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Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans

Food allergies, and peanut allergy in particular, are leading causes of anaphylactic fatalities worldwide. The immune mechanisms that underlie food allergy remain ill-defined and controversial, in part because studies in humans typically focus on analysis of a limited number of prototypical Th1/Th2...

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Autores principales: Xie, Jungang, Lotoski, Larisa C., Chooniedass, Rishma, Su, Ruey-Chyi, Simons, F. Estelle R., Liem, Joel, Becker, Allan B., Uzonna, Jude, HayGlass, Kent T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3469559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23071516
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045377
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author Xie, Jungang
Lotoski, Larisa C.
Chooniedass, Rishma
Su, Ruey-Chyi
Simons, F. Estelle R.
Liem, Joel
Becker, Allan B.
Uzonna, Jude
HayGlass, Kent T.
author_facet Xie, Jungang
Lotoski, Larisa C.
Chooniedass, Rishma
Su, Ruey-Chyi
Simons, F. Estelle R.
Liem, Joel
Becker, Allan B.
Uzonna, Jude
HayGlass, Kent T.
author_sort Xie, Jungang
collection PubMed
description Food allergies, and peanut allergy in particular, are leading causes of anaphylactic fatalities worldwide. The immune mechanisms that underlie food allergy remain ill-defined and controversial, in part because studies in humans typically focus on analysis of a limited number of prototypical Th1/Th2 cytokines. Here we determine the kinetics and prevalence of a broad panel of peanut-driven cytokine and chemokine responses in humans with current peanut allergy vs those with stable, naturally occurring clinical tolerance to peanut. Our primary focus is identification of novel indicators of immune dysregulation. Antigen-specific cytokine mRNA and protein responses were elicited in primary culture via peanut or irrelevant antigen (Leishmania extract, milk antigens) mediated stimulation of fresh peripheral blood cells from 40 individuals. Peanut extract exposure in vitro induced a broad panel of responses associated with Th2/Th9-like, Th1-like and Th17-like immunity. Peanut-dependent Type 2 cytokine responses were frequently found in both peanut allergic individuals and those who exhibit clinical tolerance to peanut ingestion. Among Th2/Th9-associated cytokines, IL-9 responses discriminated between allergic and clinically tolerant populations better than did commonly used IL-4, IL-5 or IL-13 responses. Comparison with responses evoked by unrelated control antigen-mediated stimulation showed that these differences are antigen-dependent and allergen-specific. Conversely, the intensity of IL-12, IL-17, IL-23 and IFN-γ production was indistinguishable in peanut allergic and peanut tolerant populations. In summary, the ability to generate and maintain cytokine responses to peanut is not inherently distinct between allergic and peanut tolerant humans. Quantitative differences in the intensity of cytokine production better reflects clinical phenotype, with optimally useful indicators being IL-9, IL-5, IL-13 and IL-4. Equivalent, and minimal, Ag-dependent pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in both healthy and peanut allergic volunteers argues against a key role for such cytokines in maintenance of clinical tolerance to food antigens in humans.
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spelling pubmed-34695592012-10-15 Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans Xie, Jungang Lotoski, Larisa C. Chooniedass, Rishma Su, Ruey-Chyi Simons, F. Estelle R. Liem, Joel Becker, Allan B. Uzonna, Jude HayGlass, Kent T. PLoS One Research Article Food allergies, and peanut allergy in particular, are leading causes of anaphylactic fatalities worldwide. The immune mechanisms that underlie food allergy remain ill-defined and controversial, in part because studies in humans typically focus on analysis of a limited number of prototypical Th1/Th2 cytokines. Here we determine the kinetics and prevalence of a broad panel of peanut-driven cytokine and chemokine responses in humans with current peanut allergy vs those with stable, naturally occurring clinical tolerance to peanut. Our primary focus is identification of novel indicators of immune dysregulation. Antigen-specific cytokine mRNA and protein responses were elicited in primary culture via peanut or irrelevant antigen (Leishmania extract, milk antigens) mediated stimulation of fresh peripheral blood cells from 40 individuals. Peanut extract exposure in vitro induced a broad panel of responses associated with Th2/Th9-like, Th1-like and Th17-like immunity. Peanut-dependent Type 2 cytokine responses were frequently found in both peanut allergic individuals and those who exhibit clinical tolerance to peanut ingestion. Among Th2/Th9-associated cytokines, IL-9 responses discriminated between allergic and clinically tolerant populations better than did commonly used IL-4, IL-5 or IL-13 responses. Comparison with responses evoked by unrelated control antigen-mediated stimulation showed that these differences are antigen-dependent and allergen-specific. Conversely, the intensity of IL-12, IL-17, IL-23 and IFN-γ production was indistinguishable in peanut allergic and peanut tolerant populations. In summary, the ability to generate and maintain cytokine responses to peanut is not inherently distinct between allergic and peanut tolerant humans. Quantitative differences in the intensity of cytokine production better reflects clinical phenotype, with optimally useful indicators being IL-9, IL-5, IL-13 and IL-4. Equivalent, and minimal, Ag-dependent pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in both healthy and peanut allergic volunteers argues against a key role for such cytokines in maintenance of clinical tolerance to food antigens in humans. Public Library of Science 2012-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3469559/ /pubmed/23071516 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045377 Text en © 2012 Xie et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Xie, Jungang
Lotoski, Larisa C.
Chooniedass, Rishma
Su, Ruey-Chyi
Simons, F. Estelle R.
Liem, Joel
Becker, Allan B.
Uzonna, Jude
HayGlass, Kent T.
Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title_full Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title_fullStr Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title_full_unstemmed Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title_short Elevated Antigen-Driven IL-9 Responses Are Prominent in Peanut Allergic Humans
title_sort elevated antigen-driven il-9 responses are prominent in peanut allergic humans
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3469559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23071516
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045377
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