Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Immunoregulation and Mucosal Immunology and Unit of Molecular Signal Transduction in Inflammation, Flanders Institute for Biotechnology (VIB) Department for Molecular Biomedical Research; Department of Respiratory Medicine; and Department of Biomedical Molecular Biology; Ghent University, 9000 Ghent, Belgium
2. Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Erasmus Medical Center, 3015 GE Rotterdam, Netherlands
Abstract
House dust mite (HDM) is one of the most common allergens worldwide. In this study, we have addressed the involvement of IL-1 in the interaction between HDM and the innate immune response driven by lung epithelial cells (ECs) and dendritic cells (DCs) that leads to asthma. Mice lacking IL-1R on radioresistant cells, but not hematopoietic cells, failed to mount a Th2 immune response and did not develop asthma to HDM. Experiments performed in vivo and in isolated air–liquid interface cultures of bronchial ECs showed that TLR4 signals induced the release of IL-1α, which then acted in an autocrine manner to trigger the release of DC-attracting chemokines, GM-CSF, and IL-33. Consequently, allergic sensitization to HDM was abolished in vivo when IL-1α, GM-CSF, or IL-33 was neutralized. Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) became important only when high doses of allergen were administered. These findings put IL-1α upstream in the cytokine cascade leading to epithelial and DC activation in response to inhaled HDM allergen.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
358 articles.
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