Gibbs BF et al. (MAR 2008)
Clinical and experimental allergy : journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology 38 3 480--5
A rapid two-step procedure for the purification of human peripheral blood basophils to near homogeneity.
BACKGROUND: Basophils are increasingly utilized as indicators of allergic inflammation and as primary allergic effector cells to study signalling pathways. However,until the present,their enrichment has been time consuming,costly and limited to relatively few specialized laboratories. OBJECTIVE: We have therefore devised a reproducible and rapid method for the purification of human basophils from small quantities of peripheral blood within 1.5 h,which does not require the use of specialized equipment such as elutriators. METHODS: Human basophils were obtained from healthy volunteers undergoing venipuncture. Heparinized or K3-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid blood samples were first subjected to centrifugation in Hetasep,directly followed by negative selection using immunomagnetic beads. Basophil morphology and purity were assessed by May-Grünwald staining of cytospins. IgE-mediated histamine release was analysed spectrofluorometrically and IL-4 and IL-13 production by quantitative RT-PCR. CD203c and CD63 surface expression was measured using flow cytometry before and after activation with anti-IgE. RESULTS: Using this protocol,basophils were enriched close to homogeneity in most cases with a mean purity of 99.34+/-0.88% (range 97-100%,n=18) and a mean recovery of 75.6 (range 39-100%,n=8). Basophil viability following purification was 99.6+/-0.89% using Trypan blue exclusion. The purification procedure gave rise to basophils with normal functional responses to anti-IgE regarding histamine release as well as IL-4 and IL-13 mRNA expression. Moreover,constitutive cell-surface CD203c/CD63 expressions were not elevated before anti-IgE stimulation. CONCLUSION: The rapidity,simplicity and reproducibility of this method will facilitate the employment of basophils in high-output ex vivo studies.
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Ye B-Q et al. (NOV 2010)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 185 10 6294--305
Slit2 regulates attractive eosinophil and repulsive neutrophil chemotaxis through differential srGAP1 expression during lung inflammation.
Directional migration of leukocytes is an essential step in leukocyte trafficking during inflammatory responses. However,the molecular mechanisms governing directional chemotaxis of leukocytes remain poorly understood. The Slit family of guidance cues has been implicated for inhibition of leuocyte migration. We report that Clara cells in the bronchial epithelium secreted Slit2,whereas eosinophils and neutrophils expressed its cell-surface receptor,Robo1. Compared to neutrophils,eosinophils exhibited a significantly lower level of Slit-Robo GTPase-activating protein 1 (srGAP1),leading to activation of Cdc42,recruitment of PI3K to Robo1,enhancment of eotaxin-induced eosinophil chemotaxis,and exaggeration of allergic airway inflammation. Notably,OVA sensitization elicited a Slit2 gradient at so-called bronchus-alveoli axis,with a higher level of Slit2 in the bronchial epithelium and a lower level in the alveolar tissue. Aerosol administration of rSlit2 accelerated eosinophil infiltration,whereas i.v. administered Slit2 reduced eosinophil deposition. In contrast,Slit2 inactivated Cdc42 and suppressed stromal cell-derived factor-1α-induced chemotaxis of neutrophils for inhibiting endotoxin-induced lung inflammation,which were reversed by blockade of srGAP1 binding to Robo1. These results indicate that the newly identified Slit2 gradient at the bronchus-alveoli axis induces attractive PI3K signaling in eosinophils and repulsive srGAP1 signaling in neutrophils through differential srGAP1 expression during lung inflammation.
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Kubala SA et al. ( 2014)
Prostaglandins and Other Lipid Mediators 108 1--8
Pathogen induced chemo-attractant hepoxilin A3 drives neutrophils, but not eosinophils across epithelial barriers
Pathogen induced migration of neutrophils across mucosal epithelial barriers requires epithelial production of the chemotactic lipid mediator,hepoxilin A3 (HXA3). HXA3 is an eicosanoid derived from arachidonic acid. Although eosinophils are also capable of penetrating mucosal surfaces,eosinophilic infiltration occurs mainly during allergic processes whereas neutrophils dominate mucosal infection. Both neutrophils and eosinophils can respond to chemotactic gradients of certain eicosanoids,however,it is not known whether eosinophils respond to pathogen induced lipid mediators such as HXA3. In this study,neutrophils and eosinophils were isolated from human blood and placed on the basolateral side of polarized epithelial monolayers grown on permeable Transwell filters and challenged by various chemotactic gradients of distinct lipid mediators. We observed that both cell populations migrated across epithelial monolayers in response to a leukotriene B4 (LTB4) gradient,whereas only eosinophils migrated toward a prostaglandin D2 (PGD2) gradient. Interestingly,while pathogen induced neutrophil trans-epithelial migration was substantial,pathogen induced eosinophil trans-epithelial migration was not observed. Further,gradients of chemotactic lipids derived from pathogen infected epithelial cells known to be enriched for HXA3 as well as purified HXA3 drove significant numbers of neutrophils across epithelial barriers,whereas eosinophils failed to respond to these gradients. These data suggest that although the eicosanoid HXA3 serves as an important neutrophil chemo-attractant at mucosal surfaces during pathogenic infection,HXA3 does not appear to exhibit chemotactic activity toward eosinophils. ?? 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Zimmermann M et al. (JAN 2016)
Scientific Reports 6 19674
IFNα enhances the production of IL-6 by human neutrophils activated via TLR8.
Recently,we reported that human neutrophils produce biologically active amounts of IL-6 when incubated with agonists activating TLR8,a receptor recognizing viral single strand RNA. In this study,we demonstrate that IFNα,a cytokine that modulates the early innate immune responses toward viral and bacterial infections,potently enhances the production of IL-6 in neutrophils stimulated with R848,a TLR8 agonist. We also show that such an effect is not caused by an IFNα-dependent induction of TLR7 and its consequent co-activation with TLR8 in response to R848,but,rather,it is substantially mediated by an increased production and release of endogenous TNFα. The latter cytokine,in an autocrine manner,leads to an augmented synthesis of the IkBζ co-activator and an enhanced recruitment of the C/EBPβ transcription factor to the IL-6 promoter. Moreover,we show that neutrophils from SLE patients with active disease state,hence displaying an IFN-induced gene expression signature,produce increased amounts of both IL-6 and TNFα in response to R848 as compared to healthy donors. Altogether,data uncover novel effects that type I IFN exerts in TLR8-activated neutrophils,which therefore enlarge our knowledge on the various biological actions which type I IFN orchestrates during infectious and autoimmune diseases.
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Verma AH et al. (APR 2016)
Mucosal immunology April 1--11
Eosinophils subvert host resistance to an intracellular pathogen by instigating non-protective IL-4 in CCR2(-/-) mice.
Eosinophils contribute to type II immune responses in helminth infections and allergic diseases; however,their influence on intracellular pathogens is less clear. We previously reported that CCR2(-/-) mice exposed to the intracellular fungal pathogen Histoplasma capsulatum exhibit dampened immunity caused by an early exaggerated interleukin (IL)-4 response. We sought to identify the cellular source promulgating IL-4 in infected mutant animals. Eosinophils were the principal instigators of non-protective IL-4 and depleting this granulocyte population improved fungal clearance in CCR2(-/-) animals. The deleterious impact of eosinophilia on mycosis was also recapitulated in transgenic animals overexpressing eosinophils. Mechanistic examination of IL-4 induction revealed that phagocytosis of H. capsulatum via the pattern recognition receptor complement receptor (CR) 3 triggered the heightened IL-4 response in murine eosinophils. This phenomenon was conserved in human eosinophils; exposure of cells to the fungal pathogen elicited a robust IL-4 response. Thus,our findings elucidate a detrimental attribute of eosinophil biology in fungal infections that could potentially trigger a collapse in host defenses by instigating type II immunity.Mucosal Immunology advance online publication,6 April 2016; doi:10.1038/mi.2016.26.
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挂图
Human Immune Cytokines
Infographic of key cytokines for expansion, differentiation and characterization of major immune cell types
专家访谈
Payel Sil, PhD
Understanding the Role of Autophagy in Inflammation and Autoimmunity
研究方向:
免疫
Topics:
The role of non-canonical autophagy on inflammation and autoimmunity
Immunoregulatory role of the LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP) pathway