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Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure

BACKGROUND: Early life represents a major risk window for asthma development. However, the mechanisms controlling the threshold for establishment of allergic airway inflammation in early life are incompletely understood. Airway macrophages (AMs) regulate pulmonary allergic responses and undergo TGF-...

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Autores principales: Branchett, William J., Cook, James, Oliver, Robert A., Bruno, Nicoletta, Walker, Simone A., Stölting, Helen, Mack, Matthias, O’Garra, Anne, Saglani, Sejal, Lloyd, Clare M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mosby 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33571538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2021.01.026
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author Branchett, William J.
Cook, James
Oliver, Robert A.
Bruno, Nicoletta
Walker, Simone A.
Stölting, Helen
Mack, Matthias
O’Garra, Anne
Saglani, Sejal
Lloyd, Clare M.
author_facet Branchett, William J.
Cook, James
Oliver, Robert A.
Bruno, Nicoletta
Walker, Simone A.
Stölting, Helen
Mack, Matthias
O’Garra, Anne
Saglani, Sejal
Lloyd, Clare M.
author_sort Branchett, William J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Early life represents a major risk window for asthma development. However, the mechanisms controlling the threshold for establishment of allergic airway inflammation in early life are incompletely understood. Airway macrophages (AMs) regulate pulmonary allergic responses and undergo TGF-β–dependent postnatal development, but the role of AM maturation factors such as TGF-β in controlling the threshold for pathogenic immune responses to inhaled allergens remains unclear. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to test the hypothesis that AM-derived TGF-β1 regulates pathogenic immunity to inhaled allergen in early life. METHODS: Conditional knockout (Tgfb1(ΔCD11c)) mice, with TGF-β1 deficiency in AMs and other CD11c(+) cells, were analyzed throughout early life and following neonatal house dust mite (HDM) inhalation. The roles of specific chemokine receptors were determined by using in vivo blocking antibodies. RESULTS: AM-intrinsic TGF-β1 was redundant for initial population of the neonatal lung with AMs, but AMs from Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice failed to adopt a mature homeostatic AM phenotype in the first weeks of life. Evidence of constitutive TGF-β1 signaling was also observed in pediatric human AMs. TGF-β1–deficient AMs expressed enhanced levels of monocyte-attractant chemokines, and accordingly, Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice exposed to HDM throughout early life accumulated CCR2-dependent inflammatory CD11c(+) mononuclear phagocytes into the airway niche that expressed the proallergic chemokine CCL8. Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice displayed augmented T(H)2, group 2 innate lymphoid cell, and airway remodeling responses to HDM, which were ameliorated by blockade of the CCL8 receptor CCR8. CONCLUSION: Our results highlight a causal relationship between AM maturity, chemokines, and pathogenic immunity to environmental stimuli in early life and identify TGF-β1 as a key regulator of this.
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spelling pubmed-80988622021-05-13 Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure Branchett, William J. Cook, James Oliver, Robert A. Bruno, Nicoletta Walker, Simone A. Stölting, Helen Mack, Matthias O’Garra, Anne Saglani, Sejal Lloyd, Clare M. J Allergy Clin Immunol Mechanisms of Allergy/Immunology BACKGROUND: Early life represents a major risk window for asthma development. However, the mechanisms controlling the threshold for establishment of allergic airway inflammation in early life are incompletely understood. Airway macrophages (AMs) regulate pulmonary allergic responses and undergo TGF-β–dependent postnatal development, but the role of AM maturation factors such as TGF-β in controlling the threshold for pathogenic immune responses to inhaled allergens remains unclear. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to test the hypothesis that AM-derived TGF-β1 regulates pathogenic immunity to inhaled allergen in early life. METHODS: Conditional knockout (Tgfb1(ΔCD11c)) mice, with TGF-β1 deficiency in AMs and other CD11c(+) cells, were analyzed throughout early life and following neonatal house dust mite (HDM) inhalation. The roles of specific chemokine receptors were determined by using in vivo blocking antibodies. RESULTS: AM-intrinsic TGF-β1 was redundant for initial population of the neonatal lung with AMs, but AMs from Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice failed to adopt a mature homeostatic AM phenotype in the first weeks of life. Evidence of constitutive TGF-β1 signaling was also observed in pediatric human AMs. TGF-β1–deficient AMs expressed enhanced levels of monocyte-attractant chemokines, and accordingly, Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice exposed to HDM throughout early life accumulated CCR2-dependent inflammatory CD11c(+) mononuclear phagocytes into the airway niche that expressed the proallergic chemokine CCL8. Tgfb1(ΔCD11c) mice displayed augmented T(H)2, group 2 innate lymphoid cell, and airway remodeling responses to HDM, which were ameliorated by blockade of the CCL8 receptor CCR8. CONCLUSION: Our results highlight a causal relationship between AM maturity, chemokines, and pathogenic immunity to environmental stimuli in early life and identify TGF-β1 as a key regulator of this. Mosby 2021-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8098862/ /pubmed/33571538 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2021.01.026 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Mechanisms of Allergy/Immunology
Branchett, William J.
Cook, James
Oliver, Robert A.
Bruno, Nicoletta
Walker, Simone A.
Stölting, Helen
Mack, Matthias
O’Garra, Anne
Saglani, Sejal
Lloyd, Clare M.
Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title_full Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title_fullStr Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title_full_unstemmed Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title_short Airway macrophage-intrinsic TGF-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
title_sort airway macrophage-intrinsic tgf-β1 regulates pulmonary immunity during early-life allergen exposure
topic Mechanisms of Allergy/Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33571538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2021.01.026
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