Datasheet regarding Figs 1–5.
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-02 收录
下载链接:
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Datasheet_regarding_Figs_1_5_/28962096
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Objective
The airway epithelium provides a first line of defense against pathogens by release of antimicrobial factors and neutrophil-attracting chemokines. Pseudomonas (P.) aeruginosa, a Gram-negative bacterium that expresses flagellin as an important virulence factor, is a common cause of injurious airway inflammation. The aim of our study was to determine the contribution of flagellin to the inflammatory, antimicrobial, and metabolic responses of the airway epithelium to P. aeruginosa. Furthermore, as we previously showed that targeting mTOR limited the glycolytic and inflammatory response induced by flagellin, we assessed the effect of rapamycin on human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells stimulated with flagellated and non-flagellated P. aeruginosa.
Methods
Primary pseudostratified HBE cells, cultured on an air-liquid-interface, were treated on the basolateral side with medium, vehicle or rapamycin, exposed on the apical side with flagellated or flagellin-deficient P. aeruginosa, and analyzed for their inflammatory, antimicrobial, and glycolytic responses.
Results
Flagellin augmented the P. aeruginosa-induced expression of antimicrobial factors and secretion of chemokines by HBE cells but did not further increase the glycolytic response. Treatment of HBE cells with rapamycin inhibited mTOR activation in general and flagellin-augmented mTOR activation in particular, but did not affect the glycolytic response. Rapamycin, however, diminished the flagellin-augmented inflammatory and antimicrobial response induced by Pseudomonas.
Conclusions
These results demonstrate that flagellin is a significant factor that augments the inflammatory and antimicrobial response of human airway epithelial cells upon exposure to P. aeruginosa and suggest that mTOR inhibition by rapamycin in the airway epithelium diminishes these exaggerated responses.
创建时间:
2025-05-08



