| Literature DB >> 12626589 |
HuaHao H Shen1, Sergei I Ochkur, Michael P McGarry, Jeffrey R Crosby, Edie M Hines, Michael T Borchers, Huiying Wang, Travis L Biechelle, Katie R O'Neill, Tracy L Ansay, Dana C Colbert, Stephania A Cormier, J Paul Justice, Nancy A Lee, James J Lee.
Abstract
Asthma and mouse models of allergic respiratory inflammation are invariably associated with a pulmonary eosinophilia; however, this association has remained correlative. In this report, a causative relationship between eosinophils and allergen-provoked pathologies was established using eosinophil adoptive transfer. Eosinophils were transferred directly into the lungs of either naive or OVA-treated IL-5(-/-) mice. This strategy resulted in a pulmonary eosinophilia equivalent to that observed in OVA-treated wild-type animals. A concomitant consequence of this eosinophil transfer was an increase in Th2 bronchoalveolar lavage cytokine levels and the restoration of intracellular epithelial mucus in OVA-treated IL-5(-/-) mice equivalent to OVA-treated wild-type levels. Moreover, the transfer also resulted in the development of airway hyperresponsiveness. These pulmonary changes did not occur when eosinophils were transferred into naive IL-5(-/-) mice, eliminating nonspecific consequences of the eosinophil transfer as a possible explanation. Significantly, administration of OVA-treated IL-5(-/-) mice with GK1.5 (anti-CD4) Abs abolished the increases in mucus accumulation and airway hyperresponsiveness following adoptive transfer of eosinophils. Thus, CD4(+) T cell-mediated inflammatory signals as well as signals derived from eosinophils are each necessary, yet alone insufficient, for the development of allergic pulmonary pathology. These data support an expanded view of T cell and eosinophil activities and suggest that eosinophil effector functions impinge directly on lung function.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12626589 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.170.6.3296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422