4.6 Article

IL-13 Induces Esophageal Remodeling and Gene Expression by an Eosinophil-Independent, IL-13Rα2-Inhibited Pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 185, Issue 1, Pages 660-669

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1000471

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AI42242, R01 AI45898, R01 DK076893, P01 HL076383, P30 DK 0789392, T32 AI 060515, T32 DK 07727-12]
  2. Campaign Urging Research for Eosinophilic Disease Foundation
  3. Buckeye and Food Allergy Project Foundation
  4. American Association of Allergy and Immunology

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Eosinophilic esophagitis (EE) is an emerging disease associated with both food and respiratory allergy characterized by extensive esophageal tissue remodeling and abnormal esophageal gene expression, including increased IL-13. We investigated the ability of increased airway IL-13 to induce EE-like changes. Mice with pulmonary (but not esophageal) overexpression of IL-13 evidenced esophageal IL-13 accumulation and developed prominent esophageal remodeling with epithelial hyperplasia, angiogenesis, collagen deposition, and increased circumference. IL-13 induced notable changes in esophageal transcripts that overlapped with the human EE esophageal transcriptome. IL-13-induced esophageal eosinophilia was dependent on eotaxin-1 (but not eotaxin-2). However, remodeling occurred independent of eosinophils as demonstrated by eosinophil lineage-deficient, IL-13 transgenic mice. IL-13-induced remodeling was significantly enhanced by IL-13R alpha 2 deletion, indicating an inhibitory effect of IL-13R alpha 2. In the murine system, there was partial overlap between IL-13-induced genes in the lung and esophagus, yet the transcriptomes were divergent at the tissue level. In human esophagus, IL-13 levels correlated with the magnitude of the EE transcriptome. In conclusion, inducible airway expression of IL-13 results in a pattern of esophageal gene expression and extensive tissue remodeling that resembles human EE. Notably, we identified a pathway that induces EE-like changes and is IL-13-driven, eosinophil-independent, and suppressed by IL-13R alpha 2. The Journal of Immunology, 2010, 185: 660-669.

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