Title: Antimony-resistant Leishmania donovani Exploits MIR-466i to deactivate host MyD88 for regulating IL-10/IL-12 levels during early hours of infection
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American Association of Immunologists
Abstract
Infection with antimony-resistant Leishmania donovani (SbRLD) induces aggressive pathology in the mammalian hosts as compared with ones with antimony-sensitive L. donovani (SbSLD) infection. SbRLD, but not SbSLD, interacts with TLR2/TLR6 to induce IL-10 by exploiting p50/c-Rel subunits of NF-κB in infected macrophages (Mfs). Most of the TLRs exploit the universal adaptor protein MyD88 to activate NF-κB. We now show that infection of Mfs from MyD882/2 mice with SbRLD gave rise to significantly higher intracellular parasite number coupled with elevated IL-10/IL-12 ratio in the culture supernatant as compared with infection in wild type (WT) Mfs. These attributes were not seen with SbSLD in similar experiments. Further, SbRLD infection upregulated miR-466i, which binds with 39-untranslated region, leading to the downregulation of MyD88. Infection of MyD882/2 Mf or IL-12-/- Mf with SbRLD induced IL-10 surge at 4 h, whereas the same in WT Mf started from 12 h. Thus, absence of IL-12 in MyD882/2 mice favored early binding of NF-κB subunits to the IL-10 promoter, resulting in IL-10 surge. Infection of MyD882/2 mice with SbRLD showed significantly higher organ parasites coupled with ill-defined and immature hepatic granulomas, whereas in WT mice there were less organ parasites and the granulomas were well defined. From the survival kinetics it was observed that SbRLD-infected MyD882/2 mice died by 60 d postinfection, whereas the WT mice continued to survive. Our results demonstrate that SbRLD has evolved a unique strategy to evade host antileishmanial immune repertoire by manipulating host MyD88 to its advantage. © 2015 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
