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Reversing Post-Infectious Epigenetic-Mediated Immune Suppression.
Ontiveros, Carlos O; Guerra-Resendez, Rosa S; Nishiguchi, Tomoki; Ladki, Malik; Hilton, Isaac B; Schlesinger, Larry S; DiNardo, Andrew R.
Affiliation
  • Abhimanyu; The Global Tuberculosis Program, William T. Shearer Center for Human Immunobiology, Texas Children's Hospital, Immigrant and Global Health, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States.
  • Ontiveros CO; Host-Pathogen Interactions Program, Texas Biomedical Research Institute, San Antonio, TX, United States.
  • Guerra-Resendez RS; UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States.
  • Nishiguchi T; Systems, Synthetic, and Physical Biology Graduate Program, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.
  • Ladki M; The Global Tuberculosis Program, William T. Shearer Center for Human Immunobiology, Texas Children's Hospital, Immigrant and Global Health, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States.
  • Hilton IB; The Global Tuberculosis Program, William T. Shearer Center for Human Immunobiology, Texas Children's Hospital, Immigrant and Global Health, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States.
  • Schlesinger LS; Systems, Synthetic, and Physical Biology Graduate Program, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.
  • DiNardo AR; Department of Bioengineering, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.
Front Immunol ; 12: 688132, 2021.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34163486
ABSTRACT
The immune response must balance the pro-inflammatory, cell-mediated cytotoxicity with the anti-inflammatory and wound repair response. Epigenetic mechanisms mediate this balance and limit host immunity from inducing exuberant collateral damage to host tissue after severe and chronic infections. However, following treatment for these infections, including sepsis, pneumonia, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, HIV, tuberculosis (TB) or schistosomiasis, detrimental epigenetic scars persist, and result in long-lasting immune suppression. This is hypothesized to be one of the contributing mechanisms explaining why survivors of infection have increased all-cause mortality and increased rates of unrelated secondary infections. The mechanisms that induce epigenetic-mediated immune suppression have been demonstrated in-vitro and in animal models. Modulation of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) or nuclear receptor (NR4A) pathways is able to block or reverse the development of detrimental epigenetic scars. Similarly, drugs that directly modify epigenetic enzymes, such as those that inhibit histone deacetylases (HDAC) inhibitors, DNA hypomethylating agents or modifiers of the Nucleosome Remodeling and DNA methylation (NuRD) complex or Polycomb Repressive Complex (PRC) have demonstrated capacity to restore host immunity in the setting of cancer-, LCMV- or murine sepsis-induced epigenetic-mediated immune suppression. A third clinically feasible strategy for reversing detrimental epigenetic scars includes bioengineering approaches to either directly reverse the detrimental epigenetic marks or to modify the epigenetic enzymes or transcription factors that induce detrimental epigenetic scars. Each of these approaches, alone or in combination, have ablated or reversed detrimental epigenetic marks in in-vitro or in animal models; translational studies are now required to evaluate clinical applicability.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Communicable Diseases / Epigenesis, Genetic / Immune Tolerance Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals / Humans Language: En Journal: Front Immunol Year: 2021 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Communicable Diseases / Epigenesis, Genetic / Immune Tolerance Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals / Humans Language: En Journal: Front Immunol Year: 2021 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos