Litcius/Paper detail

Hofbauer Cells Spread Listeria monocytogenes among Placental Cells and Undergo Pro-Inflammatory Reprogramming while Retaining Production of Tolerogenic Factors

Siavash Azari, Lauren J. Johnson, Amy Webb, Sophia M. Kozlowski, Xiaoli Zhang, Kara M. Rood, Amal O. Amer, Stéphanie Seveau

2021mBio30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Infection of the placental/fetal unit by the facultative intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes results in severe pregnancy complications. Hofbauer cells (HBCs) are fetal macrophages that play homeostatic anti-inflammatory functions in healthy placentas. HBCs are located in chorionic villi between the two cell barriers that protect fetal blood from infection: trophoblast cells at the maternal interface (in contact with maternal blood), and fetal endothelial cells at the fetal interface (in contact with fetal blood). As the only leukocytes residing in chorionic villi, HBCs form a critical immune barrier protecting the fetus from infection. Here, we show that although HBCs display low susceptibility to L. monocytogenes, the bacterium still replicates intracellularly and can spread to other placental and fetal cells. We propose that HBCs are permissive to L. monocytogenes transplacental propagation and can repolarize toward a pro-inflammatory phenotype upon infection. However, consistent with their placental homeostatic functions, repolarized HBCs maintain the expression of tolerogenic factors known to prevent maternal anti-fetal adaptive immunity, at least at early stages of infection.

Topics & Concepts

Listeria monocytogenesReprogrammingMicrobiologyListeriaChemistryBacteriaBiologyCell biologyImmunologyCellBiochemistryGeneticsListeria monocytogenes in Food Safety