Publication | Closed Access
Pulmonary CD103 expression regulates airway inflammation in asthma
38
Citations
33
References
2015
Year
InflammationAsthmaCytokineInflammatory Lung DiseaseAllergyLung InflammationAutoimmune DiseaseCd103 Ubiquitous ExpressionImmunologyPulmonary Cd103 ExpressionCd103 ExpressionImmunologic MechanismAutoimmunityImmunopathologyMedicineCell BiologyLung Dendritic CellsPulmonary Disease
Although CD103(+) cells recently emerged as key regulatory cells in the gut, the role of CD103 ubiquitous expression in the lung and development of allergic airway disease has never been studied. To answer this important question, we evaluated the response of Cd103(-/-) mice in two separate well-described mouse models of asthma (ovalbumin and house dust mite extract). Pulmonary inflammation was assessed by analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage content, histology, and cytokine response. CD103 expression was analyzed on lung dendritic cells and T cell subsets by flow cytometry. Cd103(-/-) mice exposed to antigens developed exacerbated lung inflammation, characterized by increased eosinophilic infiltration, severe tissue inflammation, and altered cytokine response. In wild-type mice exposed to house dust mite, CD103(+) dendritic cells are increased in the lung and an important subset of CD4(+) T cells, CD8(+) T cells, and T regulatory cells express CD103. Importantly, Cd103(-/-) mice presented a deficiency in the resolution phase of inflammation, which supports an important role for this molecule in the control of inflammation severity. These results suggest an important role for CD103 in the control of airway inflammation in asthma.
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