Publication | Open Access
IL-37 Inhibits Inflammasome Activation and Disease Severity in Murine Aspergillosis
163
Citations
37
References
2014
Year
Inflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationInnate Immune SystemImmunologyImmune RegulationPathologyClinical MycologyInnate ImmunityImmune SystemImmune DysregulationInflammationMurine ModelChronic InflammationImmune SurveillanceAutoimmunityPulmonary FibrosisImmune FunctionInflammatory DiseaseCytokineDisease SeverityInflammation BiologyMedicineMatrikines
Since IL-37 transgenic mice possesses broad anti-inflammatory properties, we assessed whether recombinant IL-37 affects inflammation in a murine model of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. Recombinant human IL-37 was injected intraperitoneally into mice prior to infection and the effects on lung inflammation and inflammasome activation were evaluated. IL-37 markedly reduced NLRP3-dependent neutrophil recruitment and steady state mRNA levels of IL-1β production and mitigated lung inflammation and damage in a relevant clinical model, namely aspergillosis in mice with cystic fibrosis. The anti-inflammatory activity of IL-37 requires the IL-1 family decoy receptor TIR-8/SIGIRR. Thus, by preventing activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome and reducing IL-1β secretion, IL-37 functions as a broad spectrum inhibitor of the innate response to infection-mediated inflammation, and could be considered to be therapeutic in reducing the pulmonary damage due to non-resolving Aspergillus infection and disease.
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