Crucial role for human Toll-like receptor 4 in the development of contact allergy to nickel

M Schmidt, B Raghavan, V Müller, T Vogl, G Fejer… - Nature …, 2010 - nature.com
M Schmidt, B Raghavan, V Müller, T Vogl, G Fejer, S Tchaptchet, S Keck, C Kalis, PJ Nielsen…
Nature immunology, 2010nature.com
Abstract Allergies to nickel (Ni2+) are the most frequent cause of contact hypersensitivity
(CHS) in industrialized countries. The efficient development of CHS requires both a T
lymphocyte-specific signal and a proinflammatory signal. Here we show that Ni2+ triggered
an inflammatory response by directly activating human Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Ni2+-
induced TLR4 activation was species-specific, as mouse TLR4 could not generate this
response. Studies with mutant TLR4 proteins revealed that the non-conserved histidines …
Abstract
Allergies to nickel (Ni2+) are the most frequent cause of contact hypersensitivity (CHS) in industrialized countries. The efficient development of CHS requires both a T lymphocyte-specific signal and a proinflammatory signal. Here we show that Ni2+ triggered an inflammatory response by directly activating human Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Ni2+-induced TLR4 activation was species-specific, as mouse TLR4 could not generate this response. Studies with mutant TLR4 proteins revealed that the non-conserved histidines 456 and 458 of human TLR4 are required for activation by Ni2+ but not by the natural ligand lipopolysaccharide. Accordingly, transgenic expression of human TLR4 in TLR4-deficient mice allowed efficient sensitization to Ni2+ and elicitation of CHS. Our data implicate site-specific human TLR4 inhibition as a potential strategy for therapeutic intervention in CHS that would not affect vital immune responses.
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