- Browse by Subject
Browsing by Subject "Humoral immunity"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item The Detection and Analysis of Pathogen-Reactive Immunoglobulins in the Urine of Men With Nongonococcal Urethritis(2023-05) Ryan, John D.; Nelson, David E.; Jordan, Stephen J.; Kaplan, Mark H.; Absalon, SabrinaInflammation of the urethra—urethritis—is commonly diagnosed in men and women who have sexually transmitted infections (STI). Characteristic signs and symptoms of urethritis include urethral discharge and burning pain during urination (dysuria). However, these findings are non-specific and can be elicited by STI for which optimal treatment approaches differ. We wanted to investigate if immunoglobulins (antibodies) in the urine of men with acute urethritis could determine the etiologies of these cases. Previously, we conducted an observational case-control study of biological males to compare the urethral microbiota of participants with unambiguous, laboratory-confirmed urethritis (cases) and participants without urethral inflammation (controls). This revealed that nearly 2 in 5 men with nongonococcal urethritis tested negative for all common STI. We identified atypical urethral pathogens in approximately 1/3 of these STI-negative individuals using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. However, we did not detect microorganisms suspected to be urethral pathogens in the remaining 2/3 of STI-negative participants. We hypothesized that these men with “pathogen-negative” urethritis had persisting inflammation from a recent STI that already cleared spontaneously by the time of testing. We observed that urine IgA antibodies against Chlamydia trachomatis (Ctr) infectious particles were significantly more prevalent among men with pathogen-negative urethritis compared to controls. In contrast, we found that the prevalence of urine anti-Ctr IgA was similar between controls and urethritis cases with atypical infections. However, our efforts to detect antibodies against another common STI, Mycoplasma genitalium (Mgen), were complicated by low abundance in urine and the unexpected prevalence of Mgen-reactive antibodies among controls. Collectively, our results suggest that signs and symptoms of urethritis can continue after the causative STI(s) have been eliminated. Furthermore, male urine represents a practical, non-invasive source of pathogen-reactive antibodies that could be evaluated using point-of-care diagnostic tests to elucidate urethritis etiologies. Importantly, our results also suggest that sexual partners of men with pathogen-negative, nongonococcal urethritis are an unrecognized chlamydia reservoir.Item Dynamic modulation of spleen germinal center reactions by gut bacteria during Plasmodium infection(Cell Press, 2021-05-11) Mandal, Rabindra K.; Denny, Joshua E.; Namazzi, Ruth; Opoka, Robert O.; Datta, Dibyadyuti; John, Chandy C.; Schmidt, Nathan W.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineGut microbiota educate the local and distal immune system in early life to imprint long-term immunological outcomes while maintaining the capacity to dynamically modulate the local mucosal immune system throughout life. It is unknown whether gut microbiota provide signals that dynamically regulate distal immune responses following an extra-gastrointestinal infection. We show here that gut bacteria composition correlated with the severity of malaria in children. Using the murine model of malaria, we demonstrate that parasite burden and spleen germinal center reactions are malleable to dynamic cues provided by gut bacteria. Whereas antibiotic-induced changes in gut bacteria have been associated with immunopathology or impairment of immunity, the data demonstrate that antibiotic-induced changes in gut bacteria can enhance immunity to Plasmodium. This effect is not universal but depends on baseline gut bacteria composition. These data demonstrate the dynamic communications that exist among gut bacteria, the gut-distal immune system, and control of Plasmodium infection.