|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : The skin is an important bulwark of acquired immunity against intestinal helminths.

First Author  Obata-Ninomiya K Year  2013
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  210
Issue  12 Pages  2583-95
PubMed ID  24166714 Mgi Jnum  J:207719
Mgi Id  MGI:5559416 Doi  10.1084/jem.20130761
Citation  Obata-Ninomiya K, et al. (2013) The skin is an important bulwark of acquired immunity against intestinal helminths. J Exp Med 210(12):2583-95
abstractText  Once animals have experienced a helminthic infection, they often show stronger protective immunity against subsequent infections. Although helminthic infections are well known to elicit Th2-type immune responses, it remains ill-defined where and how acquired protection is executed. Here we show that skin-invading larvae of the intestinal helminth Nippostrongylus brasiliensis are surrounded by skin-infiltrating cells and are prevented from migrating out of infected skin during the second but not the first infection. B cell- or IgE receptor FcepsilonRI-deficient mice showed impaired larval trapping in the skin. Selective ablation of basophils, but not mast cells, abolished the larval trapping, leading to increased worm burden in the lung and hence severe lung injury. Skin-infiltrating basophils produced IL-4 that in turn promoted the generation of M2-type macrophages, leading to the larval trapping in the skin through arginase-1 production. Basophils had no apparent contribution to worm expulsion from the intestine. This study thus reveals a novel mode of acquired antihelminth immunity, in which IgE-armed basophils mediate skin trapping of larvae, thereby limiting lung injury caused by larval migration.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

21 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression