By
From * Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139; the Centro Nacional
Biotecnologia Consejo Superior Investigaciones Cientificas, Madrid, 28049 Spain; the § Glaxo
Institute for Molecular Biology, Geneva, CH1228 Switzerland; the
Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115; and ¶ Astra Draco AB, S-22100 Lund, Sweden
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Abstract |
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The complex pathophysiology of lung allergic inflammation and bronchial hyperresponsiveness
(BHR) that characterize asthma is achieved by the regulated accumulation and activation of
different leukocyte subsets in the lung. The development and maintenance of these processes
correlate with the coordinated production of chemokines. Here, we have assessed the role that
different chemokines play in lung allergic inflammation and BHR by blocking their activities in vivo. Our results show that blockage of each one of these chemokines reduces both lung
leukocyte infiltration and BHR in a substantially different way. Thus, eotaxin neutralization reduces specifically BHR and lung eosinophilia transiently after each antigen exposure. Monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-5 neutralization abolishes BHR not by affecting the accumulation of inflammatory leukocytes in the airways, but rather by altering the trafficking of the eosinophils and other leukocytes through the lung interstitium. Neutralization of RANTES
(regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted) receptor(s) with a receptor
antagonist decreases significantly lymphocyte and eosinophil infiltration as well as mRNA expression of eotaxin and RANTES. In contrast, neutralization of one of the ligands for RANTES receptors, macrophage-inflammatory protein 1, reduces only slightly lung eosinophilia and BHR.
Finally, MCP-1 neutralization diminishes drastically BHR and inflammation, and this correlates
with a pronounced decrease in monocyte- and lymphocyte-derived inflammatory mediators.
These results suggest that different chemokines activate different cellular and molecular pathways
that in a coordinated fashion contribute to the complex pathophysiology of asthma, and that their
individual blockage results in intervention at different levels of these processes.
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Introduction |
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Lung inflammation and bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR)1 are two distinct characteristics of asthma (1, 2). Eosinophils are considered to be the central proinflammatory leukocyte involved in the asthmatic reaction, due in part to secreted toxic granular proteins and membrane products that induce pulmonary damage and subsequently intensify BHR (1). Moreover, there is a correlation between levels of eosinophil-derived cation proteins in the airways of asthmatic patients and the severity of this disease (2). Despite the fact that the eosinophil is the predominant infiltrating cell type during asthma, other leukocytes may be critical in the initiation and amplification of the inflammatory response (4, 5). The prevention of both lung eosinophilia and BHR in T lymphocyte-deficient mice during antigen-induced inflammation supports a critical role for T cell cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-5 (6). The role that monocytes/macrophages play in lung allergic inflammation pertains to their ability to act as APCs and to generate a variety of mediators that promote both eosinophil activation and adhesion to endothelium (10). In this regard, macrophages secrete eosinophilic chemoattractants, including leukotriene (LT)B4, platelet-activating factor, and C5a, in addition to modulating the generation of some of these factors by eosinophils (10).
The immunological characterization of lung eosinophilia implicates chemokines in the initiation of lung allergic inflammation and the subsequent development of BHR (5, 13). Chemokines are a group of cytokines that promote leukocyte recruitment to inflammatory sites, stimulate leukocyte exocytosis, and induce hematopoiesis (18). Chemokine expression is high and readily modulated in the lung during the development of an inflammatory response (5, 16, 17). Among these, RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted), monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-5, and eotaxin have been shown to induce eosinophil migration in vitro and/or to be involved in lung eosinophilia in humans, guinea pigs, and mice (5, 16, 13, 21). In addition to their activity on eosinophils, RANTES and MCP-5 are strong chemotactic factors both in vivo and in vitro for T lymphocytes and monocytes, respectively (16, 24). MCP-1, which is primarily involved in the recruitment of mononuclear phagocytes (25), is also strongly expressed in the lung during inflammation (5, 26). Signaling mediated by this noneosinophilic chemokine might also be involved in macrophage activation leading to a cascade of proinflammatory and tissue damage events (27).
In this report, we have used a mouse model of asthma in
which the expression of the chemokines eotaxin, RANTES,
macrophage-inflammatory protein (MIP)-1, MCP-5, and
MCP-1 is clearly modulated during disease progression (5).
To understand the pathophysiology that results from the
expression of multiple chemokines with partially overlapping functions, we have analyzed (a) the direct recruitment of specific cell types to the lung interstitium and airways
exerted by these chemokines, (b) their role in the induction
of BHR, (c) the effect they exert on the gene expression of
other chemokines, and (d) the modulation by these
chemokines of different components of the pathological response, such as cell activation or inflammatory mediator
production.
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Materials and Methods |
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Mice and In Vivo Procedures.
8-10-wk-old C57BL/6J mice were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME) and kept in the specific pathogen-free mouse facility at Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The mouse model of lung inflammation used here consists of a sensitization phase (ovalbumin [OVA], 0.1 mg/mouse intraperitoneally on day 0; Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) and an induction of the response phase (2% OVA for 5 min intranasally on day 8, and 1% OVA for 20 min intranasally on days 15-21). PBS (intraperitoneal and/or intranasal) was administered to mice as a negative control. For the blocking experiments, mice also received 20 µg/mouse of neutralizing polyclonal Abs against either eotaxin (anti-Eot), MCP-5 (anti-MCP-5), MIP-1Immunohistochemical Phenotyping and Quantitation of Leukocytes.
Total BAL cell counts were performed, and aliquots (5 × 105 cells/slide) were pelleted onto glass slides by cytocentrifugation. To determine the number of eosinophils and neutrophils, slides were stained with Wright-Giemsa (Fisher Scientific Co., Pittsburgh, PA). T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, and mononuclear phagocytes were identified by Thy 1.2 (53-2.1; PharMingen, San Diego, CA), IgM (II/41; PharMingen), and Moma-2 (Biosource International, Camarillo, CA) staining, respectively, as described (5). Percentage of eosinophils, lymphocytes, neutrophils, and macrophages was determined by counting their number in eight high power fields (×40, total area 0.5 mm2) per area randomly selected, and dividing this number by the total number of cells per high power field. To obtain the absolute number of each leukocyte subtype in the lavage, these percentages were multiplied by the total number of cells recovered from the BAL fluid. Lung sections from the different experimental groups of mice were prepared as described (5). In brief, lungs were fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin (NBF; J.T. Baker, Phillipsburg, NJ) and paraffin embedded. Sections (4 microns) were cut onto microscope slides and stained with hematoxylin/eosin according to standard protocols. To determine the sizes of pulmonary infiltrates in the experimental groups of mice, the area of lung tissue covered by infiltrate was calculated in sections at low power (×100) using NIH Image 1.56. At least six fields of at least 0.01 mm2 were scanned, and the mean percentage area was determined for each mouse of each experimental group, relative to the control mice for each experiment.Determination of Chemokine Protein Expression within Lung Tissue.
The level of expression of eotaxin protein and MCP-5 protein was determined in sections from lungs of OVA-treated mice and controls. Sections were fixed and stained using a modified avidin/ biotin staining method. All incubations were carried out under humidified conditions, and slides were washed twice between steps for 5 min each in 0.1 M PBS supplemented with 0.2% gelatin. Sections were overlaid with 20% normal rabbit serum in PBS for 15 min and then incubated overnight at 4°C with either monoclonal anti-Eot diluted 1:2 in PBS with 0.1% BSA and 0.1% sodium azide (5) or anti-murine MCP-5 (ZY2A11) culture supernatant (undiluted). Endogenous peroxide was subsequently blocked by incubation for 20 min in methanol containing 0.3% hydrogen peroxide. Nonspecific staining due to cross-reaction with endogenous avidin or biotin was blocked by incubation with avidin solution followed by biotin solution, both for 20 min. Bound mAb was visualized by incubation with biotinylated rabbit anti-rat Ig diluted in 10% normal mouse serum PBS, and then incubated for 1 h each in streptavidin-peroxidase complex prepared according to the manufacturer's instructions (both from DAKO Corp.). Finally, slides were flooded with peroxidase substrate solution (20 mg diaminobenzidine in 10 ml PBS, containing 0.01% hydrogen peroxide) for 10 min before counterstaining with hematoxylin. Control slides were either stained with an isotype-matched negative control Ab instead of primary Ab or biotinylated anti-rat Ig or streptavidin complex were selectively omitted.Measurement of Chemokine mRNA Expression.
