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Published July 15, 2005 | public
Journal Article

An Immunomodulatory Molecule of Symbiotic Bacteria Directs Maturation of the Host Immune System

Abstract

The mammalian gastrointestinal tract harbors a complex ecosystem consisting of countless bacteria in homeostasis with the host immune system. Shaped by evolution, this partnership has potential for symbiotic benefit. However, the identities of bacterial molecules mediating symbiosis remain undefined. Here we show that, during colonization of animals with the ubiquitous gut microorganism Bacteroides fragilis, a bacterial polysaccharide (PSA) directs the cellular and physical maturation of the developing immune system. Comparison with germ-free animals reveals that the immunomodulatory activities of PSA during B. fragilis colonization include correcting systemic T cell deficiencies and T_H1/T_H2 imbalances and directing lymphoid organogenesis. A PSA mutant of B. fragilis does not restore these immunologic functions. PSA presented by intestinal dendritic cells activates CD4⁺ T cells and elicits appropriate cytokine production. These findings provide a molecular basis for host-bacterial symbiosis and reveal the archetypal molecule of commensal bacteria that mediates development of the host immune system.

Additional Information

© 2005 Elsevier Under an Elsevier user license. Received 12 January 2005, Revised 28 February 2005, Accepted 4 May 2005, Available online 14 July 2005. We thank Drs. A. Onderdonk, R. Cisneros, and R.T. Bronson for expert technical and intellectual contributions; Drs. M. Wessels, C. Nagler-Anderson, L. Comstock, J. McCoy, and H. Ton-That for critical reviews of the manuscript; and members of the Kasper and Tzianabos labs for assistance throughout the work. This study was supported by a WHO Fellowship to C.H.L. (WPRO 0003/03) and a Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation to S.K.M. This work was supported by funding from the NIH (NIH/NIAID R01AI039576) to D.L.K.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023