AI Article Synopsis

  • Eosinophil (EOS) accumulation at sites of allergic inflammation starts with their adhesion to endothelial cells, which is influenced by cytokine production from mononuclear cells.
  • Immunotherapy (IT) can modify this process, as seen in a study where peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from asthmatics responded differently to allergens based on IT treatment.
  • Specifically, asthmatics not receiving IT showed increased EOS adhesion activity when exposed to the house-dust-mite antigen, while those receiving IT did not show this increase, indicating that IT may help reduce eosinophil recruitment in allergic reactions.

Article Abstract

An initial step of eosinophil (EOS) accumulation in the sites of allergic inflammation is the adhesion to endothelial cells. There is increasing evidence that immunotherapy (IT) modulates the production of cytokines from mononuclear cells and hence attenuates allergic inflammation. To examine whether IT modifies the production of factor(s) which induce EOS adhesion, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from house-dust-mite-sensitive asthmatics treated with or without IT were cultured for 96 h in the presence or absence of 1/microg/ml Dermatophagoides farinae antigen. EOS were isolated from the peripheral blood of healthy subjects. EOS adhesion-inducing activity (EAIA) in the PBMC culture supernatants was examined by the ability to modify EOS adhesion to paraformaldehyde-fixed human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) which were stimulated with IL-4 plus TNF-alpha. In asthmatics without IT, the addition of D. farinae antigen significantly promoted the production of EAIA from PBMC (EOS adhesion: 22.4+/-13.1% by medium control vs. 30.5+/-18.9% by D. farinae, n=10, p=0.023). This enhancing effect was blocked by an anti-beta2-integrin antibody. In contrast, the addition of D. farinae did not modulate EAIA production from PBMC in asthmatics treated with IT (23.1+/-10.3% vs. 21.5+/-12.3%, n=10, p=NS). These results suggest that IT induces the inhibition of antigen-dependent production of EAIA from PBMC. This may contribute to the inhibitory effect of IT on eosinophil recruitment in allergic inflammation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000053565DOI Listing

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