Total RNA from the lungs of OVA-treated mice or control littermates at different time points was extracted by the single step method using RNA STAT-60 (Tel-Test, Inc., Friendswood, TX). Chemokine mRNA expression was determined by multiprobe RNase protection assay (RPA) using the RiboQuant RPA kit (PharMingen) as recommended by the supplier. The identity and quantity of each mRNA species in the original RNA sample were then determined based on the signal intensities given by the appropriately sized, protected probe fragment bands. The sample loading was normalized by the housekeeping gene, GAPDH, included in each template set.Measurement of Cytokine, Inflammatory Mediator, and Ab Levels.
The release of these activating factors during OVA administration was determined by ELISA. BAL fluid was taken 1 h after antigen challenge on day 15 or 21. Serial dilutions of BAL fluid samples were assayed using commercial ELISA kits for IL-4, IL-5, TNF- ![]() |
Results |
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Mice treated with
OVA (see Materials and Methods; Fig. 1 A, bottom) show
maximal lung monocyte/macrophage accumulation at early stages of the inflammatory response (3 h after OVA
challenge on day 15), whereas eosinophil and T lymphocyte numbers increase in this organ at late stages of the response (3 h after OVA challenge on day 21; Fig. 1 A). The
highest mRNA expression of MCP-1 (day 15, 3 h), as well
as eotaxin and RANTES (day 21, 3 h) and MCP-5 and
MIP-1 (day 15-21, 3 h), coincides with the kinetics followed by the infiltrating leukocytes described above (Fig. 1
A; reference 5). No MIP-1
mRNA expression was detected during OVA treatment (Fig. 1 A). Fig. 1 B shows
that the production of both eotaxin and MCP-5 protein in
response to OVA correlates with the mRNA expression
pattern shown by these two chemokines, at least at the time
points analyzed (days 15 and 21). In addition, 24 h after OVA administration on day 21, eotaxin and MCP-5 protein expression is clearly diminished compared with that
detected 3 h after antigen challenge on the same day (data
not shown). This suggests that the kinetics of chemokine
mRNA expression parallels that observed, at least, for eotaxin and MCP-5 protein expression.
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To evaluate the specific contribution of eotaxin, an eosinophilic chemokine (13, 22, 23, 34), MCP-5, a monocyte
and eosinophil chemokine (16), MIP-1, a monocyte,
lymphocyte, and eosinophil chemokine (14, 21, 35), and
MCP-1, a monocyte chemokine (25, 36), to the development of lung inflammation in this OVA model, blocking
experiments of these chemokines were performed using
specific neutralizing Abs that have been characterized extensively in vivo and in vitro (references 5, 16, 28, and 29;
and see Materials and Methods for details). Neutralization of chemokine receptors that are activated by RANTES, a T
lymphocyte and eosinophil chemokine (21), and other
ligands was achieved using the antagonist Met-RANTES
(see Materials and Methods; reference 30). Neutralizing
agents were delivered daily from days 8 to 21 in these first
series of experiments, and analysis was always performed 3 h
after OVA challenge on day 21. Since the location of infiltrating cells within the lung correlates strongly with the severity of the inflammatory response (3), leukocyte enumeration was performed in the airways (BAL fluid) and in the
interstitium (lung sections) after OVA treatment.
