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Browsing by Subject "Interleukin-33"
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Item Bovine Serum Albumin Elicits IL-33–Dependent Adipose Tissue Eosinophilia: Potential Relevance to Ovalbumin-induced Models of Allergic Disease(American Association of Immunologists, 2023) Caslin, Heather L.; Bolus, W. Reid; Thomas, Christopher; Toki, Shinji; Norlander, Allison E.; Peebles, R. Stokes, Jr.; Hasty, Alyssa H.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineAll cells of the immune system reside in adipose tissue (AT), and increasing type 2 immune cells may be a therapeutic strategy to improve metabolic health. In our previous study using i.p. IL-5 injections to increase eosinophils, we observed that a standard vehicle control of 0.1% BSA also elicited profound AT eosinophilia. In this study, we aimed to determine whether BSA-induced AT eosinophilia results in metabolic benefits in murine models of diet-induced obesity. I.p. 0.1% BSA injections increased AT eosinophils after 4 wk. Despite elevating eosinophils to >50% of immune cells in the AT, body weight and glucose tolerance were not different between groups. Interestingly, BSA elicited epithelial IL-33 production, as well as gene expression for type 2 cytokines and IgE production that were dependent on IL-33. Moreover, multiple models of OVA sensitization also drove AT eosinophilia. Following transplantation of a donor fat pad with BSA-induced eosinophilia, OVA-sensitized recipient mice had higher numbers of bronchoalveolar lavage eosinophils that were recipient derived. Interestingly, lungs of recipient mice contained eosinophils, macrophages, and CD8 T cells from the donor AT. These trafficked similarly from BSA- and non-BSA-treated AT, suggesting even otherwise healthy AT serves as a reservoir of immune cells capable of migrating to the lungs. In conclusion, our studies suggest that i.p. injections of BSA and OVA induce an allergic response in the AT that elicits eosinophil recruitment, which may be an important consideration for those using OVA in animal models of allergic disease.Item IL-33 Mediated Th2 Effector Functions are Suppressed in Tregs by Bcl6 and Regulated by Sex(2024-08) Lee, Kyu Been; Dent, Alexander; Richer, Martin; Robinson, Christopher; Yang, KaiAllergic airway inflammation (asthma) is a prevalent and uncurable disease worldwide, affecting many individuals’ quality of life. Although asthma does not form from a singular cause, one primary mediator comes from the exposure to environmental allergens and the improper activation of the T cell subset: T helper 2 (Th2) cells. Th2 cells produce pro-inflammatory cytokines and promote the activation and recruitment of various pro-inflammatory cells into the lung, causing greater damage and inflammatory responses in the organ. Th2 cell’s activation is regulated by another T cell subset, Regulatory T (Treg) cells, by expressing anti-inflammatory cytokines and downregulating the inflammatory response. On the contrary, the release of interleukin-33 (IL-33) from damaged lung epithelial cells transitions Tregs into Th2-like Tregs (ST2+ Tregs) which release both pro-and anti-inflammatory cytokines and cannot suppress the inflammatory disease. However, transcriptional repressor protein B cell lymphoma 6 (Bcl6) provides Tregs a stable follicular phenotype and suppresses the ST2+ Treg transition. Preliminary data revealed that Bcl6 repressive function is dependent on mouse sex, in which Tregs of male mice are more resistant to the ST2+ Treg phenotype than those of female mice. However, the removal of Bcl6 also removed the sex-dependent suppression against the ST2+ Treg transition. The project therefore sought to further confirm and answer whether Bcl6 suppressed the ST2+ Treg phenotype in a sex-dependent manner, ultimately leading to a sex-biased asthma prevalence and severity. We utilized quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and next-generation sequencing techniques to uncover which genes Bcl6 regulates, how IL-33 affects chromatin accessibility/gene expression, and what relation sex hormones have with Bcl6 in the expression of Th2 cytokines from Tregs. Currently, we have discovered that estrogen-like chemicals in common cell culturing media may be acting on the estrogen receptor of Tregs and causing differential gene expressions based on media conditions. We also determined that Bcl6 is acting independently of mouse sex to suppress Th2 genes in Tregs, contrary to preliminary findings. Overall, we have obtained insight on the role of the estrogen receptor and Bcl6’s mechanism of suppression in relation to sex.Item IL-33 promotes the egress of group 2 innate lymphoid cells from the bone marrow(Rockefeller University Press, 2018-01-02) Stier, Matthew T.; Zhang, Jian; Goleniewska, Kasia; Cephus, Jacqueline Y.; Rusznak, Mark; Wu, Lan; Kaer, Luc Van; Zhou, Baohua; Newcomb, Dawn C.; Peebles, R. Stokes, Jr.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineGroup 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) are effector cells within the mucosa and key participants in type 2 immune responses in the context of allergic inflammation and infection. ILC2s develop in the bone marrow from common lymphoid progenitor cells, but little is known about how ILC2s egress from the bone marrow for hematogenous trafficking. In this study, we identified a critical role for IL-33, a hallmark peripheral ILC2-activating cytokine, in promoting the egress of ILC2 lineage cells from the bone marrow. Mice lacking IL-33 signaling had normal development of ILC2s but retained significantly more ILC2 progenitors in the bone marrow via augmented expression of CXCR4. Intravenous injection of IL-33 or pulmonary fungal allergen challenge mobilized ILC2 progenitors to exit the bone marrow. Finally, IL-33 enhanced ILC2 trafficking to the lungs in a parabiosis mouse model of tissue disruption and repopulation. Collectively, these data demonstrate that IL-33 plays a critical role in promoting ILC2 egress from the bone marrow.