Fungal chitin from asthma-associated home environments induces eosinophilic lung infiltration

SJ Van Dyken, D Garcia, P Porter, X Huang… - The Journal of …, 2011 - journals.aai.org
SJ Van Dyken, D Garcia, P Porter, X Huang, PJ Quinlan, PD Blanc, DB Corry, RM Locksley
The Journal of Immunology, 2011journals.aai.org
Abstract Development of asthma and allergic inflammation involves innate immunity, but the
environmental contributions remain incompletely defined. Analysis of dust collected from the
homes of asthmatic individuals revealed that the polysaccharide chitin is environmentally
widespread and associated with β-glucans, possibly from ubiquitous fungi. Cell wall
preparations of Aspergillus isolated from house dust induced robust recruitment of
eosinophils into mouse lung, an effect that was attenuated by enzymatic degradation of cell …
Abstract
Development of asthma and allergic inflammation involves innate immunity, but the environmental contributions remain incompletely defined. Analysis of dust collected from the homes of asthmatic individuals revealed that the polysaccharide chitin is environmentally widespread and associated with β-glucans, possibly from ubiquitous fungi. Cell wall preparations of Aspergillus isolated from house dust induced robust recruitment of eosinophils into mouse lung, an effect that was attenuated by enzymatic degradation of cell wall chitin and β-glucans. Mice expressing constitutively active acidic mammalian chitinase in the lungs demonstrated a significant reduction in eosinophil infiltration after fungal challenge. Conversely, chitinase inhibition prolonged the duration of tissue eosinophilia. Thus, fungal chitin derived from home environments associated with asthma induces eosinophilic allergic inflammation in the lung, and mammalian chitinases, including acidic mammalian chitinase, limit this process.
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