Eotaxin neutralization during OVA treatment specifically affected eosinophils both in BAL fluid and pulmonary
interstitium. This effect was more pronounced on day 21 (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). MCP-5 neutralization during
OVA treatment strongly affected accumulation of BAL
monocytes and eosinophils on day 15, but not on day 21 (Fig. 2, and Table 1). Interestingly, minimal OVA-induced
leukocyte accumulation was detected in the lung interstitium at any time point after MCP-5 blockage (Table 2, and
Fig. 3). Met-RANTES administration reduced OVA-
induced monocyte accumulation in the BAL by half on day
21 (Table 1) and abrogated BAL lymphocyte and eosinophil accumulation during OVA treatment (Fig. 2, and Table 1). There was a corresponding decrease in inflammation in the pulmonary interstitium after Met-RANTES administration on day 21 (Table 2). MIP-1 neutralization reduced eosinophil recruitment into the airways and pulmonary interstitium by 20% only at late stages of the
inflammatory response, but without affecting monocyte,
macrophage, and lymphocyte numbers (day 21, Fig. 2 A,
and Tables 1 and 2).
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Neutralization of MCP-1 before each intranasal OVA challenge from days 8 to 21 reduced all four cell populations that migrate to the lung in response to OVA (Tables 1 and 2, and Fig. 3). Mononuclear phagocyte and eosinophil accumulation in the lung was reduced by 55 and 80%, respectively, after MCP-1 blockage (Fig. 2, and Table 1). OVA-induced pulmonary T lymphocyte accumulation during the inflammatory response was virtually abolished in the absence of MCP-1-mediated signals (Table 1).
To dissect the windows of action of the chemokines, blockage experiments were performed at different time points during OVA treatment, and mice were always analyzed 3 h after OVA challenge on day 21. Thus, when the anti-MCP-1 Abs were administered from days 15 to 21, only a small reduction in the numbers of infiltrating BAL leukocytes was detected (Fig. 2 C), suggesting a critical role of MCP-1 at early stages of the inflammatory response. However, blockage of MCP-1 neither at early stages (days 8-16) nor at late stages of the inflammatory response (days 19-21) is sufficient to decrease significantly BAL leukocyte numbers (Fig. 2 C). No differences in BAL cell numbers on day 21 were detected after eotaxin blockage for shorter periods (days 19-21 or day 21) compared with day 8-day 21 blockage (Fig. 2 C). However, when the anti-Eot Abs were administered on days 8-20 but not on day 21, no reduction in BAL eosinophilia was observed (Fig. 2 C). Signals delivered by MCP-1 during the whole process (days 8-21) are necessary to achieve OVA-induced lung inflammation, whereas eotaxin contributes to the development of eosinophilia by inducing a daily recruitment of eosinophils to the lung in this model. On day 21, similar OVA-induced inflammation was found after day 8-day 21, day 19-day 21, day 21, or day 8-day 20 MCP-5 blockage (Fig. 2 C).
BHR Induction after Chemokine Blockage.To evaluate whether
the specific reduction in lung inflammation induced by
blockage of a particular chemokine correlates with a decrease in airway responsiveness, BHR was evaluated in
OVA-treated mice after chemokine blockage. Fig. 4 A
shows that MIP-1 neutralization reduced BHR by 30%
compared with that observed in OVA-treated controls.
