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      Ontogeny of Toll-Like Receptor Mediated Cytokine Responses of Human Blood Mononuclear Cells

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          Abstract

          Newborns and young infants suffer increased infectious morbidity and mortality as compared to older children and adults. Morbidity and mortality due to infection are highest during the first weeks of life, decreasing over several years. Furthermore, most vaccines are not administered around birth, but over the first few years of life. A more complete understanding of the ontogeny of the immune system over the first years of life is thus urgently needed. Here, we applied the most comprehensive analysis focused on the innate immune response following TLR stimulation over the first 2 years of life in the largest such longitudinal cohort studied to-date (35 subjects). We found that innate TLR responses (i) known to support Th17 adaptive immune responses (IL-23, IL-6) peaked around birth and declined over the following 2 years only to increase again by adulthood; (ii) potentially supporting antiviral defense (IFN-α) reached adult level function by 1 year of age; (iii) known to support Th1 type immunity (IL-12p70, IFN-γ) slowly rose from a low at birth but remained far below adult responses even at 2 years of age; (iv) inducing IL-10 production steadily declined from a high around birth to adult levels by 1 or 2 years of age, and; (v) leading to production of TNF-α or IL-1β varied by stimuli. Our data contradict the notion of a linear progression from an ‘immature’ neonatal to a ‘mature’ adult pattern, but instead indicate the existence of qualitative and quantitative age-specific changes in innate immune reactivity in response to TLR stimulation.

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          Most cited references26

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          Innate immunity of the newborn: basic mechanisms and clinical correlates.

          Ofer Levy (2007)
          The fetus and newborn face a complex set of immunological demands, including protection against infection, avoidance of harmful inflammatory immune responses that can lead to pre-term delivery, and balancing the transition from a sterile intra-uterine environment to a world that is rich in foreign antigens. These demands shape a distinct neonatal innate immune system that is biased against the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. This bias renders newborns at risk of infection and impairs responses to many vaccines. This Review describes innate immunity in newborns and discusses how this knowledge might be used to prevent and treat infection in this vulnerable population.
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            Inflammation in preterm and term labour and delivery.

            Inflammation has been implicated in the mechanisms responsible for preterm and term parturition, as well as fetal injury. Out of all of the suspected causes of preterm labour and delivery, infection and/or inflammation is the only pathological process for which both a firm causal link with preterm birth has been established and a molecular pathophysiology defined. Inflammation has also been implicated in the mechanism of spontaneous parturition at term. Most cases of histopathological inflammation and histological chorioamnionitis, both in preterm and term labour, are sub-clinical in nature. The isolation of bacteria in the amniotic fluid, known as microbial invasion of the amniotic cavity, is a pathological finding; the frequency of which is dependent upon the clinical presentation and gestational age. There is a window of time during which it may be possible to detect a 'molecular signature of inflammation' by analysis of the transcriptome before histological evidence is observed. This article reviews the role of inflammation in preterm and term parturition. It is possible that modulation of inflammation using anti-inflammatory cytokines, corticoids, antioxidants and/or other factors may complement antibiotic therapy and limit fetal injury.
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              Neonatal innate TLR-mediated responses are distinct from those of adults.

              The human neonate and infant are unduly susceptible to infection with a wide variety of microbes. This susceptibility is thought to reflect differences from adults in innate and adaptive immunity, but the nature of these differences is incompletely characterized. The innate immune response directs the subsequent adaptive immune response after integrating information from TLRs and other environmental sensors. We set out to provide a comprehensive analysis defining differences in response to TLR ligation between human neonates and adults. In response to most TLR ligands, neonatal innate immune cells, including monocytes and conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells produced less IL-12p70 and IFN-alpha (and consequently induced less IFN-gamma), moderately less TNF-alpha, but as much or even more IL-1beta, IL-6, IL-23, and IL-10 than adult cells. At the single-cell level, neonatal innate cells generally were less capable of producing multiple cytokines simultaneously, i.e., were less polyfunctional. Overall, our data suggest a robust if not enhanced capacity of the neonate vs the adult white-blood cell TLR-mediated response to support Th17- and Th2-type immunity, which promotes defense against extracellular pathogens, but a reduced capacity to support Th1-type responses, which promote defense against intracellular pathogens.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2010
                30 November 2010
                : 5
                : 11
                : e15041
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Division of Infectious and Immunological Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
                [2 ]Department of Immunology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America
                [3 ]Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, United States of America
                [4 ]Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, Washington, United States of America
                United States of America
                Author notes
                * E-mail: tkollm@ 123456mac.com (TK)

                Conceived and designed the experiments: TRK ESF CBW AMH PML SET. Performed the experiments: NPC DB BC DPS AK JC AR-W PML SET. Analyzed the data: NPC DB KCH NRH SGS AMH ESF TRK. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: PML ST. Wrote the paper: TRK ESF NPC DB KCH AMH.

                ¶ These authors also contributed equally to this work.

                Article
                PONE-D-10-00792
                10.1371/journal.pone.0015041
                2994830
                21152080
                509bab5e-2c9e-4439-82eb-5fc7066b64b4
                Corbett et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 17 August 2010
                : 14 October 2010
                Page count
                Pages: 12
                Categories
                Research Article
                Biology
                Developmental Biology
                Immunology
                Immune Cells
                Antigen-Presenting Cells
                B Cells
                Monocytes
                Immunity
                Immune Activation
                Immunoregulation
                Inflammation
                Innate Immunity
                Immunologic Techniques
                Immunoassays
                Immunofluorescence
                Immune Response
                Immunomodulation
                Medicine
                Clinical Immunology
                Pediatrics
                Child Development

                Uncategorized
                Uncategorized

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