Psychological stress increases susceptibility to Staphylococcus aureus infection by the action of TGFÃ to suppress immune acting fibroblasts [scRNA-Seq]
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-02 收录
下载链接:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRP515966
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Psychological stress results in increased susceptibility to infection yet the mechanisms responsible for this major healthcare burden are incompletely understood. In mice, stress induced by restraint increases infection by Staphylococcus aureus while adrenalectomy or chemical inhibition of adrenergic signaling blocks this response. Single-cell transcriptomics and lipidomic profiling of the skin after stress reveal fibroblasts undergoing adipogenesis are the major cell type responding to stress. Fibroblasts are critical to the increase in infection as adrenaline inhibits fibroblast Camp expression and bacterial killing, and stress did not increase infection in mice that lack Camp in fibroblasts. The suppression of the antimicrobial function of Camp in fibroblasts occurs due to activation of TGFÃ signaling and is critical to the capacity of stress to increase susceptibility to infection since treatment of mice with a neutralizing TGFÃ antibody or a TGFÃ receptor inhibitor restores expression of Camp and alleviates increased susceptibility to infection. These data show that susceptibility to infection after psychological stress is due to a brain-skin axis that induces TGFÃ and subsequently inhibits host defense by immune acting fibroblasts in the dermis. This identifies TGFÃ as an unexpected target that can ameliorate increased bacterial infections associated with stress. Overall design: scRNA-seq of infected mouse skin in the presence or absence of restraint stress with or without TGFÃ receptor inhibitor (SB-431542)
创建时间:
2025-05-30



