| Literature DB >> 27903737 |
Tibor Z Veres1,2, Tamás Kopcsányi3, Nicholas van Panhuys2,4, Michael Y Gerner2, Zhiduo Liu2, Pia Rantakari3, Johannes Dunkel3, Masayuki Miyasaka3,5, Marko Salmi3,6, Sirpa Jalkanen3,6, Ronald N Germain7.
Abstract
Allergic asthma develops in the mucosal tissue of small bronchi. At these sites, local cytokine production by Th2/Th17 cells is believed to be critical for the development of tissue eosinophilia/neutrophilia. Using the mouse trachea as a relevant model of human small airways, we performed advanced in vivo dynamic and in situ static imaging to visualize individual cytokine-producing T cells in the airway mucosa and to define their immediate cellular environment. Upon allergen sensitization, newly recruited CD4+ T cells formed discrete Ag-driven clusters with dendritic cells (DCs). Within T cell-DC clusters, a small fraction of CD4+ T cells produced IL-13 or IL-17 following prolonged Ag-specific interactions with DCs. As a result of local Th2 cytokine signaling, eosinophils were recruited into these clusters. Neutrophils also infiltrated these clusters in a T cell-dependent manner, but their mucosal distribution was more diffuse. Our findings reveal the focal nature of allergen-driven responses in the airways and define multiple steps with potential for interference with the progression of asthmatic pathology.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27903737 PMCID: PMC5225021 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422