4.7 Article

Transmaternal Helicobacter pylori exposure reduces allergic airway inflammation in offspring through regulatory T cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 143, Issue 4, Pages 1496-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2018.07.046

Keywords

Allergic airway inflammation; microbial interventions during pregnancy; immune regulation; immune tolerance; metagenomics; epigenetic regulation of allergy and asthma

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation Temporary Backup Schemes Consolidator Grant [BSCGIO_157841/1]
  2. Clinical Research Priority Program on Human Hemato-Lymphatic Diseases, University of Zurich
  3. National Institutes of Health [AI039657, CA116087, U01AI22285, TL1TR001447]
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs [BX000627]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation [310030_162560]
  6. HFSPO [LT000438/2014]
  7. Marie Curie Fellowships [PIEF-GA-2013-623055]
  8. CD fund
  9. [P30CA016087]

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Background: Transmaternal exposure to tobacco, microbes, nutrients, and other environmental factors shapes the fetal immune system through epigenetic processes. The gastric microbe Helicobacter pylori represents an ancestral constituent of the human microbiota that causes gastric disorders on the one hand and is inversely associated with allergies and chronic inflammatory conditions on the other. Objective: Here we investigate the consequences of transmaternal exposure to H pylori in utero and/or during lactation for susceptibility to viral and bacterial infection, predisposition to allergic airway inflammation, and development of immune cell populations in the lungs and lymphoid organs. Methods: We use experimental models of house dust mite-or ovalbumin-induced airway inflammation and influenza A virus or Citrobacter rodentium infection along with metagenomics analyses, multicolor flow cytometry, and bisulfite pyrosequencing, to study the effects of H pylori on allergy severity and immunologic and microbiome correlates thereof. Results: Perinatal exposure to H pylori extract or its immunomodulator vacuolating cytotoxin confers robust protective effects against allergic airway inflammation not only in first-but also second-generation offspring but does not increase susceptibility to viral or bacterial infection. Immune correlates of allergy protection include skewing of regulatory over effector T cells, expansion of regulatory T-cell subsets expressing CXCR3 or retinoic acid-related orphan receptor gt, and demethylation of the forkhead box P3 (FOXP3) locus. The composition and diversity of the gastrointestinal microbiota is measurably affected by perinatal H pylori exposure. Conclusion: We conclude that exposure to H pylori has consequences not only for the carrier but also for subsequent generations that can be exploited for interventional purposes.

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