Abstract

BackgroundA common characteristic of allergens is that they contain proteases that can activate protease-activated receptor (PAR-2); however the mechanism by which PAR-2 regulates allergic airway inflammation is unclear.MethodsMice (wild type and PAR-2-deficient) were sensitized using German cockroach (GC) feces (frass), the isolated protease from GC frass, or through adoptive transfer of GC frass-treated bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDC) and measurements of airway inflammation (cellular infiltration, cytokine expression, and mucin production), serum IgE levels and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) were assessed. BMDC were cultured, treated with GC frass and assessed for cytokine production. PAR-2 expression on pulmonary mDCs was determined by flow cytometry.ResultsExposure to GC frass induced AHR and airway inflammation in wild type mice; however PAR-2-deficient mice had significantly attenuated responses. To directly investigate the role of the protease, we isolated the protease from GC frass and administered the endotoxin-free protease into the airways of mice in the presence of OVA. GC frass proteases were sufficient to promote the development of AHR, serum IgE, and Th2 cytokine production. PAR-2 expression on mDC was upregulated following GC frass exposure, but the presence of a functional PAR-2 did not alter antigen uptake. To determine if PAR-2 activation led to differential cytokine production, we cultured BMDC in the presence of GM-CSF and treated these cells ex vivo with GC frass. PAR-2-deficient BMDC released significantly less IL-6, IL-23 and TNFα compared to BMDC from wild type mice, suggesting PAR-2 activation was important in Th2/Th17 skewing cytokine production. To determine the role for PAR-2 on mDCs on the initiation of allergic airway inflammation, BMDCs from wild type and PAR-2-deficient mice were treated in the presence or absence of GC frass and then adoptively transferred into the airway of wild type mice. Importantly, GC frass-stimulated wild type BMDCs were sufficient to induce AHR and allergic airway inflammation, while GC frass-stimulated PAR-2-deficient BMDC had attenuated responses.ConclusionsTogether these data suggest an important role for allergen activation of PAR-2 on mDCs in mediating Th2/Th17 cytokine production and allergic airway responses.

Highlights

  • It is generally accepted that allergic asthma results from an inappropriate Th2-dominated immune response to an otherwise innocuous protein

  • protease-activated receptors (PARs)-2 promotes the development of German cockroach (GC) frass-induced asthma To determine the role of PAR-2 in mediating allergen-driven airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), wild type and PAR-2-deficient mice were exposed to GC frass by intratracheal instillation on day 0 and 14, and three days later airway responses were measured

  • Exposure of wild type mice to GC frass resulted in increased AHR which was significantly attenuated in PAR2-deficient mice (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

It is generally accepted that allergic asthma results from an inappropriate Th2-dominated immune response to an otherwise innocuous protein. In studies in which systemically-induced (OVA bound to alum administered by intraperitoneal injection) airway responses were compared in wild type and PAR-2-deficient mice, PAR-2deficient mice had decreased cellular infiltration compared to controls [12]. They showed that sensitization and challenge of PAR-2 overexpressing mice with OVA resulted in increased AHR compared to wild type mice [12]. We recently confirmed a role for PAR-2 in mediating allergen-derived allergic airway inflammation [13]; the mechanism by which PAR-2 regulated these events is currently unclear. A common characteristic of allergens is that they contain proteases that can activate proteaseactivated receptor (PAR-2); the mechanism by which PAR-2 regulates allergic airway inflammation is unclear

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