| Literature DB >> 31174293 |
Stefan Schülke1, Melanie Albrecht2.
Abstract
Food allergies are a steadily increasing health and economic problem. Immunologically, food allergic reactions are caused by pathological, allergen-specific Th2 responses resulting in IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation and associated inflammatory reactions. Clinically, food allergies are characterized by local inflammation of the mouth mucosa, the face, the throat, the gastrointestinal tract, are frequently paralleled by skin reactions, and can result in life-threatening anaphylactic reactions. To better understand food allergies and establish novel treatment options, mouse models are indispensable. This review discusses the available mouse food allergy models, dividing them into four categories: (1) adjuvant-free mouse models, (2) mouse models relying on adjuvants to establish allergen-specific Th2 responses, (3) mouse models using genetically-modified mouse strains to allow for easier sensitization, and (4) humanized mouse models in which different immunodeficient mouse strains are reconstituted with human immune or stem cells to investigate humanized immune responses. While most of the available mouse models can reproducibly portray the immunological parameters of food allergy (Th2 immune responses, IgE production and mast cell activation/expansion), so far, the recreation of the clinical parameters has proven more difficult. Therefore, up to now none of the available mouse models can reproduce the complete human pathology.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant; food allergy; humanized mice; mouse model
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31174293 PMCID: PMC6627293 DOI: 10.3390/cells8060546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Pathomechanism of type I allergy. Uptake or penetration of allergen molecules via the respiratory or gastrointestinal epithelia (1) results in uptake, processing and presentation of allergen-derived peptides by antigen presenting cells (APCs, (2)). Activated APCs express co-stimulatory signals (3) and secrete cytokines (4) that promote the differentiation of naïve antigen-specific T cells into effector cells. In case of allergic reactions naive allergen-specific Th0 cells differentiate into Th2 cells orchestrated by the cytokines IL-13 and IL-4 produced by innate like lymphocytes type II (ILC2). The respective ILC2s are in turn activated by the cytokines thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP), IL-25, and IL-33 secreted by either stressed or damaged epithelial cells (5). The activated allergen-specific Th2 cells in turn activate allergen-specific naïve B cells that have specifically recognized the allergen via their B cell receptor (BCR, (6)), taken up, processed, and presented the allergen to the T cell receptor (TCR) of the activated Th2 cell (7). The Th2 cell subsequently authorizes the activation and differentiation of the allergen-specific B cell via CD40 and CD40 ligand (CD40L) signaling (8) and secretion of the Th2-promoting cytokine IL-4 (9). Together, these signals allow for the differentiation of the allergen-specific B cell into an IgE-producing plasma cell (10). The allergen-specific IgE antibodies produced in turn by the activated plasma cell bind to the high affinity IgE receptor FcεRI on the surface of mast cells, resulting in the sensitization of these cells (11). Upon second contact with the allergen the allergic reaction is triggered by the cross-linking of the surface bound IgE antibodies resulting in the degranulation of the mast cell associated with the release of large amounts of pro-inflammatory mediators (12). The activated mast cells in a positive feedback loop drive further activation of allergen-specific B cells by the production of IL-4 and providing CD40L-mediated co-stimulatory signals (13) to CD40 on the B cell surface (14).
Figure 2Factors contributing to the development of food allergy. The published literature suggests, that both a disruption of regulatory T cell (Treg)- and immune globulin A (IgA)-mediated oral tolerance and defects in the barrier function of skin and gut contribute to the development of food allergy. Moreover, alterations in stomach pH and the gut and skin microbiome were shown to influence allergic sensitization. In addition, intrinsic properties of the allergen molecules such as innate immune activation, proteolytic activity, or increased thermal and proteolytic stability contribute to allergic sensitization.
