by using a modification (40) of the technique described by Castro and Fairbairn (5). Mice were killed at various times p.i. Adult worms were recovered from mice after the intestine had been opened longitudinally, rinsed, and placed in Hanks' balanced salt solution for 3 h at 37°C. Worms were counted under a dissecting microscope.
The techniques used for T. muris maintenance, infection, and recovery were described previously (41). Mice were infected with approximately 100 eggs and killed at various times p.i.
In vivo treatments. T. spiralis-infected mice were injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) with IL-9 (100 ng/day) which had been purified from the serum of IL-9 transgenic mice on immobilized rat anti-mouse IL-9 antibody. Dose-response studies had revealed that this dose is optimum for in vivo experiments. Control mice received the same volume of buffer (phosphate-buffered saline [PBS] plus 1% mouse serum) as that used for the cytokine injection. Treatment was performed every day from the day of infection until the mice were sacrificed.
For neutralizing IL-9, mice were treated with murine anti-IL-9 monoclonal antibodies (MM9A1 and MM9CI) or were vaccinated against IL-9 with IL-9 chemically complexed to ovalbumin (OVA) to induce neutralizing anti-IL-9 antibodies as described previously (32). For the latter experiments, control mice were immunized with OVA only. In studies with anti-IL-9 antibodies, mice were treated with 1 mg of antibody or control mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) on day 0 and then with 0.5 mg on every alternate day until day 20 p.i.
Measurement of muscle contraction in intestinal muscle strips. Preparation of intestinal muscle strips for muscle contractility experiments and analysis of carbachol-induced contraction were described previously (36). Briefly, the jejunum or colon was removed and placed in oxygenated (95% O2-5% CO2) Krebs solution, and 1-cm sections of whole gut were cut from the jejunum or from the colon. The lumen of each segment was flushed with Krebs buffer prior to the insertion of short (2- to 3-mm) lengths of Silastic tubing (outer diameter, 0.065 in.; inner diameter, 0.030 in.; Dow Corning, Midland, Mich.) into the open ends of the gut segments. Tubing was then tied in place with surgical silk. The insertion of the tubing was found to maintain the patency of the gut segments over the course of the experiments. Segments were then hung in the longitudinal axis and attached at one end to an FT03C force transducer (Grass, Quincy, Mass.), and responses were recorded on a Grass 7D polygraph. Tissues were equilibrated for 30 min at 37°C in Krebs buffer that had been oxygenated with 95% O2- 5% CO2 before the start of the experiment. The previously identified optimal tension (400 mg for jejunum and 800 mg for colon) was then applied in carbachol dose-response experiments before the addition of the first dose of carbachol (36). Previous experiments had indicated that these values were the optimal tensions for determining the maximal responsiveness of both control and inflammed tissues. After the application of tension, the gut segments were exposed to different concentrations of carbachol. After the maximal response to each dose was obtained, the tissues were rinsed twice and equilibrated in fresh Krebs solution for 15 min before the addition of the next dose. Contractile responses to carbachol were expressed as milligrams of tension per cross-sectional area as described previously (36). For each mouse, the mean tension was calculated from at least three segments.
Measurement of contraction and relaxation in dispersed smooth muscle cells. Muscle cells were isolated from longitudinal muscle of the myenteric plexus (LMMP) in the jejunum of noninfected C57BL/6 mice by a method similar to that used by Bitar and Makhlouf to prepare smooth muscle cells from the guinea pig stomach (4). Briefly, the jejunum was removed and placed in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium with 1% antibiotic-antimycotic agent. LMMP was prepared by careful dissection, preincubated with 10 ng of IL-9/ml or with PBS overnight in a 5% CO2 incubator, and then incubated for two successive 10-min periods at 31°C in 10 ml of HEPES medium (98.1 mM NaCl, 3.87 mM KCl, 2.42 mM NaH2PO4 · H2O, 4.86 mM L-glutamic acid, 4.86 mM fumaric acid, 4.86 mM pyruvate, 11.17 mM glucose, 1.79 mM CaCl2, 1.2 mM MgSO4 · 7H2O, 23.5 mM HEPES [pH 7.4]) containing 10 mg of collagenase (CLS type 1; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.)/ml, bovine serum albumin (Sigma), and trypsin inhibitor. After incubation, the partly digested LMMP was washed with enzyme-free HEPES medium and reincubated in 10 ml of fresh HEPES medium to allow the cells to disperse spontaneously. Cells were then harvested by filtration through 210-µm polyester mesh.
Dispersed cells were stimulated by the addition of an 0.8-ml aliquot of the cell suspension to 0.1 ml of the test agent and incubation at room temperature for 30 s, because we previously found that carbachol induced the maximal contractile response in jejunal longitudinal smooth muscle cells after 30 s of incubation. The reaction was interrupted by the addition of acrolein to a final concentration of 1%. The median cell length of 50 cells on each slide was measured with a microscope by using image-splitting micrometry, and the percent decrease in the mean cell length relative to that of the control was determined.
MMCP-1 ELISA. The levels of mouse mucosal mast cell protease 1 (MMCP-1) in serum were measured by using an MMCP-1 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit purchased from Moredun Animal Health (Penicuik, United Kingdom) as previously described (22). Briefly, rabbit anti-MMCP-1 was used as a capture antibody. Tenfold serial dilutions of serum were made from 1/10 to 1/10,000. Horeseradish peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse MMCP-1 was then added, and quantification was carried out by reference to purified MMCP-1.
Evaluation of in vitro cytokine production from spleen cells. Single-cell suspensions of spleen tissues were prepared in RPMI 1640 containing 10% fetal calf serum, 5 mM L-glutamine, 100 U of penicillin/ml, 100 µg of streptomycin/ml, 25 mM HEPES, and 0.05 mM 2-mercaptoethanol (all from Gibco-BRL). Cells (107) were incubated in the presence of concanavalin A (ConA) (5 µg/ml) or 50 µg of T. spiralis antigen/ml. Culture supernatants were harvested after 48 h and stored at -20°C. Cytokines in the supernatants were measured by ELISAs with commercially available kits purchased from R & D Systems (Minneapolis, Minn.).
Histological analysis. A segment (1 cm in length) of small intestine or cecum tip was fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin and processed by standard histological techniques. The neutral buffered formalin-fixed sections were stained with periodic acid-Schiff stain for counting intestinal goblet cells. The number of goblet cells was expressed per 10 villus crypt units.
Statistical analysis. Data were analyzed by using Student's t test, with a P value of <0.05 being considered significant. All results are expressed as the mean and standard error of the mean (SEM).
| RESULTS |
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IL-9 enhanced serum MMCP-1 levels and intestinal goblet cell numbers in T. spiralis infection. MMCP-1 levels were undetectable in noninfected mice. Infection with T. spiralis caused a clear increase in serum MMCP-1 concentrations (from <0.1 to 16.85 ± 0.8 ng/ml). IL-9 administration to both noninfected and T. spiralis-infected mice resulted in a significant up-regulation of the enzyme (Fig. 3a).
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Administration of IL-9 up-regulates IL-4 and IL-13 production from in vitro-stimulated spleen cells. To evaluate the influence of IL-9 on the production of IL-4 and IL-13 in T. spiralis infection, spleen cells collected from IL-9- or PBS-treated infected mice on day 8 p.i. were stimulated with ConA or with T. spiralis antigen. The production of both IL-4 and IL-13 in cultures of ConA-stimulated spleen cells collected from IL-9 treated mice was significantly increased (Table 1). A similar trend was also observed after in vitro stimulation with T. spiralis antigen.
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| DISCUSSION |
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In contrast to the observations made with T. spiralis, IL-9 plays a critical role in mediating the hypercontractility of colonic muscle during T. muris infection. Taken together, these results indicate that the roles of individual cytokines in the generation of Th2-mediated muscle hypercontractility differ according to the type of nematode infection: while IL-4 and IL-13 are required and sufficient for hypercontractility induced by T. spiralis infection, IL-9 is required for an optimal response to T. muris infection. In both situations, however, increasing IL-9 levels accelerates worm clearance.
