Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) are enriched in mucosal tissues
(e.g. lung) and respond to epithelial cell-derived cytokines initiating type-2
inflammation. During inflammation, ILC2 numbers are increased in the lung.
However, the mechanisms controlling ILC2 trafficking and motility within
inflamed lungs remain unclear and are crucial for understanding ILC2 function in
pulmonary immunity. Using several approaches, including lung intravital
microscopy, we demonstrate that pulmonary ILC2s are highly-dynamic, exhibit
amoeboid-like movement and aggregate in the lung peribronchial and perivascular
spaces. They express distinct chemokine receptors, including CCR8, and actively
home to CCL8 deposits located around the airway epithelium. Within lung tissue,
ILC2s were particularly motile in extracellular matrix-enriched regions. We show
that collagen-I drives ILC2 to dramatically change their morphology by
remodeling their actin cytoskeleton to promote environmental exploration
critical for regulating eosinophilic inflammation. Our study provides previously
unappreciated insights into ILC2-migratory patterns during inflammation and
highlights the importance of environmental guidance cues in the lung in
controlling ILC2 dynamics.
Children with recurrent respiratory infections frequently use health care services and antibiotics, undergo surgical procedures and are at risk for asthma in early life. Having older siblings increases the risk of recurrent infections.
Neutrophil mobilization, recruitment, and clearance must be tightly regulated as overexuberant neutrophilic inflammation is implicated in the pathology of chronic diseases, including asthma. Efforts to target neutrophils therapeutically have failed to consider their pleiotropic functions and the implications of disrupting fundamental regulatory pathways that govern their turnover during homeostasis and inflammation. Using the house dust mite (HDM) model of allergic airway disease, we demonstrate that neutrophil depletion unexpectedly resulted in exacerbated T helper 2 (TH2) inflammation, epithelial remodeling, and airway resistance. Mechanistically, this was attributable to a marked increase in systemic granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) concentrations, which are ordinarily negatively regulated in the periphery by transmigrated lung neutrophils. Intriguingly, we found that increased G-CSF augmented allergic sensitization in HDM-exposed animals by directly acting on airway type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) to elicit cytokine production. Moreover, increased systemic G-CSF promoted expansion of bone marrow monocyte progenitor populations, which resulted in enhanced antigen presentation by an augmented peripheral monocyte-derived dendritic cell pool. By modeling the effects of neutrophil depletion, our studies have uncovered previously unappreciated roles for G-CSF in modulating ILC2 function and antigen presentation. More broadly, they highlight an unexpected regulatory role for neutrophils in limiting TH2 allergic airway inflammation.
BackgroundHuman nasopharynx is often colonized by potentially pathogenic bacteria. Gene polymorphisms in mannose-binding lectin (MBL), toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 and TLR4 have been reported. The present study aimed to investigate possible association between nasopharyngeal bacterial colonization and gene polymorphisms of MBL, TLR2 and TLR4 in healthy infants.Methodology/Principal FindingsFrom August 2008 to June 2010, 489 nasopharyngeal swabs and 412 blood samples were taken from 3-month-old healthy Finnish infants. Semi-quantitative culture was performed and pyrosequencing was used for detection of polymorphisms in MBL structural gene at codons 52, 54, and 57, TLR2 Arg753Gln and TLR4 Asp299Gly. Fifty-nine percent of subjects were culture positive for at least one of the four species: 11% for Streptococcus pneumoniae, 23% for Moraxella catarrhalis, 1% for Haemophilus influenzae and 25% for Staphylococcus aureus. Thirty-two percent of subjects had variant types in MBL, 5% had polymorphism of TLR2, and 18% had polymorphism of TLR4. Colonization rates of S. pneumoniae and S. aureus were significantly higher in infants with variant types of MBL than those with wild type (p = .011 and p = .024). Colonization rates of S. aureus and M. catarrhalis were significantly higher in infants with polymorphisms of TLR2 and of TLR4 than those without (p = .027 and p = .002).ConclusionsOur study suggests that there is an association between nasopharyngeal bacterial colonization and genetic variation of MBL, TLR2 and TLR4 in young infants. This finding supports a role for these genetic variations in susceptibility of children to respiratory infections.
In this study, we demonstrated that TLR1 rs5743618 was associated with asthma and atopic eczema during the first 6 years of life after early bronchiolitis. In addition, TLR6 rs5743810 was associated with present atopy at preschool age.
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