Figure 3Experimental setup, factors contributing to the successful establishment, and readout parameters typically investigated in the published mouse food allergy models. Successful establishment of allergic sensitization in mouse food allergy models was shown to depend on the route of allergen application, dose, frequency, and number of applications, as well as the used adjuvant. In addition, environmental factors such as diet, microbiome of the used animals, and the eventual usage of drugs during the sensitization, allergen quality with respect to contaminations with either other proteins or endotoxins, matrix effects of the applied allergen extract, and host-related factors such as used mouse strain, gender, and age of the used animals, but also genetic differences were shown to be critical factors in allergic sensitization. Subsequently to successful allergic sensitization animals are challenged with either purified allergens or allergen-containing allergen extracts to elicit the allergic reaction. The main differences in the published mouse food allergy models are observed for the routes of allergen application, allergen dose, and usage of either purified allergens or allergen-enriched natural extracts of the respective food source. Finally, the induced allergic reactions are evaluated according to certain readout parameters. These readout parameters are divided into clinical parameters of the allergic reaction (e.g., induced anaphylactic reactions, intestinal allergic symptoms, as well as changes in animal activity, mobility and behavior) and parameters that characterize the underlying immunologic reactions (production of allergen-specific IgG1 and IgE, biological activity of the induced IgE antibodies, induction of Th2 responses and associated cytokine production, differences in immune cell phenotype, frequency, and activation). Abbreviations: i.p.: intraperitoneal, i.g.: intragastric, i.v. intravenous, s.c.: subcutaneous, CT: cholera toxin, SEB: Staphylococcus enterotoxin B, Alum: aluminum hydroxide, MCT: medium chain triglycerides.
Figure 4Allergens and adjuvant strategies described in the literature to establish food allergy models. The published mouse food allergy models employ a variety of different food allergens with hen’s egg, milk, and nut allergens making up the majority of the used allergen sources. To achieve allergic sensitization, the different allergens are either applied orally with cholera toxin (CT), Staphylococcus enterotoxin B (SEB), or adjuvant-free, intraperitoneally with aluminum hydroxide (Alum) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), intradermally without adjuvant, or intranasally together with CT and LPS.
Figure 5Classification of mouse food allergy models. The available mouse models are divided into four categories: (1) adjuvant-free mouse models, (2) mouse models relying on adjuvants to establish allergen-specific Th2 responses, (3) mouse models using genetically-modified mouse strains to allow for easier sensitization, and (4) humanized mouse models in which different immunodeficient mouse strains are reconstituted with human immune or stem cells to investigate humanized immune responses.
Summary of the experimental mouse food allergy models discussed in this article. Abbreviations: mMCP1: mouse mast cell protease 1, Alum: aluminum hydroxide, CNS1: non-coding DNA sequence 1, WAS(P): Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (protein), GATA3: GATA binding protein 3, PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
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| [ | C3H/HeJ | 1 × 80 mg peanut extract, i.g. | 1 × 30 mg peanut extract, i.p. |
Production of peanut specific IgE antibodies Local mast cell activation in the skin Mast cell-mediated anaphylactic reactions (temperature drop, reduced breathing rate, increased mMCP-1 release) | |
| [ | BALB/c | Three one-week cycles of tape stripping each followed by application of 100 µg Ova onto the skin | 1 × 100 mg of Ova, i.g. |
IL-33 release in the skin after tape stripping Anaphylactic reactions (temperature drop, mast cell expansion, systemic release of mMCP1, Ova-specific IgE production) |
Skin damage induced by repeated tape stripping triggers release of IL-33 IL-33 essential for the induction of allergic reactions |
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| [ | Gnotobiotic C3H/HeN | 20 mg β-lactoglobulin + 10 µg cholera toxin, i.g. | 2 × 100 mg β-lactoglobulin, i.g. 30 min apart |
Temperature drop Increased production of allergen-specific IgG1 and IgE antibodies Mast cell activation Production of IL-4 and IL-13 |
Before sensitization, gnotobiotic mice were reconstituted with feces from either healthy or food allergic patients |
