| Literature DB >> 26810221 |
Kewal Asosingh1, Amit Vasanji2, Aaron Tipton3, Kimberly Queisser3, Nicholas Wanner3, Allison Janocha3, Deepa Grandon4, Bela Anand-Apte5, Marc E Rothenberg6, Raed Dweik4, Serpil C Erzurum4.
Abstract
Angiogenesis is closely linked to and precedes eosinophilic infiltration in asthma. Eosinophils are recruited into the airway by chemoattractant eotaxins, which are expressed by endothelial cells, smooth muscles cells, epithelial cells, and hematopoietic cells. We hypothesized that bone marrow-derived proangiogenic progenitor cells that contain eotaxins contribute to the initiation of angiogenesis and inflammation in asthma. Whole-lung allergen challenge of atopic asthma patients revealed vascular activation occurs within hours of challenge and before airway inflammation. The eotaxin receptor CCR3 was expressed at high levels on submucosal endothelial cells in patients and a murine model of asthma. Ex vivo exposure of murine endothelial cells to eotaxins induced migration and angiogenesis. In mechanistic studies, wild-type mice transplanted with eotaxin-1/2-deficient bone marrow had markedly less angiogenesis and inflammation in an atopic asthma model, whereas adoptive transfer of proangiogenic progenitor cells from wild-type mice in an atopic asthma model into the eotaxin-1/2-deficient mice led to angiogenesis and airway inflammation. The findings indicate that Th2-promoting hematopoietic progenitor cells are rapidly recruited to the lung upon allergen exposure and release eotaxins that coordinately activate endothelial cells, angiogenesis, and airway inflammation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26810221 PMCID: PMC4761512 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1500770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422