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Publication : Th2-induced airway mucus production is dependent on IL-4Ralpha, but not on eosinophils.

First Author  Cohn L Year  1999
Journal  J Immunol Volume  162
Issue  10 Pages  6178-83
PubMed ID  10229862 Mgi Jnum  J:119786
Mgi Id  MGI:3703268 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.162.10.6178
Citation  Cohn L, et al. (1999) Th2-induced airway mucus production is dependent on IL-4Ralpha, but not on eosinophils. J Immunol 162(10):6178-83
abstractText  Mucus hyperproduction in asthma results from airway inflammation and contributes to clinical symptoms, airway obstruction, and mortality. In human asthmatics and in animal models, excess mucus production correlates with airway eosinophilia. We previously described a system in which TCR transgenic CD4 Th2 cells generated in vitro were transferred into recipient mice and activated in the respiratory tract with inhaled Ag. Th2 cells stimulated airway eosinophilia and a marked increase in mucus production, while mice that received Th1 cells exhibited airway inflammation without eosinophilia or mucus. Mucus could be induced by IL-4-/- Th2 cells at comparable levels to mucus induced by IL-4+/+ Th2 cells. In the current studies we dissect further the mechanisms of Th2-induced mucus production. When IL-4-/- Th2 cells are transferred into IL-4Ralpha-/- mice, mucus is not induced, and BAL eosinophilia is absent. These data suggest that in the absence of IL-4, IL-13 may be critical for Th2-induced mucus production and eosinophilia. To determine whether eosinophils are important in mucus production, IL-5-/- Th2 cells were transferred into IL-5-/- recipients. Eosinophilia was abolished, yet mucus staining in the epithelium persisted. These studies show definitively that IL-5, eosinophils, or mast cells are not essential, but signaling through IL-4Ralpha is critically important in Th2 cell stimulation of mucus production.
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