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Can infection cause chronic disease?

Can infection cause chronic disease?

By Anusha Senevirante, Post-Doctoral researcher, Imperial College London

With non-communicable diseases (or NCDs, which include heart disease, diabetes, cancer) now responsible for the most deaths worldwide, large investments into research on these diseases are helping us understand their causes. Many of these diseases have something in common, they involve chronic inflammation. Cells normally triggered by the immune system to fight infection, are persistently activated by endogenous factors within the body, eventually causing damage to bodily tissues and beginning the disease processes involved in the development of diabetes, cancer and atherosclerosis – the build-up of fatty plaques in the arteries causing heart attacks and strokes. This begs the question, if both infection and endogenous factors can trigger the same immune responses that are known to cause NCDs, could infection directly cause NCDs?

Triggering our Immune Defense

A good example of the pathways triggered by both infection and endogenous factors is the well-characterised family of Toll-like receptors (TLRs). These receptors play a key role in innate immunity – the first line of defence against infection. Each of the 9 members of the TLR family recognise different components of pathogens, for example TLR4 recognises lipopolysaccharide (LPS) found on the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, TLR5 recognises flagellin, which forms the tail-like flagellum on certain bacteria, and TLRs 3 and 7 recognise viral ribonucleic acids or RNAs, which viruses release into the host cell they infect to exploit the cell’s machinery to produce its viral proteins. When TLRs bind to a molecule they recognise, they can activate one of two signalling pathways to trigger defence mechanisms against the invading pathogen. All TLRs except TLR3, initiate what is referred to as MyD88-dependent signalling, activating a sequence of proteins ending with a protein called NFkB (NFkappaB), which is responsible for the production of numerous inflammatory proteins. TLR3 and TLR4 use the TRIF-dependent pathway, also resulting in the activation of NFkB as well as the Interferon regulatory factor (IRF) family, which produces Interferons to fight viral infections (Kawai and Akira, 2010). Once an immune response is triggered following TLR activation, it is usually sufficient to successfully destroy the infection. Thus, the infection is short-lived and the immune system can return to a resting state.

There are numerous examples of endogenous ligands produced in the body, that can also activate TLRs, and they can be produced continuously over a long period of time, unlike the usually brief insult caused by infection. Therefore, endogenous ligands are usually behind the development of chronic disease. For example, free fatty acids derived from a diet with high levels of fat, are known to activate TLRs. High blood glucose levels can activate TLRs and increase levels of non-esterified free fatty acids in the blood, thus increasing the risk of diabetes and obesity. It is well known that in atherosclerosis, TLRs recognise numerous endogenous ligands. For example oxidised low density lipoprotein (oxLDL) and saturated fatty acids, from high fat meals, can be recognised by TLR2 and TLR4 (Holvoet et al., 2006). Crucially TLRs are found on the surface of the cell that is the main culprit in worsening atherosclerotic disease – the macrophage. When TLRs become active on a macrophage for a prolonged period, resulting in increased production of inflammatory proteins, macrophages become less effective in clearing harmful oxLDL, ultimately dying and depositing themselves in the artery wall leading to atherosclerotic plaque build-up (Seimon et al., 2010). Hence it is plausible to believe that chronic activation of TLRs by serious, lingering infections could increase the incidence of heart attacks, strokes, diabetes and other NCDs.

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The many endogenous and exogenous/pathogenic ligands that are recognised by Toll-like receptors. (Seneviratne and Monaco, 2013)

The known links between infections and NCDs

A direct link has been proven between viral infection and diabetes. Viruses can use the art of ‘molecular mimicry’ to mimic proteins found within our bodies and direct our immune systems to attack our own tissues. This occurs when TLRs found on the surface of dendritic cells, recognise viruses and direct T cells to become auto-reactive, thus targeting our own body tissues. Simultaneously the virus can block the action of regulatory T cells, which normally suppress auto-reactive T cells to protect our tissues. As a result auto-reactive T cells can turn on us and damage islet cells in the pancreas, releasing more islet proteins for auto-reactive T cells to attack, eventually causing diabetes due to a poorly functioning pancreas (Lang et al., 2005).

