Patterns of Chemokine Expression in Models of Schistosoma Mansoni Inflammation and Infection Reveal Relationships Between Type 1 and Type 2 Responses and Chemokines in Vivo
Overview
Affiliations
To explore the roles of chemokines in type 1 and type 2 responses in vivo, we examined mRNA expression for a panel of up to 17 chemokines in experimental mouse models using Schistosoma mansoni. These studies revealed that Mig (monokine induced by gamma interferon), cytokine-responsive gene 2/10-kDa interferon-inducible protein, RANTES, lymphotactin, macrophage inflammatory protein 1beta (MIP-1beta), JE/monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, and MIP-2 are associated with type 1 egg-induced responses and that thymus-derived chemotactic agent 3 (TCA3), eotaxin, MIP-1alpha, and MIP-1gamma are associated with type 2 egg-induced responses. After cercarial infection, both type 1-associated and type 2-associated chemokines were elevated in the livers of infected mice presensitized with eggs and recombinant interleukin-12 (rIL-12), a regimen that diminishes pathology. Neutralization of IL-12 or gamma interferon during egg deposition reversed the effects of prior treatment with rIL-12, leading to a return to larger granulomas; persistently elevated expression of TCA3, eotaxin, and MIP-1alpha; and a marked reduction in the expression of type 1-associated chemokines despite the maintenance of a dominant type 1 cytokine response in the draining lymph nodes. Our findings suggest that there are patterns of coordinate chemokine expression characteristic of type 1 and type 2 responses in vivo; that the cells recruited by a given pattern of chemokines may differ, depending on the composition of peripheral populations; and that patterns of tissue expression of chemokines may determine the character of an inflammatory response independently of the dominant pattern of differentiation of antigen-specific T cells. Our data reveal new relationships between chemokines and polarized immune responses and suggest that end organ inflammation might be altered by chemokine blockade without necessitating reversal of the phenotype of the majority of differentiated T cells.
Granulomas in parasitic diseases: the good and the bad.
Giorgio S, Gallo-Francisco P, Roque G, Floro E Silva M Parasitol Res. 2020; 119(10):3165-3180.
PMID: 32789534 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-020-06841-x.
Macrophages are critical to the maintenance of IL-13-dependent lung inflammation and fibrosis.
Borthwick L, Barron L, Hart K, Vannella K, Thompson R, Oland S Mucosal Immunol. 2015; 9(1):38-55.
PMID: 25921340 PMC: 4626445. DOI: 10.1038/mi.2015.34.
Targeting CCL5 in inflammation.
Marques R, Guabiraba R, Russo R, Teixeira M Expert Opin Ther Targets. 2013; 17(12):1439-60.
PMID: 24090198 PMC: 7103722. DOI: 10.1517/14728222.2013.837886.
OConnell A, Redding K, Hess J, Lok J, Nolan T, Abraham D Microbes Infect. 2011; 13(6):536-44.
PMID: 21315175 PMC: 3092813. DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2011.01.016.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide biases Langerhans cells toward Th2-type immunity.
Ding W, Stohl L, Wagner J, Granstein R J Immunol. 2008; 181(9):6020-6.
PMID: 18941191 PMC: 2679684. DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.181.9.6020.