Although a clear association has been established between IL-33 and inflammatory bowel disease, mechanistic studies to date, primarily using acute murine models of colitis, have yielded contradicting results, demonstrating both pathogenic and protective roles. We used a well-characterized, spontaneous model of inflammatory bowel disease [ie, SAMP1/YitFc (SAMP) mice] to investigate the role of IL-33 during chronic intestinal inflammation. Our results showed marked eosinophil infiltration into the gut mucosa with increased levels of eotaxins and type 2 helper T-cell (Th2) cytokines as disease progressed and became more severe, which could be reversed on either eosinophil depletion or blockade of IL-33 signaling. Exogenous IL-33 administration recapitulated these effects in ilea of uninflamed (parental) control AKR/J mice. Human data supported these findings, showing colocalization and up-regulation of IL-33 and eosinophil in the colonic mucosa of inflammatory bowel disease patients versus noninflamed controls. Finally, colonization of commensal flora by fecal material transplantation into germ-free SAMP and the presence of the gut microbiome induced IL-33, subsequent eosinophil infiltration, and mounting of Th2 immune responses, leading to exacerbation of chronic intestinal inflammation characteristic of SAMP mice. These data demonstrate a pathogenic role for IL-33-mediated eosinophilia and activation of Th2 immunity in chronic intestinal inflammation that is dependent on the gut microbiome. Targeting IL-33 may represent a novel therapeutic approach to treat patients with inflammatory bowel disease.

IL-33 drives eosinophil infiltration and pathogenic type 2 helper T-cell immune responses leading to chronic experimental ileitis / C. De Salvo, X. Wang, L. Pastorelli, B. Mattioli, S. Omenetti, K.A. Buela, S. Chowdhry, R.R. Garg, W.A. Goodman, A. Rodriguez Palacios, D.E. Smith, D.W. Abbott, F. Cominelli, G. Bamias, W. Xin, J.J. Lee, M. Vecchi, T.T. Pizarro. - In: THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY. - ISSN 0002-9440. - 186:4(2016 Apr), pp. 885-898. [10.1016/j.ajpath.2015.11.028]

IL-33 drives eosinophil infiltration and pathogenic type 2 helper T-cell immune responses leading to chronic experimental ileitis

L. Pastorelli;M. Vecchi
Penultimo
;
2016

Abstract

Although a clear association has been established between IL-33 and inflammatory bowel disease, mechanistic studies to date, primarily using acute murine models of colitis, have yielded contradicting results, demonstrating both pathogenic and protective roles. We used a well-characterized, spontaneous model of inflammatory bowel disease [ie, SAMP1/YitFc (SAMP) mice] to investigate the role of IL-33 during chronic intestinal inflammation. Our results showed marked eosinophil infiltration into the gut mucosa with increased levels of eotaxins and type 2 helper T-cell (Th2) cytokines as disease progressed and became more severe, which could be reversed on either eosinophil depletion or blockade of IL-33 signaling. Exogenous IL-33 administration recapitulated these effects in ilea of uninflamed (parental) control AKR/J mice. Human data supported these findings, showing colocalization and up-regulation of IL-33 and eosinophil in the colonic mucosa of inflammatory bowel disease patients versus noninflamed controls. Finally, colonization of commensal flora by fecal material transplantation into germ-free SAMP and the presence of the gut microbiome induced IL-33, subsequent eosinophil infiltration, and mounting of Th2 immune responses, leading to exacerbation of chronic intestinal inflammation characteristic of SAMP mice. These data demonstrate a pathogenic role for IL-33-mediated eosinophilia and activation of Th2 immunity in chronic intestinal inflammation that is dependent on the gut microbiome. Targeting IL-33 may represent a novel therapeutic approach to treat patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
English
innate lymphoid-cells; inflammatory-bowel-disease; ameliorates experimental colitis; ulcerative-colitis; intestinal inflammation; crohns-disease; airway inflammation; samp1/YITFC mouse; spontaneous model; murine model
Settore MED/12 - Gastroenterologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
apr-2016
186
4
885
898
14
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
IL-33 drives eosinophil infiltration and pathogenic type 2 helper T-cell immune responses leading to chronic experimental ileitis / C. De Salvo, X. Wang, L. Pastorelli, B. Mattioli, S. Omenetti, K.A. Buela, S. Chowdhry, R.R. Garg, W.A. Goodman, A. Rodriguez Palacios, D.E. Smith, D.W. Abbott, F. Cominelli, G. Bamias, W. Xin, J.J. Lee, M. Vecchi, T.T. Pizarro. - In: THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY. - ISSN 0002-9440. - 186:4(2016 Apr), pp. 885-898. [10.1016/j.ajpath.2015.11.028]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
C. De Salvo, X. Wang, L. Pastorelli, B. Mattioli, S. Omenetti, K.A. Buela, S. Chowdhry, R.R. Garg, W.A. Goodman, A. Rodriguez Palacios, D.E. Smith, D.W. Abbott, F. Cominelli, G. Bamias, W. Xin, J.J. Lee, M. Vecchi, T.T. Pizarro
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/371637
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