An adoptive transfer model of allergic lung inflammation in mice is mediated by CD4+ CD62LlowCD25+ T cells

JT Wise, TJ Baginski, JL Mobley - The Journal of Immunology, 1999 - journals.aai.org
JT Wise, TJ Baginski, JL Mobley
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
Animal models of allergic lung inflammation have provided important insight into the cellular
and biochemical factors involved in the pathogenesis of human asthma. Herein, we describe
an adoptive transfer model of OVA-specific eosinophilic lung inflammation in the mouse that
is used to characterize the cells involved in mediating the pulmonary inflammatory response.
We report that freshly isolated spleen cells from OVA-sensitized mice are unable to prime
naive recipient mice to respond to a subsequent OVA aerosol challenge. Subjecting the …
Abstract
Animal models of allergic lung inflammation have provided important insight into the cellular and biochemical factors involved in the pathogenesis of human asthma. Herein, we describe an adoptive transfer model of OVA-specific eosinophilic lung inflammation in the mouse that is used to characterize the cells involved in mediating the pulmonary inflammatory response. We report that freshly isolated spleen cells from OVA-sensitized mice are unable to prime naive recipient mice to respond to a subsequent OVA aerosol challenge. Subjecting the spleen cells to short term restimulation with Ag in vitro, however, renders the cells competent to transfer activity. The magnitude and the kinetics of the eosinophilic pulmonary inflammation in the adoptive transfer recipients are nearly identical with those generated by a more conventional active sensitization/challenge protocol, with the notable exception of differential production of plasma IgE in the two models. Extensive negative and positive selection of splenocyte subtypes indicates that the transfer of Ag-primed CD4+ T cells is both necessary and sufficient to establish full responsiveness in the recipient mice. Additional phenotypic characterization of the transfer-reactive CD4+ T cells indicates that they are found within the CD62L low CD25+ subset and secrete high levels of IL-5 in response to Ag stimulation. Limiting dilution analysis-derived minimal frequency estimates indicate that approximately 1 in 8500 of the sensitized, cultured spleen cells produces IL-5 in response to OVA stimulation in vitro, suggesting that eosinophilic lung inflammation can be induced in naive mice by the transfer of< 1200 Ag-specific CD4+ T cells.
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