Publication | Open Access
Epithelial Cell-Derived IL-25, but Not Th17 Cell-Derived IL-17 or IL-17F, Is Crucial for Murine Asthma
100
Citations
38
References
2012
Year
AsthmaInflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationImmunologyImmunologic MechanismCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmune SystemImmune DysregulationTh17 Cell-derived Il-17InflammationLung Epithelial CellsImmune MediatorEpithelial CellsEpithelial Cell-derived Il-25Il-25 DeficiencyCell BiologyMurine AsthmaCytokineImmune Cell DevelopmentMedicine
IL-17A, IL-17F, and IL-25 are ligands for IL-17RA. In the current study, we demonstrated that IL-25-deficient mice-but not IL-17A-, IL-17F-, IL-17A/F-, IL-23p19-, or retinoic acid-related orphan receptor (ROR)-γt-deficient mice-showed significant suppression of 1) the number of eosinophils and the levels of proinflammatory mediators in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids, 2) airway hyperresponsiveness to methacholine, and 3) OVA-specific IgG1 and IgE levels in the serum during OVA-induced Th2-type/eosinophilic airway inflammation. The IL-25 deficiency did not affect lung dendritic cell migration or Ag-specific memory-Th2 cell expansion during Ag sensitization. Adoptive transfer of T cells, mast cells, or bone marrow cells from IL-25-deficient mice revealed that induction of Th2-type/eosinophilic airway inflammation was dependent on activation of lung epithelial cells and eosinophils by IL-25 produced by airway structural cells such as epithelial cells but not by such hematopoietic stem-cell-origin immune cells as T cells and mast cells. Therefore, airway structural cell-derived IL-25-rather than Th17 cell-derived IL-17A and IL-17F-is responsible for induction of local inflammation by promoting activation of lung epithelial cells and eosinophils in the elicitation phase of Th2-type/eosinophilic airway inflammation. It is not required for Ag-specific Th2 cell differentiation in the sensitization phase.
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