T. spiralis is a parasite that dwells in the small intestine, and studies with animal models have demonstrated that, like other nematode infections, infection with T. spiralis is associated with enhanced contractility of small intestinal muscle (6, 33, 36). A previous study from our laboratory showed that mouse strains expelling this parasite rapidly (e.g., NIH Swiss) exhibit a greater degree of small intestinal muscle contractility than B10.BR mice, which expel this parasite slowly (36). Recent work has shown that jejunal muscle hypercontractility is attenuated in mice deficient in Stat6, suggesting an important role for Th2 cytokines (24). Very recently, it was also shown that IL-4 and IL-13 enhance carbachol-induced contraction in dispersed smooth muscle cells isolated from the jejunum of mice (1). It was also shown that the transfer and overexpression of the IL-12 gene during Th2-based T. spiralis infection shift the immune response toward Th1 and inhibit worm expulsion. In addition, this shift in the immune response attenuates infection-induced muscle hypercontractility (26). Taken together, these results clearly indicate that the Th2 type of immune response is critical for the development of intestinal muscle hypercontractility in this infection and also that the processes underlying muscle hypercontractility and parasite expulsion may share a common immunological basis and may be causally related. In the present study, the IL-9-mediated enhancement of muscle contractility in infected mice might have occurred as the result of an additive effect of this cytokine on other Th2 cytokines or simply through an increase in the production of IL-4 and IL-13, both of which were produced in higher amounts from spleen cells from IL-9-treated mice. IL-9 induction of IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 expression in lungs was also shown recently by Temann et al. (34).
To assess the contribution of IL-9 in T. spiralis infection, we also studied the effect of IL-9 treatment on muscle contractility and worm expulsion in Stat6-deficient mice infected with T. spiralis. Consistent with previous findings (24), significant attenuation of infection-induced intestinal muscle contractility and inhibition of worm expulsion occurred in Stat6-deficient T. spiralis-infected mice. In spite of the acceleration of worm expulsion and the enhancement of muscle contractility in wild-type C57BL/6 mice, IL-9 treatment had no significant effect on muscle contractility or on worm expulsion in Stat6-deficient mice on days 7 and 14 p.i. (data not shown). On the basis of these results, it seems likely that the effect that we observed on muscle contractility was due to increased production of IL-4 and IL-13. The failure to inhibit the development of muscle hypercontractility and worm expulsion by using two different methods of IL-9 neutralization may have been due to a dominant effect of IL-4 or IL-13 in this infection, a situation similar to that recently observed in the context of worm expulsion in IL-4-deficient mice (2). Previous studies suggested that blocking of both IL-4 and IL-13 is required for efficient inhibition of worm expulsion in T. spiralis infection but that blocking of either IL-4 or IL-13 is sufficient to inhibit worm expulsion in T. muris infection (17). It is possible that in T. spiralis infection, immunoneutralization of IL-9 failed to affect worm expulsion and muscle contractility due to a compensatory action of IL-4 or IL-13 or both.
The nematode parasite T. muris inhabits the large intestine of mice and is closely related at the morphological, physiological, and antigenic levels to Trichuris trichuria, the causative agent of chronic trichuriasis in humans (12). Different inbred strains of mice exhibit differential immune responsiveness to T. muris infection. Resistant strains (C57BL/6, BALB/c, and BALB/K) mount a Th2 type of response and expel the parasite rapidly from the intestine, while susceptible strains (AKR and B10.BR) develop a chronic infection with the activation of a nonprotective Th1 type of response (11). Previous studies with T. muris demonstrated that IL-9 transgenic mice, which constitutively overexpress IL-9, expel worms more quickly than wild-type mice (15) and that vaccination against IL-9 inhibits worm expulsion (32) from the intestine. Although the importance of IL-9 in the generation of a host protective immune response in this infection was well documented in these studies, the ultimate effector mechanisms by which IL-9 mediates the eviction of the parasite from the gut remain to be determined. In this study, we clearly observed an attenuation of T. muris infection-induced colonic muscle contraction in mice which were immunized against IL-9. This finding correlated with the inhibition of worm expulsion from the large intestine. These findings clearly indicate that IL-9 plays a critical role in worm expulsion and muscle hypercontractility during this nematode infection. In addition, as IL-9 activates Stat3 (42), the results of the present study indicate that in addition to the Stat6 pathway, other pathways, such as the Stat3 pathway, may also be involved in intestinal muscle function.
