| Literature DB >> 30326727 |
Soichiro Ueda1, Koichi Fukunaga1, Takahisa Takihara2, Yoshiki Shiraishi2, Tsuyoshi Oguma2, Tetsuya Shiomi1, Yusuke Suzuki1, Makoto Ishii1, Koichi Sayama1, Shizuko Kagawa1, Hiroyuki Hirai3, Kinya Nagata3, Masataka Nakamura4, Taku Miyasho5, Tomoko Betsuyaku1, Koichiro Asano2.
Abstract
Chemoattractant receptor homologous with T-helper cell type 2 cells (CRTH2), a receptor for prostaglandin D2, is preferentially expressed on T-helper cell type 2 lymphocytes, group 2 innate lymphoid cells, eosinophils, and basophils, and elicits the production of type 2 cytokines, including profibrotic IL-13. We hypothesized that lack of CRTH2 might protect against fibrotic lung disease, and we tested this hypothesis using a bleomycin-induced lung inflammation and fibrosis model in CRTH2-deficient (CRTH2-/-) or wild-type BALB/c mice. Compared with wild-type mice, CRTH2-/- mice treated with bleomycin exhibited significantly higher mortality, enhanced accumulation of inflammatory cells 14-21 days after bleomycin injection, reduced pulmonary compliance, and increased levels of collagen and total protein in the lungs. These phenotypes were associated with decreased levels of IFN-γ, IL-6, IL-10, and IL-17A in BAL fluid. Adoptive transfer of splenocytes from wild-type, but not CRTH2-/-, mice 2 days before injection of bleomycin resolved the sustained inflammation as well as the increased collagen and protein accumulation in the lungs of CRTH2-/- mice. We consider that the disease model is driven by γδT cells that express CRTH2; thus, the adoptive transfer of γδT cells could ameliorate bleomycin-induced alveolar inflammation and fibrosis.Entities:
Keywords: CRTH2; IL-10; IL-17; bleomycin; γδT cell
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30326727 DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2017-0397OC
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol ISSN: 1044-1549 Impact factor: 6.914