TLR5-Deficient Mice Lack Basal Inflammatory and Metabolic Defects but Exhibit Impaired CD4 T Cell Responses to a Flagellated Pathogen
The Journal of Immunology 186(9): 5406-5412
Article 2011 English
Authors
SL
Shirdi Letran
SL
Seung–Joo Lee
SA
Shaikh M. Atif
Abstract
1 min read
TLR5-deficient mice have been reported to develop spontaneous intestinal inflammation and metabolic abnormalities. However, we report that TLR5-deficient mice from two different animal colonies display no evidence of basal inflammatory disease, metabolic abnormalities, or enhanced resistance to Salmonella infection. In contrast, the absence of TLR5 hindered the initial activation and clonal expansion of intestinal flagellin-specific CD4 T cells following oral Salmonella infection. Together, these data demonstrate that a basal inflammatory phenotype is not a consistent feature of TLR5-deficient mice and document a novel role for TLR5 in the rapid targeting of flagellin by intestinal pathogen-specific CD4 T cells.
Shaikh M. Atif, Seung‐Joo Lee, Lin‐Xi Li, Satoshi Uematsu, Akira Shizuo, Sara Gorjestani, Xin Lin, Edina Schweighoffer, Victor L. J. Tybulewicz, Stephen J. McSorley
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