期刊
JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
卷 117, 期 1, 页码 111-118出版社
MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2005.09.017
关键词
T cells; fibrosis; tolerance; suppression; allergy
资金
- Medical Research Council [G0400503B] Funding Source: researchfish
Background: Allergic asthma typically shows activated, allergen-specific CD4(+) T cells in the early phase and airway remodeling in the late phase of the disease. Although TGF-beta plays a crucial role in airway remodeling, it is only marginally induced in CD4(+) T cells in the early allergen-dependent activation of the immune system. Objective: To elucidate the transition between early- and late-phase events, we investigated the role of activin A, a close family member of TGF-beta. Methods: Activin A and TGF-beta(1) levels were measured systemically in the serum and in CD4(+) T cells of asthmatic patients, as well as locally in the lung. Results: Activin A serum levels were increased in patients with severe asthma compared with levels in patients with moderate asthma and healthy control subjects, whereas all patients showed significantly increased TGF-beta(1) serum levels independent of disease severity. In T cells only patients with moderate asthma showed increased activin A mRNA expression, whereas TGF-beta(1) expression was equal to that seen in healthy subjects. Accordingly, ovalburnin sensitization in a mouse model of allergic asthma could induce activin A mRNA expression, but not TGF-beta(1) expression, in the lung. Immunohistochemistry of mice and human specimens revealed an abundant expression of activin A by infiltrating lymphocytes and structural cells of the lung. Although TGF-beta(1) more potently enhanced proliferation and Smad 2/3-dependent reporter genes in fibroblasts, activin A was capable of inducing TGF-beta(1) and vice versa. Conclusion: Activin A provides a link between acute allergenspecific T-cell responses and chronic TGF-beta(1)-mediated airway remodeling in asthma.
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