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Publication : Prenatal inflammation remodels lung immunity and function by programming ILC2 hyperactivation.

First Author  López DA Year  2024
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  43
Issue  7 Pages  114365
PubMed ID  38909363 Mgi Jnum  J:353437
Mgi Id  MGI:7709037 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114365
Citation  Lopez DA, et al. (2024) Prenatal inflammation remodels lung immunity and function by programming ILC2 hyperactivation. Cell Rep 43(7):114365
abstractText  Here, we examine how prenatal inflammation shapes tissue function and immunity in the lung by reprogramming tissue-resident immune cells from early development. Maternal, but not fetal, type I interferon-mediated inflammation provokes expansion and hyperactivation of group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) seeding the developing lung. Hyperactivated ILC2s produce increased IL-5 and IL-13 and are associated with acute Th2 bias, decreased Tregs, and persistent lung eosinophilia into adulthood. ILC2 hyperactivation is recapitulated by adoptive transfer of fetal liver precursors following prenatal inflammation, indicative of developmental programming at the fetal progenitor level. Reprogrammed ILC2 hyperactivation and subsequent lung immune remodeling, including persistent eosinophilia, is concomitant with worsened histopathology and increased airway dysfunction equivalent to papain exposure, indicating increased asthma susceptibility in offspring. Our data elucidate a mechanism by which early-life inflammation results in increased asthma susceptibility in the presence of hyperactivated ILC2s that drive persistent changes to lung immunity during perinatal development.
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