| [ | BALB/c vs. C57BL/6 | 2 × 50 µg Ova + 1 mg Alum, i.p. | 1 × 50 mg Ova i.g. |
Acute diarrhea with increased intestinal permeability, eosinophilia, and mastocytosis only in BALB/c mice |
Effects shown to be mast cell-dependent |
| [ | BALB/c vs. 129ScEvBrd | 1 × 50 µg Ova + 2 mg Alum, s.c. | 1 × 50 mg Ova, i.g. |
129ScEvBrd mice with significantly stronger temperature drop and higher plasma histamine levels Higher number of mast cells in the tissues of the 129ScEvBrd mice compared to BALB/c animals No differences in Ova-specific IgE or IgG 1 levels or mast cell degranulation efficiency between both strains | |
| [ | C57BL/6 | 4 × 1 mg peanut protein + 10 µg cholera toxin | 1 × 5 mg peanut protein, i.p. |
Temperature drop, systemic release of histamine and Cys-leukotriene Local swelling of nose and mouth Reduced activity Increased production of allergen-specific IgG1 and IgE antibodies Early mast cell activation, followed by infiltration of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and eosinophils into the peritoneum | |
| [ | C3H/HeJ | 2 × 5 or 25 mg peanut protein + 10 µg cholera toxin, i.g. | 1 × 10 mg peanut extract, i.g. |
Only the lower allergen dose (5 mg) was able to successfully induce allergic sensitization Robust peanut-specific IgE production Mast cell degranulation & plasma histamine release | In this publication Li et al. defined a symptom score for the evaluation of the induced allergic reactions (see |
| [ | BALB/c | 2 × 50 µg Ova plus 1 mg Alum, i.p. | Continuous challenge by feeding of Ova-containing food pellets for a period of seven days |
Weight loss and temperature drop Production of Ova-specific IgE antibodies Pronounced diarrhea and inflammation of the small intestine | |
| [ | BALB/c | 6 × 20 µg Pru p 3 + 20 ng LPS, i.n. | 1 × 100 µg Pru p 3, i.p. |
Anaphylactic reactions (temperature drop, inactivity, and increased respiratory rates) Increased production of Pru p 3-specific IgE and IgG1 antibodies Increased production of IL-4 and IFN-γ, but reduced IL-10 production from splenocytes | Only available Pru p 3 allergy model |
| [ | B10.A | 1 × 100 µg + 5x 50 µg wheat gliadin fraction + 4 mg Alum, i.p. | 1 × 10 mg gliadin, i.g. + 30 min of strenuous physical treadmill exercise (15 m/min, 20 % gradient) |
Production of gliadin-specific IgE antibodies Anaphylactic reactions (temperature drop and significantly lower activity levels) | Mouse model of exercise induced anaphylaxis. |
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| [ | IL-4RaF709 | 12 × 5 mg Ova + 20 µg cholera toxin, i.g. | 1 × 150 mg Ova, i.g. |
Significantly increased basal IgE production in naive IL-4RaF709 animals Temperature drop, diarrhea, and systemic mast cell activation Production of ovalbumin-specific IgE antibodies increased allergen-specific IgE levels if the animals were sensitized with Ova plus cholera toxin | Due to the Th2-promoting milieu IL-4raF709 can be sensitized to allergen without adjuvant |
| [ | Foxp3 CNS1−/− | Not performed | Not performed |
Foxp3 CNS1−/− mice with distinct Th2-mediated pathologies at both the gastrointestinal tract and the lung characteristic of both allergic inflammation and asthma Decreased body weight likely caused by gastritis and plasmacytic enteritis with increased frequencies of plasma cells in the intestinal lamina propria and crypt abscesses Spontaneous development of Th2-biassed responses (enhanced production of IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 by GATA3+CD4+ T cells, constitutively increased serum levels of IgE and IgA specific for both autoantigens, as well as food antigens Alterations in gut microbiome (decreased ratios of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes) |
Th1 and Th17 responses unchanged No multiorgan autoimmune responses observed |
| [ | WAS−/− | Not performed | Not performed |
WAS−/− mice develop T cell dependent, severe progressive colitis (infiltration of neutrophils and lymphocytes, enhanced levels of IFN-γ, IL-4, and IL-13) by six months of age (50% fatality rate Only neutralization of IL-4, but not IFN-y, was able to abrogate the development of colitis | |
| [ | WAS−/− |
WAS−/− mice develop spontaneous allergic sensitization to common food allergens, most pronounced for wheat and soy, paralleled by intestinal mast cell expansion Th2-mediated intestinal inflammation was even further enhanced when mice were conditionally deleted for WASP in Foxp3+ Tregs | Mechanistically, WASP-deficiency drives Th2 responses by interfering with normal Treg function | ||
| [ | WAS−/− | 7 × 5 mg Ova without adjuvant, i.g., v.s. 3 × 50 µg Ova + 100 µL Alum, i.p. | 1 × 50 mg Ova |
