4.7 Article

Increased group 2 innate lymphoid cells in peripheral blood of adults with mastocytosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 147, Issue 4, Pages 1490-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.09.037

Keywords

Mastocytosis; mast cell; innate lymphoid cell; ILC2; KIT; itch; maculopapular cutaneous mastocytosis

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (Veni fellowship) [91617114]
  2. Erasmus MC

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ILC2 levels were significantly higher in patients with systemic mastocytosis carrying the D816V mutation compared with non-carriers or healthy controls. Skin involvement and itch in patients were associated with higher levels of ILC2s, independent of atopy or serum tryptase levels. Majority of ILC2s did not carry the D816V mutation, suggesting a role for ILC2s in mastocytosis pathogenesis through crosstalk with mast cells.
Background: Systemic mastocytosis is a hematological disease in which aberrant mast cells accumulate because of gain-of-function mutations in the KIT receptor. Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) are effector cells of type 2 immune responses that also express KIT and colocalize with mast cells at barrier tissue sites. In mouse models, mast cell-ILC2 crosstalk can drive local inflammation. However, a possible role for ILC2s in the pathophysiology of mastocytosis remains unexplored. Objective: We sought to characterize circulating ILC2s in a clinically diverse cohort of patients with mastocytosis. Methods: We included 21 adults with systemic mastocytosis and 18 healthy controls. Peripheral blood ILC2 abundance and phenotype were analyzed by flow cytometry and correlated to clinical characteristics, including the presence of the D816V KIT mutation. Results: ILC2 levels were significantly higher in D816V1 patients with mastocytosis compared with D816V- patients or healthy controls. We observed increased proportions of KIT1 ILC2s among patients with mastocytosis, regardless of D816V status. Patients with skin involvement and itch showed the highest levels of ILC2s, which was independent from atopy or serum tryptase levels. Allele-specific quantitative PCR showed that the vast majority of ILC2s did not carry the D816V mutation. Conclusions: Our findings suggest a role for ILC2s and pathogenic ILC2-mast cell crosstalk in mastocytosis. We hypothesize that a high cutaneous D816V1 mast cell burden alters the skin microenvironment to induce chronic local ILC2 activation and their dissemination into the circulation. Activated ILC2s could contribute to skin symptoms by producing inflammatory mediators and by further augmenting mast cell mediator release.

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