Allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity is diminished in CD81-deficient mice

作者:Deng J; Yeung VP; Tsitoura D; DeKruyff RH; Umetsu DT; Levy S*
来源:The Journal of Immunology, 2000, 165(9): 5054-5061.
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.165.9.5054

摘要

We demonstrated previously that CD81(-/-) mice have an impaired Th2 response. To determine whether this impairment affected allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity (AHR), CD81(-/-) BALB/c mice and CD81(+/+) littermates were sensitized i.p. and challenged intranasally with OVA, Although wild type developed severe AHR, CD81(-/-) mice showed normal airway reactivity and reduced airway inflammation. Nevertheless, OVA-specific T cell proliferation was similar in both groups of mice, Analysis of cytokines secreted by the responding CD81(-/-) T cells, particularly those derived from peribronchial draining lymph nodes, revealed a dramatic reduction in IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 synthesis. The decrease in cytokine production was not due to an intrinsic T cell deficiency because naive CD81(-/-) T cells responded to polyclonal Th1 and Th2 stimulation with normal proliferation and cytokine production. Moreover, there was an increase in T cells and a decrease in B cells in peribronchial lymph nodes and in spleens of immunized CD81(-/-) mice compared with wild-type animals. Interestingly OVA-specific Ig levels, including IgE, were similar in CD81(-/-) and CD81(+/+) mice. Thus, CD81 plays a role in the development of AHR not by influencing Ag-specific IgE production but by regulating local cytokine production.

  • 出版日期2000-11-1