Dysregulation of serum gamma interferon levels in vascular chronic Q fever patients provides insights into disease pathogenesis

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Abstract

A large community outbreak of Q fever occurred in the Netherlands in the period 2007 to 2010. Some of the infected patients developed chronic Q fever, which typically includes pathogen dissemination to predisposed cardiovascular sites, with potentially fatal consequences. To identify the immune mechanisms responsible for ineffective clearance of Coxiella burnetii in patients who developed chronic Q fever, we compared serum concentrations of 47 inflammation-associated markers among patients with acute Q fever, vascular chronic Q fever, and past resolved Q fever. Serum levels of gamma interferon were strongly increased in acute but not in vascular chronic Q fever patients, compared to past resolved Q fever patients. Interleukin-18 levels showed a comparable increase in acute as well as vascular chronic Q fever patients. Additionally, vascular chronic Q fever patients had lower serum levels of gamma interferon-inducible protein 10 (IP-10) and transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) than did acute Q fever patients. Serum responses for these and other markers indicate that type I immune responses to C. burnetii are affected in chronic Q fever patients. This may be attributed to an affected immune system in cardiovascular patients, which enables local C. burnetii replication at affected cardiovascular sites.

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Pennings, J. L. A., Kremers, M. N. T., Hodemaekers, H. M., Hagenaars, J. C. J. P., Koning, O. H. J., Renders, N. H. M., … Janssen, R. (2015). Dysregulation of serum gamma interferon levels in vascular chronic Q fever patients provides insights into disease pathogenesis. Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, 22(6), 664–671. https://doi.org/10.1128/CVI.00078-15

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