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Indigenous enteric eosinophils control DCs to...
Journal article

Indigenous enteric eosinophils control DCs to initiate a primary Th2 immune response in vivo

Abstract

Eosinophils natively inhabit the small intestine, but a functional role for them there has remained elusive. Here, we show that eosinophil-deficient mice were protected from induction of Th2-mediated peanut food allergy and anaphylaxis, and Th2 priming was restored by reconstitution with il4(+/+) or il4(-/-) eosinophils. Eosinophils controlled CD103(+) dendritic cell (DC) activation and migration from the intestine to draining lymph nodes, events necessary for Th2 priming. Eosinophil activation in vitro and in vivo led to degranulation of eosinophil peroxidase, a granule protein whose enzymatic activity promoted DC activation in mice and humans in vitro, and intestinal and extraintestinal mouse DC activation and mobilization to lymph nodes in vivo. Further, eosinophil peroxidase enhanced responses to ovalbumin seen after immunization. Thus, eosinophils can be critical contributors to the intestinal immune system, and granule-mediated shaping of DC responses can promote both intestinal and extraintestinal adaptive immunity.

Authors

Chu DK; Jimenez-Saiz R; Verschoor CP; Walker TD; Goncharova S; Llop-Guevara A; Shen P; Gordon ME; Barra NG; Bassett JD

Journal

Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol. 211, No. 8, pp. 1657–1672

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Publication Date

July 28, 2014

DOI

10.1084/jem.20131800

ISSN

0022-1007

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