Resident Corneal Cells Communicate with Neutrophils Leading to the Production of IP-10 during the Primary Inflammatory Response to HSV-1 Infection
Author(s) -
Sara J. Molesworth-Kenyon,
N. Popham,
Ashley A. Viehmann Milam,
John E. Oakes,
Robert N. Lausch
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of inflammation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.106
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 2090-8040
pISSN - 2042-0099
DOI - 10.1155/2012/810359
Subject(s) - chemokine , cxcr3 , immunology , cd8 , cornea , ex vivo , hsl and hsv , medicine , secretion , t cell , in vivo , inflammation , biology , immune system , chemokine receptor , virus , microbiology and biotechnology , ophthalmology
In this study we show that murine and human neutrophils are capable of secreting IP-10 in response to communication from the HSV-1 infected cornea and that they do so in a time frame associated with the recruitment of CD8 + T cells and CXCR3-expressing cells. Cellular markers were used to establish that neutrophil influx corresponded in time to peak IP-10 production, and cellular depletion confirmed neutrophils to be a significant source of IP-10 during HSV-1 corneal infection in mice. A novel ex vivo model for human corneal tissue infection with HSV-1 was used to confirm that cells resident in the cornea are also capable of stimulating neutrophils to secrete IP-10. Our results support the hypothesis that neutrophils play a key role in T-cell recruitment and control of viral replication during HSV-1 corneal infection through the production of the T-cell recruiting chemokine IP-10.
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