Recent studies have revealed that infections significantly increase the likelihood of atherosclerosis and subsequent heart disease, and an aggregation of several infections increases the burden further (Zhu et al., 2000). Infections that have been associated with heart disease include the hepatitis A virus, herpes simplex virus, Chlamydia pneumoniae and influenza. Amazingly live influenza virus has been recovered from atherosclerotic arteries even after the illness had resolved, further supporting a contribution of viral infection to atherosclerotic disease (Haidari et al., 2010). Viral DNA has also been recovered from atherosclerotic plaques (Ibrahim et al., 2005). While a direct link between infection, TLRs and immune activation, and atherosclerosis has yet to be established, more and more studies are suggesting that such a hypothesis is not unreasonable and it may only be a matter of time before a link is established.

Why should we study the link between infection and NCDs?

We typically think of diseases like heart disease and obesity as being most prevalent among mature, sedentary, obese individuals in the developed world, but the reality is very different. NCDs are now more prevalent in developing countries and the patients are getting younger, hence NCDs are primarily diseases of poverty (Lopez et al., 2006). Could it be that people in developing countries are at greater risk of contracting infections, due to poorer hygiene and healthcare, hence the prevalence of NCDs is also increasing? Infections are not the only reason inflammation occurs in our bodies, other factors such as smoking, stress and poor diet play a role, and may also be a greater problem in developing countries. But it is not unreasonable to think that tackling infectious diseases could ease the burden of disease on a population in more ways than one. Our fight against serious communicable diseases such as HIV/AIDS and Malaria could also indirectly reduce the incidence of NCDs. Thus, further research into the links between infections and NCDs could significantly improve quality of life in the developing world.

References

Haidari, M., Wyde, P.R., Litovsky, S., Vela, D., Ali, M., Casscells, S.W., and Madjid, M. (2010). Influenza virus directly infects, inflames, and resides in the arteries of atherosclerotic and normal mice. Atherosclerosis 208, 90–96.

Holvoet, P., Davey, P.C., De Keyzer, D., Doukouré, M., Deridder, E., Bochaton-Piallat, M.-L., Gabbiani, G., Beaufort, E., Bishay, K., Andrieux, N., et al. (2006). Oxidized low-density lipoprotein correlates positively with toll-like receptor 2 and interferon regulatory factor-1 and inversely with superoxide dismutase-1 expression: studies in hypercholesterolemic swine and THP-1 cells. Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol. 26, 1558–1565.

Ibrahim, A.I., Obeid, M.T., Jouma, M.J., Moasis, G.A., Al-Richane, W.L., Kindermann, I., Boehm, M., Roemer, K., Mueller-Lantzsch, N., and Gärtner, B.C. (2005). Detection of herpes simplex virus, cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus DNA in atherosclerotic plaques and in unaffected bypass grafts. J. Clin. Virol. 32, 29–32.

Kawai, T., and Akira, S. (2010). The role of pattern-recognition receptors in innate immunity: update on Toll-like receptors. Nat Immunol 11, 373–384.

Lang, K.S., Recher, M., Junt, T., Navarini, A.A., Harris, N.L., Freigang, S., Odermatt, B., Conrad, C., Ittner, L.M., Bauer, S., et al. (2005). Toll-like receptor engagement converts T-cell autoreactivity into overt autoimmune disease. Nat Med 11, 138–145.

Lopez, A.D., Mathers, C.D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D.T., and Murray, C.J. (2006). Global and regional burden of disease and risk factors, 2001: systematic analysis of population health data. 367, 1747–1757.

Seimon, T. a, Nadolski, M.J., Liao, X., Magallon, J., Nguyen, M., Feric, N.T., Koschinsky, M.L., Harkewicz, R., Witztum, J.L., Tsimikas, S., et al. (2010). Atherogenic lipids and lipoproteins trigger CD36-TLR2-dependent apoptosis in macrophages undergoing endoplasmic reticulum stress. Cell Metab. 12, 467–482.

Seneviratne, A., and Monaco, C. (2013). Role Of Inflammatory Cells And Toll-Like Receptors In Atherosclerosis. Curr. Vasc. Pharmacol.

Zhu, J., Quyyumi, A.A., Norman, J.E., Csako, G., Waclawiw, M.A., Shearer, G.M., and Epstein, S.E. (2000). Effects of total pathogen burden on coronary artery disease risk and C-reactive protein levels. Am. J. Cardiol. 85, 140–146.

15th Mar 2021 Anusha Senevirante, Post-Doctoral researcher, Imperial College London

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