Abstract

Background: Eosinophils are increased in the airways and blood of asthmatic patients. However, the mechanism of regulation of eosinophilia is incompletely understood. Methods: To study the potential effect of asthmatic lymphocytes on eosinophils, lymphocytes from the blood of asthmatic patients in exacerbation, or from healthy subjects, were isolated and cultured in medium alone (LC-CM) or with interleukin-2 (IL-2-CM) (125 U/ml), and the effect of supernatant obtained from these cultures on eosinophil proliferation from progenitors and survival was studied, Result: IL-2 CM from asthmatic patients significantly increased eosinophil colony formation from asthmatic blood but had no effect on colony formation from the blood of healthy subjects. IL-2-CM from asthmatic patients also significantly prolonged the survival of eosinophils. IL-2 alone and IL-2-CM from healthy subjects had no effect on eosinophil proliferation and survival. Asthmatic lymphocytes had more IL-2 receptors (CD25) than normal lymphocytes, and this difference persisted even after culture in IL-2. However, upregulation of the CD25 receptor on normal lymphocytes by incubation with concanavalin A led to the production of IL-2-CM, which did not increase eosinophil proliferation from progenitors. Conclusions: Lymphocytes from asthmatic patients but not from normal blood can significantly increase eosinophil proliferation and survival. The effects on eosinophil proliferation do not seem to be directly related to the presence of increased CD25 expression on lymphocytes.

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