Tamas Dolowschiak
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tamas Dolowschiak.
Cell Host & Microbe | 2014
Mikael E. Sellin; Anna A. Müller; Boas Felmy; Tamas Dolowschiak; Médéric Diard; Aubry Tardivel; Kendle M. Maslowski; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
The gut mucosal epithelium separates the host from the microbiota, but enteropathogens such as Salmonella Typhimurium (S.Tm) can invade and breach this barrier. Defenses against such acute insults remain incompletely understood. Using a murine model of Salmonella enterocolitis, we analyzed mechanisms limiting pathogen loads in the epithelium during early infection. Although the epithelium-invading S.Tm replicate initially, this intraepithelial replicative niche is restricted by expulsion of infected enterocytes into the lumen. This mechanism is compromised if inflammasome components (NAIP1-6, NLRC4, caspase-1/-11) are deleted, or ablated specifically in the epithelium, resulting in ∼100-fold higher intraepithelial loads and accelerated lymph node colonization. Interestingly, the cytokines downstream of inflammasome activation, interleukin (IL)-1α/β and IL-18, appear dispensable for epithelial restriction of early infection. These data establish the role of an epithelium-intrinsic inflammasome, which drives expulsion of infected cells to restrict the pathogens intraepithelial proliferation. This may represent a general defense mechanism against mucosal infections.
PLOS Biology | 2014
Patrick Kaiser; Roland R. Regoes; Tamas Dolowschiak; Sandra Y. Wotzka; Jette Lengefeld; Emma Slack; Andrew J. Grant; Martin Ackermann; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
Salmonella bacteria can tolerate antibiotics by adopting a slow-growing “persister” state that hides in host dendritic cells and can re-initiate infection after treatment ends. This can be avoided by supplementing antibiotic treatment with stimulants of innate immunity.
Journal of Immunology | 2014
Silvia Stockinger; Claudia U. Duerr; Marcus Fulde; Tamas Dolowschiak; Johanna Pott; Ines Yang; Daniel Eibach; Fredrik Bäckhed; Shizuo Akira; Sebastian Suerbaum; Martijn H. Brugman; Mathias W. Hornef
Recent results indicate a significant contribution of innate immune signaling to maintain mucosal homeostasis, but the precise underlying signal transduction pathways are ill-defined. By comparative analysis of intestinal epithelial cells isolated from conventionally raised and germ-free mice, as well as animals deficient in the adaptor molecules MyD88 and TRIF, the TLR3 and TLR4, as well as the type I and III IFN receptors, we demonstrate significant TLR-mediated signaling under homeostatic conditions. Surprisingly, homeostatic expression of Reg3γ and Paneth cell enteric antimicrobial peptides critically relied on TRIF and, in part, TLR3 but was independent of IFN receptor signaling. Reduced antimicrobial peptide expression was associated with significantly lower numbers of Paneth cells and a reduced Paneth cell maturation and differentiation factor expression in TRIF mutant compared with wild-type epithelium. This phenotype was not transferred to TRIF-sufficient germ-free animals during cohousing. Low antimicrobial peptide expression in TRIF-deficient mice caused reduced immediate killing of orally administered bacteria but was not associated with significant alterations in the overall composition of the enteric microbiota. The phenotype was rapidly restored in a TRIF-independent fashion after transient epithelial damage. Our results identify TRIF signaling as a truly homeostatic pathway to maintain intestinal epithelial barrier function revealing fundamental differences in the innate immune signaling between mucosal homeostasis and tissue repair.
Mucosal Immunology | 2016
Jennifer Brasseit; E. Althaus-Steiner; Martin Faderl; Nina Dickgreber; Leslie Saurer; Vera Genitsch; Tamas Dolowschiak; Hai Li; D. Finke; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt; Kathleen McCoy; Andrew J. Macpherson; Nadia Corazza; Mario Noti; Christoph Mueller
Current therapies to treat inflammatory bowel diseases have limited efficacy, significant side effects, and often wane over time. Little is known about the cellular and molecular mechanisms operative in the process of mucosal healing from colitis. To study such events, we developed a new model of reversible colitis in which adoptive transfer of CD4+CD45RBhi T cells into Helicobacter typhlonius–colonized lymphopenic mice resulted in a rapid onset of colonic inflammation that was reversible through depletion of colitogenic T cells. Remission was associated with an improved clinical and histopathological score, reduced immune cell infiltration to the intestinal mucosa, altered intestinal gene expression profiles, regeneration of the colonic mucus layer, and the restoration of epithelial barrier integrity. Notably, colitogenic T cells were not only critical for induction of colitis but also for maintenance of disease. Depletion of colitogenic T cells resulted in a rapid drop in tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) levels associated with reduced infiltration of inflammatory immune cells to sites of inflammation. Although neutralization of TNFα prevented the onset of colitis, anti-TNFα treatment of mice with established disease failed to resolve colonic inflammation. Collectively, this new model of reversible colitis provides an important research tool to study the dynamics of mucosal healing in chronic intestinal remitting–relapsing disorders.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2018
Katharina Littringer; Claudia Moresi; Nikolas Rakebrandt; Xiaobei Zhou; Michelle Schorer; Tamas Dolowschiak; Florian Kirchner; Felix Rost; Christian W. Keller; Donal McHugh; Salomé LeibundGut-Landmann; Mark D. Robinson; Nicole Joller
CD4+Foxp3+ Treg cells are essential for maintaining self-tolerance and preventing excessive immune responses. In the context of Th1 immune responses, co-expression of the Th1 transcription factor T-bet with Foxp3 is essential for Treg cells to control Th1 responses. T-bet-dependent expression of CXCR3 directs Treg cells to the site of inflammation. However, the suppressive mediators enabling effective control of Th1 responses at this site are unknown. In this study, we determined the signature of CXCR3+ Treg cells arising in Th1 settings and defined universal features of Treg cells in this context using multiple Th1-dominated infection models. Our analysis defined a set of Th1-specific co-inhibitory receptors and cytotoxic molecules that are specifically expressed in Treg cells during Th1 immune responses in mice and humans. Among these, we identified the novel co-inhibitory receptor CD85k as a functional predictor for Treg-mediated suppression specifically of Th1 responses, which could be explored therapeutically for selective immune suppression in autoimmunity.
