| Literature DB >> 11943672 |
J Paul Justice1, J Crosby, M T Borchers, A Tomkinson, J J Lee, N A Lee.
Abstract
The potential role of airway interleukin-5 (IL-5) expression in eliciting mucus production was demonstrated in a pulmonary IL-5 transgenic mouse model (NJ.1726) in which naive transgenic mice display comparable levels of airway mucus relative to allergen-sensitized and -challenged wild-type mice. The intrinsic mucus accumulation of NJ.1726 was abolished in compound transgenic-gene knockout mice deficient of either CD4(+) cells [NJ.1726/CD4(-/-)] or alphabeta T cell receptor-positive (TCR(+)) cells [NJ.1726/alphabeta TCR(-/-)]. In addition, mucus production in naive NJ.1726 was inhibited by >90% after administration of the soluble anti-IL-4 receptor alpha-subunit antagonist. The loss of mucus production in NJ.1726/CD4(-/-), NJ.1726/alphabeta TCR(-/-), and anti-IL-4 receptor alpha-subunit antagonist-treated mice occurred notwithstanding the significant pulmonary eosinophilia and expansion of airway B cells induced by ectopic IL-5 expression. Furthermore, the loss of mucus accumulation occurred in these mice despite elevated levels of airway and peripheral IL-5, indicating that IL-5 does not directly induce goblet cell metaplasia and mucus production. Thus pulmonary expression of IL-5 alone is capable of inducing CD4(+) T cell-dependent goblet cell metaplasia, apparently mediated by IL-4 receptor alpha-subunit-ligand interactions, and represents a previously unrecognized novel pathway for augmenting allergen-induced mucus production.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11943672 DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00195.2001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ISSN: 1040-0605 Impact factor: 5.464