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Publication : A critical function for CD200 in lung immune homeostasis and the severity of influenza infection.

First Author  Snelgrove RJ Year  2008
Journal  Nat Immunol Volume  9
Issue  9 Pages  1074-83
PubMed ID  18660812 Mgi Jnum  J:139298
Mgi Id  MGI:3807723 Doi  10.1038/ni.1637
Citation  Snelgrove RJ, et al. (2008) A critical function for CD200 in lung immune homeostasis and the severity of influenza infection. Nat Immunol 9(9):1074-83
abstractText  The lung must maintain a high threshold of immune 'ignorance' to innocuous antigens to avoid inflammatory disease that depends on the balance of positive inflammatory signals and repressor pathways. We demonstrate here that airway macrophages had higher expression of the negative regulator CD200 receptor (CD200R) than did their systemic counterparts. Lung macrophages were restrained by CD200 expressed on airway epithelium. Mice lacking CD200 had more macrophage activity and enhanced sensitivity to influenza infection, which led to delayed resolution of inflammation and, ultimately, death. The administration of agonists that bind CD200R, however, prevented inflammatory lung disease. Thus, CD200R is critical for lung macrophage immune homeostasis in the resting state and limits inflammatory amplitude and duration during pulmonary influenza infection.
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