Author:
Ma Junjie,Classon Cajsa H.,Stark Julian M.,Li Muzhen,Huang Huey-Jy,Vrtala Susanne,Rosshart Stephan P.,Nylén Susanne,Coquet Jonathan M.
Abstract
AbstractAllergic disorders are caused by a combination of hereditary and environmental factors. The hygiene hypothesis postulates that early life microbial exposures impede the development of subsequent allergic disease. However, unambiguous evidence that microbes reduce the development of allergic disorders is still lacking. Recently developed ‘wildling’ mice contain a rich and diverse commensal and encounter a repertoire of microbes typical of the wild, with pathogenic potential. Here, we probed the hygiene hypothesis by comparing the development of allergic inflammation in wildlings to that of genetically identical mice lacking diverse microbial exposure. We find that wildlings develop stronger allergic inflammation in response to house dust mites with allergic T cell responses driven not only by cognate peptide antigens, but also by innate cytokines. In all, the results suggest that high microbial content and diversity potentiates, rather than restricts, allergic immune responses.One sentence summaryStrong allergic inflammation in the face of rich and diverse microbial exposures
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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