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Publication : The Notch signaling pathway promotes basophil responses during helminth-induced type 2 inflammation.

First Author  Webb LM Year  2019
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  216
Issue  6 Pages  1268-1279
PubMed ID  30975892 Mgi Jnum  J:276476
Mgi Id  MGI:6314958 Doi  10.1084/jem.20180131
Citation  Webb LM, et al. (2019) The Notch signaling pathway promotes basophil responses during helminth-induced type 2 inflammation. J Exp Med 216(6):1268-1279
abstractText  Type 2 inflammation drives the clearance of gastrointestinal helminth parasites, which infect over two billion people worldwide. Basophils are innate immune cells that support host-protective type 2 inflammation during murine infection with the helminth Trichuris muris However, the mechanisms required for basophil function and gene expression regulation in this context remain unclear. We show that during T. muris infection, basophils localized to the intestine and up-regulated Notch receptor expression, rendering them sensitive to Notch signals that rapidly regulate gene expression programs. In vitro, Notch inhibition limited basophil cytokine production in response to cytokine stimulation. Basophil-intrinsic Notch signaling was required for T. muris-elicited changes in genome-wide basophil transcriptional programs. Mice lacking basophil-intrinsic functional Notch signaling had impaired worm clearance, decreased intestinal type 2 inflammation, altered basophil localization in the intestine, and decreased CD4(+) T helper 2 cell responses following infection. These findings demonstrate that Notch is required for basophil gene expression and effector function associated with helminth expulsion during type 2 inflammation.
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