WAS−/− mice sensitized without adjuvant developed significantly lower Ova-specific IgE levels compared to classical Ova/alum sensitization Upon oral challenge Ova 79% of WAS−/− mice exhibited symptoms of systemic intestinal anaphylaxis, (elevated serum levels of mMCPT1, mortality rates > 50%) | WAS−/− mice mimic both polysensitization and highly bioactive, but low-level IgE production frequently observed in human food allergic patients |
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| [ | Mice expressing the α-chain of human FcεRI in a CD11c-restricted manner | 2 × 100 µg Ova mixed 1:1 with Alum, i.p. | 3–6 × 50 mg Ova, i.g. |
Mice with CD11c-restricted expression of the human FcεRI α-chain had lower levels of gastro-intestinal inflammation (lower levels of mast cell transcripts, lower production of IL-4, IL-13, CCL-2, and IL-6, lower systemic levels of mMCP1) compared to wildtype control mice | IgE-signaling in human DCs is involved in down-regulating allergic mucosal inflammation |
| [ | NOD-SCID-γc−/− | I.p. injection of 2 × 107 PBMC from allergic donors with high allergen-specific IgE levels in combination with the respective allergen (20 µg) followed by i.p. boost with 20 µg allergen 8 days later | 1 × 20 µg allergen rectally or 50 µg allergen orally (d21) |
2–6 h after challenge, assessment of allergen-specific induction of gastro-intestinal inflammation via mini-endoscopy, histology Production of allergen-specific IgE Allergen-specific T cell proliferation and cytokine production | Blocking experiments demonstrated that gut inflammation in this model was mediated by human IgE |
| [ | NOG IL-3/GM-Tg mice | 1 × 105 or 4 × 104 human umbilical cord blood-derived CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells i.v. 24 h after irradiation | Not performed |
Significant increase in human total myeloid cells (CD33+), granulocytes (CD66b+), and monocytes (CD14+) in peripheral blood Human eosinophils, basophils, neutrophils, and mast cells detectable 18 weeks after transplantation Activation and IgE-mediated passive cutaneous anaphylaxis reactions by human basophils and mast cells | |
| [ | NOD-SCID-γc−/− stem cell factor (SCF)-Tg mice | 5 × 104–105 human CD34+ cord blood stem cells, i.v., 6 weeks later sensitization: | 1 × 350 mg peanut butter, i.g. |
Human Th1- and Th2-effector cells, Foxp3+CD127lowCD25+ Tregs, and CD19+HLA-DR+ B cells detectable in spleen and jejunum of the engrafted animals Production of human peanut-specific IgE antibodies and IgE-dependent activation of human mast cells resulting in anaphylactic reactions (temperature drop, tryptase release) | Humanized mouse models can be used to recreate the multistep and highly complex human allergic responses |
| [ | NSG | 3 × 107 PBMC from peanut allergic individuals mixed with 100 µg peanut extract (i.p. split in 2 injections sites), followed by weekly i.p. injections (4×) with 100 µg peanut extract | 4 × weekly 300 µg peanut extract, i.g. |
Production of human peanut-specific IgE Induction of allergic symptoms in peanut allergic mice (anaphylaxis score, locomotor activity)∙ Histamine level in plasma | Humanized mouse model was used to compare the effectiveness of an experimental adeno-associated virus (AAV)-based expression of anti-human IgE to the already established anti-human IgE treatment with Omalizumab |
Symptom score after [40].
| Score | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| 0 | No symptoms |
| 1 | Scratching and rubbing around nose and head |
| 2 | Puffiness around eyes and mouth, diarrhea, pillar erect, reduced activity, and/or decreased activity with increased respiratory rate |
| 3 | Wheezing, labored respiration, and cyanosis around mouth and tail |
| 4 | No activity after prodding or tremor and convulsion |
| 5 | Death |
Figure 6Reproduction of the immunological and clinical parameters associated with food allergic reactions by the available mouse food allergy models. Human immunological and clinical food allergy parameters that can be recreated by the available mouse food allergy models (anaphylactic shock and the associated parameters and symptoms, itching and swelling of lips, tongue, face, and throat, diarrhea caused by allergic intestinal inflammation, and the immunological parameters of the allergic Th2 reaction (Th2 inflammation, IgE production, as well mast cell activation, degranulation, and expansion)) are marked with green checkmarks, parameters that have up to now proven difficult to reproduce in mice (the often with food allergic reactions associated skin reactions (hives, itching, and eczema), abdominal pain, and nausea) are marked with red stop signs. Please note that mice are anatomically unable to vomit.