4.8 Article

A central regulatory role for eosinophils and the eotaxin/CCR3 axis in chronic experimental allergic airway inflammation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0607863103

Keywords

allergy; asthma; chemokine; cytokine

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL076383, P01 HL 076383-01] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI045898, R01 AI 45898, R01 AI 42242] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIAMS NIH HHS [R01 AR042242] Funding Source: Medline

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To clarify the role and regulation of eosinophils, we subjected several key eosinophil-related genetically engineered mice to a chronic model of allergic airway inflammation aiming to identify results that were independent of the genetic targeting strategy. In particular, mice with defects in eosinophil development (Delta dblGATA) and eosinophil recruitment [mice deficient in CCR3 (CCR3 knockout) and mice deficient in both eotaxin-1 and eotaxin-2 (eotaxin-1/2 double knockout)] were subjected to Aspergillus fumigatus-induced allergic airway inflammation. Allergen-induced eosinophil recruitment into the airway was abolished by 98%, 94%, and 99% in eotaxin-1/2 double knockout, CCR3 knockout, and Delta dbl-GATA mice, respectively. Importantly, allergen-induced type II T helper lymphocyte cytokine production was impaired in the lungs of eosinophil- and CCR3-deficient mice. The absence of eosinophils correlated with reduction in allergen-induced mucus production. Notably, by using global transcript expression profile analysis, a large subset (29%) of allergen-induced genes was eosinophil- and CCR3-dependent; pathways downstream from eosinophils were identified, including in situ activation of coagulation in the lung. In summary, we present multiple lines of independent evidence that eosinophils via CCR3 have a central role in chronic allergic airway disease.

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