Characteristic components of the cellular immune response to nematode infections also include mucosal mastocytosis and goblet cell hyperplasia (9, 19). Here, we further investigated the extent to which these responses are IL-9 dependent and are involved in host protection against these two nematode infections. Mast cells are generally considered important for host protective immunity in T. spiralis infection, although some controversy exists (27, 35). To investigate the mast cell response, we quantified the levels in serum of MMCP-1, a protease known to be produced by mucosal mast cells in vivo (30). The administration of exogenous IL-9 increased MMCP-1 levels in T. spiralis infection. As IL-9 is a growth factor for mast cells, this increment in MMCP-1 levels reflects the efficacy of in vivo IL-9 treatment. Moreover, the suppression of MMCP-1 by anti-IL-9 antibody treatment in noninfected mice suggested that the antibody effectively inhibited the activity of IL-9 in vivo. Nevertheless, the absence of any significant effects of anti-IL-9 antibody treatment on MMCP-1 levels and worm expulsion in T. spiralis-infected mice indicates that other cytokines compensate for the absence of IL-9 in maintaining MMCP-1 levels in this infection. Recently, we found that MMCP-1 levels are decreased in T. spiralis-infected IL-4 knockout mice immunized against IL-9 (unpublished observation), suggesting that effective inhibition of MMCP-1 is attainable by blocking both IL-4 and IL-9 but not by blocking IL-9 only.
While IL-9 immunoneutralization inhibited worm expulsion, it had no significant effect on serum MMCP-1 levels in T. muris-infected mice. This observation supports a previous observation that immunization against IL-9 had no significant effect on mucosal mast cell numbers in the cecum in this nematode infection compared to a control (32). These observations do not support a major role for mast cells in the expulsion process of T. muris, an observation similar to one recently made for anti-IL-3 antibody treatment in this parasite infection (3).
Hyperplasia of mucin-secreting intestinal goblet cells has also been observed in a number of nematode infections, including T. spiralis and T. muris infections (9, 18, 23, 25). Mucins from goblet cells may play an important role in trapping and removing intestinal nematodes from the gut (28). In this study, we observed significantly higher numbers of goblet cells in IL-9-treated mice than in PBS-treated mice infected with T. spiralis. This enhancement of the goblet cell response may also be due to the additive effects of IL-9 on other Th2 cytokines. Although exogenous IL-9 treatment increased goblet cell numbers in the intestine, neutralization of this cytokine had no significant effect on these cells in T. spiralis infection. In T. muris infection, although goblet cell numbers decreased in mice which were immunized against IL-9, the reduction was not statistically different from that in controls. Thus, IL-9-mediated host protective immunity in T. muris infection correlated more with colonic muscle hypercontractility than with goblet cells.
In conclusion, the present data indicate that IL-9 influences intestinal muscle function during enteric nematode infection and that the involvement of this cytokine in host protective immunity in nematode infection differs in infections with different species of nematodes. The results suggest that when IL-9 stimulates intestinal muscle contraction, it is associated with an acceleration of worm clearance, and that anti-IL-9 neutralization inhibits worm clearance when it is associated with an attenuation of muscle contraction. While IL-9 seems to be critical in the development of colonic muscle hypercontractility and worm expulsion in T. muris infection, it is not essential for the development of hypercontractility in T. spiralis-infected mice, although the addition of IL-9 enhanced hypercontractility and worm expulsion, presumably by an additive affect of its action together with those of IL-4 and IL-13. This study provided evidence for a role of IL-9 in immune-mediated alterations in intestinal muscle function and generated interesting data on the contribution of the same cytokine to host protection in different species of nematode parasites.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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M.R. is a scientific associate at Télévie.
| FOOTNOTES |
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