Dynamics of macrophage polarization support Salmonella persistence in a whole living organism

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hdl:2117/406924
Document typeArticle
Defense date2024-01-15
Rights accessOpen Access
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Abstract
The spatiotemporal dynamics of macrophage polarization during infection within host remain to be investigated. Here, we implement a model of persistent Salmonella. Typhimurium infection in zebrafish, which allows visualization of polarized macrophages and bacteria in real time at high resolution. While macrophages polarize toward M1-like phenotype to control early infection, during later stages, Salmonella persists inside non-inflammatory clustered macrophages. Transcriptomic profiling of macrophages showed a highly dynamic signature during infection characterized by a switch from pro-inflammatory to anti-inflammatory/pro-regenerative status and revealed a shift in adhesion program. In agreement with this specific adhesion signature, macrophage trajectory tracking identifies motionless macrophages as a permissive niche for persistent Salmonella. Our results demonstrate that zebrafish model provides a unique platform to explore, in a whole organism, the versatile nature of macrophage functional programs during bacterial acute and persistent infections.
CitationBernardello, M. [et al.]. Dynamics of macrophage polarization support Salmonella persistence in a whole living organism. "eLife", 15 Gener 2024, vol. 13, núm. e89828.
ISSN2050-084X
Publisher versionhttps://elifesciences.org/articles/89828
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