High-affinity IgE receptors on dendritic cells exacerbate Th2-dependent inflammation

E Sallmann, B Reininger, S Brandt… - The Journal of …, 2011 - journals.aai.org
E Sallmann, B Reininger, S Brandt, N Duschek, E Hoflehner, E Garner-Spitzer, B Platzer…
The Journal of Immunology, 2011journals.aai.org
Abstract The IgE-mediated and Th2-dependent late-phase reaction remains a
mechanistically enigmatic and daunting element of human allergic inflammation. In this
study, we uncover the FcεRI on dendritic cells (DCs) as a key in vivo component of this form
of allergy. Because rodent, unlike human, DCs lack FcεRI, this mechanism could be
revealed only by using a new transgenic mouse model with human-like FcεRI expression on
DCs. In the presence of IgE and allergen, FcεRI+ DCs instructed naive T cells to differentiate …
Abstract
The IgE-mediated and Th2-dependent late-phase reaction remains a mechanistically enigmatic and daunting element of human allergic inflammation. In this study, we uncover the FcεRI on dendritic cells (DCs) as a key in vivo component of this form of allergy. Because rodent, unlike human, DCs lack FcεRI, this mechanism could be revealed only by using a new transgenic mouse model with human-like FcεRI expression on DCs. In the presence of IgE and allergen, FcεRI+ DCs instructed naive T cells to differentiate into Th2 cells in vitro and boosted allergen-specific Th2 responses and Th2-dependent eosinophilia at the site of allergen exposure in vivo. Thus, FcεRI on DCs drives the cascade of pathogenic reactions linking the initial allergen capture by IgE with subsequent Th2-dominated T cell responses and the development of late-phase allergic tissue inflammation.
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