Literature DB >> 18774395

Innate immune responses during respiratory tract infection with a bacterial pathogen induce allergic airway sensitization.

Nicolas W J Schröder1, Timothy R Crother, Yoshikazu Naiki, Shuang Chen, Michelle H Wong, Atilla Yilmaz, Anatoly Slepenkin, Danica Schulte, Randa Alsabeh, Terence M Doherty, Ellena Peterson, Andre E Nel, Moshe Arditi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The original hygiene hypothesis predicts that infections should protect against asthma but does not account for increasing evidence that certain infections might also promote asthma development. A mechanistic reconciliation of these findings has not yet emerged. In particular, the role of innate immunity in this context is unclear.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to test whether bacterial respiratory tract infection causes airway sensitization toward an antigen encountered in parallel and to elucidate the contribution of innate immune responses.
METHODS: Mice were infected with different doses of Chlamydia pneumoniae, followed by exposure to human serum albumin (HSA) and challenge with HSA 2 weeks later. Airway inflammation, immunoglobulins, and lymph node cytokines were assessed. Furthermore, adoptive transfer of dendritic cells (DCs) and depletion of regulatory T (Treg) cells was performed.
RESULTS: C pneumoniae-induced lung inflammation triggered sensitization toward HSA, resulting in eosinophilic airway inflammation after HSA challenge. Airway sensitization depended on the severity and timing of infection: low-dose infection and antigen exposure within 5 days of infection induced allergic sensitization, whereas high-dose infection or antigen exposure 10 days after infection did not. Temporal and dose-related effects reflected DC activation and could be reproduced by means of adoptive transfer of HSA-pulsed lung DCs from infected mice. MyD88 deficiency in DCs abolished antigen sensitization, and depletion of Treg cells prolonged the time window in which sensitization could occur.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that moderate, but not severe, pulmonary bacterial infection can induce allergic sensitization to inert inhaled antigens through a mechanism that requires MyD88-dependent DC activation and is controlled by Treg cells.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18774395      PMCID: PMC3052793          DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2008.06.038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol        ISSN: 0091-6749            Impact factor:   10.793


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