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Publication : Obligatory role for interleukin-13 in obstructive lesion development in airway allografts.

First Author  Lama VN Year  2006
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  169
Issue  1 Pages  47-60
PubMed ID  16816360 Mgi Jnum  J:110188
Mgi Id  MGI:3639558 Doi  10.2353/ajpath.2006.050975
Citation  Lama VN, et al. (2006) Obligatory role for interleukin-13 in obstructive lesion development in airway allografts. Am J Pathol 169(1):47-60
abstractText  The pathogenesis of bronchiolitis obliterans (BO), a common and devastating obliterative disorder of small airways following lung transplantation, remains poorly understood. Lesions are characterized in their early stages by lymphocyte influx that evolves into dense fibrotic infiltrates. Airway specimens taken from patients with histological BO revealed infiltrating myofibroblasts, which strongly expressed the signaling chain of the high affinity interleukin-13 (IL-13) receptor IL-13Ralpha1. Because IL-13 has proinflammatory and profibrotic actions, a contributory role for IL-13 in BO development was examined using murine models of orthotopic and heterotopic tracheal transplantation. Compared with airway isografts, allografts exhibited a significant increase in relative IL-13 mRNA and protein levels. Allogeneic tracheas transplanted into IL-13-deficient mice were protected from BO in both transplant models. Flow cytometric analysis of orthotopic transplant tissue digests revealed markedly fewer infiltrating mononuclear phagocytes and CD3(+) T lymphocytes in IL-13-deficient recipients. Furthermore, protection from luminal obliteration, collagen deposition, and myofibroblast infiltration was observed in heterotopic airways transplanted into the IL-13(-/-) recipients. Transforming growth factor-beta1 expression was significantly decreased in tracheal allografts into IL-13(-/-) recipients, compared to wild-type counterparts. These human and murine data implicate IL-13 as a critical effector cytokine driving cellular recruitment and subsequent fibrosis in clinical and ex-perimental BO.
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