AI Article Synopsis

  • The reasons for varying clinical outcomes from respiratory viral infections are still unclear, but environmental factors may play a role.
  • The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a key protein that interacts with various chemicals and influences immune responses, including changes in T cell and neutrophil activity during infections like influenza.
  • This study found that while increased nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) levels and neutrophil accumulation in infected lungs happen at the same time during AhR activation, they are regulated separately in different cell types, highlighting the complexity of AhR's role in immune responses against viral infections.

Article Abstract

The underlying reasons for variable clinical outcomes from respiratory viral infections remain uncertain. Several studies suggest that environmental factors contribute to this variation, but limited knowledge of cellular and molecular targets of these agents hampers our ability to quantify or modify their contribution to disease and improve public health. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is an environment-sensing transcription factor that binds many anthropogenic and natural chemicals. The immunomodulatory properties of AhR ligands are best characterized with extensive studies of changes in CD4(+) T cell responses. Yet, AhR modulates other aspects of immune function. We previously showed that during influenza virus infection, AhR activation modulates neutrophil accumulation in the lung, and this contributes to increased mortality in mice. Enhanced levels of inducible NO synthase (iNOS) in infected lungs are observed during the same time frame as AhR-mediated increased pulmonary neutrophilia. In this study, we evaluated whether these two consequences of AhR activation are causally linked. Reciprocal inhibition of AhR-mediated elevations in iNOS and pulmonary neutrophilia reveal that although they are contemporaneous, they are not causally related. We show using Cre/loxP technology that elevated iNOS levels and neutrophil number in the infected lung result from separate, AhR-dependent signaling in endothelial and respiratory epithelial cells, respectively. Studies using mutant mice further reveal that AhR-mediated alterations in these innate responses to infection require a functional nuclear localization signal and DNA binding domain. Thus, gene targets of AhR in non-hematopoietic cells are important new considerations for understanding AhR-mediated changes in innate anti-viral immunity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3538960PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1201341DOI Listing

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