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Publication : Small intestinal resident eosinophils maintain gut homeostasis following microbial colonization.

First Author  Ignacio A Year  2022
Journal  Immunity Volume  55
Issue  7 Pages  1250-1267.e12
PubMed ID  35709757 Mgi Jnum  J:326960
Mgi Id  MGI:7327002 Doi  10.1016/j.immuni.2022.05.014
Citation  Ignacio A, et al. (2022) Small intestinal resident eosinophils maintain gut homeostasis following microbial colonization. Immunity 55(7):1250-1267.e12
abstractText  The intestine harbors a large population of resident eosinophils, yet the function of intestinal eosinophils has not been explored. Flow cytometry and whole-mount imaging identified eosinophils residing in the lamina propria along the length of the intestine prior to postnatal microbial colonization. Microscopy, transcriptomic analysis, and mass spectrometry of intestinal tissue revealed villus blunting, altered extracellular matrix, decreased epithelial cell turnover, increased gastrointestinal motility, and decreased lipid absorption in eosinophil-deficient mice. Mechanistically, intestinal epithelial cells released IL-33 in a microbiota-dependent manner, which led to eosinophil activation. The colonization of germ-free mice demonstrated that eosinophil activation in response to microbes regulated villous size alterations, macrophage maturation, epithelial barrier integrity, and intestinal transit. Collectively, our findings demonstrate a critical role for eosinophils in facilitating the mutualistic interactions between the host and microbiota and provide a rationale for the functional significance of their early life recruitment in the small intestine.
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