PLOS Pathogens | 2018
Florian Sparber; Tamas Dolowschiak; Sarah Mertens; Laura Lauener; Björn E. Clausen; Nicole Joller; Patrizia Stoitzner; Roxane Tussiwand; Salomé LeibundGut-Landmann
The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans frequently causes diseases such as oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC) in immunocompromised individuals. Although it is well appreciated that the cytokine IL-17 is crucial for protective immunity against OPC, the cellular source and the regulation of this cytokine during infection are still a matter of debate. Here, we directly visualized IL-17 production in the tongue of experimentally infected mice, thereby demonstrating that this key cytokine is expressed by three complementary subsets of CD90+ leukocytes: RAG-dependent αβ and γδ T cells, as well as RAG-independent ILCs. To determine the regulation of IL-17 production at the onset of OPC, we investigated in detail the myeloid compartment of the tongue and found a heterogeneous and dynamic mononuclear phagocyte (MNP) network in the infected tongue that consists of Zbtb46-Langerin- macrophages, Zbtb46+Langerin+ dendritic cells (DCs) and Ly6C+ inflammatory monocytes. Of those, the Langerin+ DC population stands out by its unique capacity to co-produce the cytokines IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-23, all of which promote IL-17 induction in response to C. albicans in the oral mucosa. The critical role of Langerin+ DCs for the innate IL-17 response was confirmed by depletion of this cellular subset in vivo, which compromised IL-17 induction during OPC. In conclusion, our work revealed key regulatory factors and their cellular sources of innate IL-17-dependent antifungal immunity in the oral mucosa.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017
Erik Bakkeren; Tamas Dolowschiak; Médéric Diard
To understand how bacteria evolve and adapt to their environment, it can be relevant to monitor phenotypic changes that occur in a population. Single cell level analyses and sorting of mutant cells according to a particular phenotypic readout can constitute efficient strategies. However, when the phenotype of interest is expressed heterogeneously in ancestral isogenic populations of cells, single cell level sorting approaches are not optimal. Phenotypic heterogeneity can for instance make no-expression mutant cells indistinguishable from a subpopulation of wild-type cells transiently not expressing the phenotype. The analysis of clonal populations (e.g., isolated colonies), in which the average phenotype is measured, can circumvent this issue. Indeed, no-expression mutants form negative populations while wild-type clones form populations in which average expression of the phenotype yields a positive signal. We present here an optimized colony immunoblot protocol and a semi-automated image analysis pipeline (ImageJ macro) allowing for rapid detection of clones harboring mutations that affect the heterogeneous (i.e., bimodal) expression of the Type Three Secretion System-1 (TTSS-1) in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. We show that this protocol can efficiently differentiate clones expressing TTSS-1 at various levels in mixed populations. We were able to detect the emergence of hilC mutants in which the proportion of cells expressing TTSS-1 was reduced compared to the ancestor. We could also follow changes in the frequency of different mutants during long-term infections. This demonstrates that our protocol constitutes a tractable approach to assess semi-quantitatively the evolutionary dynamics of heterogeneous phenotypes, such as the expression of virulence genes, in bacterial populations.
Current Biology | 2014
Médéric Diard; Mikael E. Sellin; Tamas Dolowschiak; Markus Arnoldini; Martin Ackermann; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
PLOS Pathogens | 2014
Lisa M. Maier; Médéric Diard; Mikael E. Sellin; Elsa-Sarah Chouffane; Kerstin Trautwein-Weidner; Balamurugan Periaswamy; Emma Slack; Tamas Dolowschiak; Bärbel Stecher; Claude Loverdo; Roland R. Regoes; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
PLOS Pathogens | 2016
Anna A. Müller; Tamas Dolowschiak; Mikael E. Sellin; Boas Felmy; Carolin T. Verbree; Sandra Gadient; Alexander J. Westermann; Jörg Vogel; Salomé LeibundGut-Landmann; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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