Publication | Open Access
Cooperation between interleukin-5 and the chemokine eotaxin to induce eosinophil accumulation in vivo.
652
Citations
33
References
1995
Year
Intradermal InjectionEosinophil AccumulationImmune RegulationImmunologyEosinophilic DisorderImmunotherapyImmune SystemImmune DysregulationInflammationBone MarrowImmunopathologyImmune MediatorAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyAutoimmunityImmune FunctionChemokine EotaxinPharmacologyCytokineMedicineGuinea Pig
Experiments were designed to study the effect of systemically administered IL-5 on local eosinophil accumulation induced by the intradermal injection of the chemokine eotaxin in the guinea pig. Intravenous interleukin-5 (IL-5) stimulated a rapid and dramatic increase in the numbers of accumulating eosinophils induced by i.d.-injected eotaxin and, for comparison, leukotriene B4. The numbers of locally accumulating eosinophils correlated directly with a rapid increase in circulating eosinophils: circulating eosinophil numbers were 13-fold higher 1 h after intravenous IL-5 (18.3 pmol/kg). This increase in circulating cells corresponded with a reduction in the number of displaceable eosinophils recovered after flushing out the femur bone marrow cavity. Intradermal IL-5, at the doses tested, did not induce significant eosinophil accumulation. We propose that these experiments simulate important early features of the tissue response to local allergen exposure in a sensitized individual, with eosinophil chemoattractant chemokines having an important local role in eosinophil recruitment from blood microvessels, and IL-5 facilitating this process by acting remotely as a hormone to stimulate the release into the circulation of a rapidly mobilizable pool of bone marrow eosinophils. This action of IL-5 would be complementary to the other established activities of IL-5 that operate over a longer time course.
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