| Literature DB >> 21108471 |
Marianne Raymond1, Vu Quang Van, Manuel Rubio, Karl Welzenbach, Marika Sarfati.
Abstract
The interplay between innate and adaptive immune responses is essential for the establishment of allergic diseases. CD47 and its receptor, signal regulatory protein α (SIRP-α), govern innate cell trafficking. We previously reported that administration of CD47(+/+) but not CD47(-/-) SIRP-α(+) BM-derived DC (BMDC) induced airway inflammation and Th2 responses in otherwise resistant CD47-deficient mice. We show here that early administration of a CD47-Fc fusion molecule suppressed the accumulation of SIRP-α(+) DC in mediastinal LN, the development of systemic and local Th2 responses as well as airway inflammation in sensitized and challenged BALB/c mice. Mechanistic studies highlighted that SIRP-α ligation by CD47-Fc on BMDC did not impair Ag uptake, Ag presentation and Ag-specific DO11.10 Tg Th2 priming and effector function in vitro, whereas in vivo administration of CD47-Fc or CD47-Fc-pretreated BMDC inhibited Tg T-cell proliferation, pinpointing that altered DC trafficking accounts for defective Th priming. We conclude that the CD47/SIRP-α axis may be harnessed in vivo to suppress airway SIRP-α(+) DC homing to mediastinal LN, Th2 responses and allergic airway inflammation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21108471 DOI: 10.1002/eji.201040797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532