Immunity
Volume 38, Issue 6, 27 June 2013, Pages 1187-1197
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Article
Double-Stranded RNA of Intestinal Commensal but Not Pathogenic Bacteria Triggers Production of Protective Interferon-β

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2013.02.024Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Commensal but not pathogenic bacteria induce IFN-β secretion in small intestine

  • LAB-induced IFN-β is beneficial in protection from infection and colitis

  • TLR3 on intestinal DCs sense commensal bacteria dsRNA to produce IFN-β

  • LAB can be utilized as probiotics to induce protective IFN-β from DCs

Summary

The small intestine harbors a substantial number of commensal bacteria and is sporadically invaded by pathogens, but the response to these microorganisms is fundamentally different. We identified a discriminatory sensor by using Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3). Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) of one major commensal species, lactic acid bacteria (LAB), triggered interferon-β (IFN-β) production, which protected mice from experimental colitis. The LAB-induced IFN-β response was diminished by dsRNA digestion and treatment with endosomal inhibitors. Pathogenic bacteria contained less dsRNA and induced much less IFN-β than LAB, and dsRNA was not involved in pathogen-induced IFN-β induction. These results identify TLR3 as a sensor to small intestinal commensal bacteria and suggest that dsRNA in commensal bacteria contributes to anti-inflammatory and protective immune responses.

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