Interferon-β Coordinates Epithelial Immune Networks and Fibrotic Responses During Chlamydia muridarum Infection

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Interferon-β Coordinates Epithelial Immune Networks and Fibrotic Responses During Chlamydia muridarum Infection

Authors

Kumar, R.; Cordova-Mendez, I. C.; Burgess, D.; Qadadri, B.; Banerjee, A.; Derbigny, W. A.

Abstract

Chlamydia trachomatis infection is the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection worldwide and a leading cause of inflammatory reproductive tract disease and infertility in women. Much of the tissue damage associated with genital chlamydial infection arises from host inflammatory responses rather than direct bacterial cytotoxicity. Epithelial cells lining the female reproductive tract represent the primary host cells infected during chlamydial infection and play key roles in initiating innate immune responses. Among the cytokines produced by infected epithelial cells, type-I interferons have emerged as important regulators of host defense and inflammatory signaling; however, the specific contribution of interferon-{beta} (IFN-{beta}) to epithelial transcriptional responses during chlamydial infection remains incompletely defined. In the present study, we investigated the role of IFN-{beta} in coordinating epithelial immune signaling networks during infection with Chlamydia muridarum. Using wild-type murine oviduct epithelial cells (OE-WT) and IFN-{beta}-deficient epithelial cells (OE-IFN{beta}-KO), we performed pathway-focused RT2 Profiler PCR array analyses examining transcriptional responses across four biological pathways: (1) innate and adaptive immune responses, (2) type-I interferon signaling, (3) inflammatory and autoimmune responses, and (4) fibrosis-associated pathways. Infection of OE-WT cells resulted in coordinated induction of cytokines, chemokines, and interferon-stimulated genes associated with antimicrobial defense and immune cell recruitment. In contrast, IFN-{beta} deficiency resulted in widespread dysregulation of these transcriptional programs, including reduced induction of interferon-responsive chemokines such as CCL5 and CXCL10, altered inflammatory cytokine expression, and transcriptional signatures consistent with enhanced tissue remodeling responses. Notably, IFN-{beta} deficiency resulted in increased TNF expression accompanied by reduced IL-6 induction, suggesting disruption of balanced inflammatory signaling networks. Pathway analyses further revealed dysregulated expression of fibrosis-associated genes including Serpine1, Ctgf, and Eng in IFN-{beta}-deficient epithelial cells, indicating potential mechanisms linking interferon signaling to tissue remodeling during infection. Collectively, these findings identify IFN-{beta} as a central regulator of epithelial immune networks during chlamydial infection and suggest that disruption of IFN-{beta} signaling may promote inflammatory and fibrotic pathology within the female reproductive tract.

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