Abstract

The T cell-mediated lung inflammation that is associated with allergic asthma is characterized mainly by massive eosinophil infiltration, which induces airway injury and the subsequent late-phase reactivity. Because Th2 cells are often isolated from asthmatic subjects, these cells are postulated to play a role in asthma pathogenesis. We report that adoptively transferred, influenza hemagglutinin-specific Th1 and Th2 cells induced different patterns of chemokines leading to different types of cellular infiltration. Th2 cells were sufficient to induce dramatic Ag-dependent lung eosinophilia and eotaxin expression; by contrast, Th1 transfer primarily induced neutrophil recruitment with little eotaxin production. To determine whether Th1 cells show inhibitory effects on Th2 cell-mediated responses, Th1 and Th2 cells were cotransferred. Hemagglutinin-specific Th1 cells did not inhibit Ag-induced lung eosinophilia, nor did they inhibit eotaxin expression. Furthermore, influenza virus infection of the lung in mice receiving hemagglutinin-specific Th2 cells also induced eotaxin expression and eosinophilia that could not be inhibited by the cotransfer of Th1 cells. Our results show that Th2-mediated allergic lung inflammation coexists with the Th1-mediated responses that are stimulated by diverse forms of Ags.

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