This reduction correlates with the 20-25% decrease in eosinophil accumulation detected in both lung interstitium
and airways of these mice after anti-MIP-1
Ab administration (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). In addition, eotaxin
neutralization reduced BHR by half compared with that
observed in OVA-treated controls (Fig. 4 A). This reduction correlates with the 60-70% decrease in eosinophil accumulation detected in the lung interstitium and airways of
this experimental group of mice (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and
2). However, when the anti-Eot Abs were administered on days 8-20 but not on day 21, no reduction in BHR was
observed (Fig. 4 B). In contrast, blockage of eotaxin exclusively at the last day of the treatment (day 21) was sufficient
to reduce BHR by 32% (Fig. 4 B). This indicates that eotaxin is involved in the induction of both BAL eosinophilia
(Fig. 2 C) and BHR (Fig. 4 B) after each individual antigen
provocation. The levels of BHR detected at day 21 in the
OVA-treated mice after MCP-5 blockage
in which BAL
eosinophilia was only reduced by 15% but interstitium eosinophilia was reduced by 87% (Figs. 2 and 3, and Tables
1 and 2)
were decreased by 60%, similar to the BHR
baseline levels detected in PBS-treated littermates (Fig. 4
A). However, BHR was not affected when MCP-5 blockage was executed at late stages of the inflammatory response (day 21), although BAL and interstitium eosinophilia was comparable to that observed after day 8-day 21 blockage (Fig. 4 B). This indicates that signals delivered by MCP-5 at early stages of the response could be critical in
the induction of BHR rather than the establishment of
lung inflammation. BHR was decreased by 70% when
MCP-1 was blocked from early stages of the OVA treatment (Fig. 4 A). OVA plus anti-MCP-1-treated mice and
PBS-treated controls show similar degrees of bronchoconstriction before and after antigen provocation (Fig. 4 A).
The effects of Met-RANTES administration on the development of BHR are pronounced and are described in detail elsewhere (31).
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The in vivo neutralization of eotaxin, MCP-1, or chemokines that bind RANTES receptor(s) either reduces or abrogates the OVA-induced accumulation of one or more leukocyte types both in BAL and lung interstitium (Figs. 2 and 3, and Tables 1 and 2). This could be related to changes in the pattern of expression of these chemokines. To evaluate whether eotaxin, MCP-1, or chemokines that bind RANTES receptor(s) control the expression of themselves and/or other chemokines, their mRNA expression in the lung was determined by RPA after the blockage of each chemokine during OVA treatment. Fig. 5 shows that after eotaxin neutralization, there was significant expression of OVA-induced eotaxin, RANTES, and MCP-1 on day 21. The mRNA expression level of these chemokines was comparable to those found in OVA-treated controls at the same time point (Fig. 5). In contrast, eotaxin and RANTES mRNA expression was reduced significantly in the lung of Met-RANTES-treated mice at each time point studied (Fig. 5, and data not shown). MCP-1 expression was not altered significantly by Met-RANTES in these mice (Fig. 5). Surprisingly, MCP-1 blockage, which prevents lung accumulation of eosinophils and lymphocytes in response to OVA, does not prevent the expression of the lymphocytic and/or eosinophilic chemokines RANTES and eotaxin (Fig. 5).
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Since MCP-1 blockage does not affect the mRNA expression of the chemokines studied, the absence of leukocyte
infiltration in the lung of OVA plus anti-MCP-1-treated
mice could be due to the modulation of activating factors
other than chemokines. These activating factors could be
produced directly by monocytes or induced indirectly by
this subset of leukocytes. Fig. 6 A shows that at 1 h after
OVA administration, the production of LTB4 and PGE2
was increased in the BAL fluid of the OVA-treated mice
on day 21 but not on day 15. However, blockage of MCP-1
completely inhibits OVA-induced production of these two
inflammatory mediators (Fig. 6 A). Similarly, detectable
levels of TXB2 were observed in the BAL fluid of OVA-treated mice, but not in OVA plus anti-MCP-1-treated littermates, on day 21 of treatment (Fig. 6 A). No differences between controls and test mice were detected in
LTC4/D4/E4 levels at the time point analyzed (Fig. 6 A).
The production of IgE in response to OVA was decreased
fivefold in the BAL fluid after MCP-1 blockage at the time
point indicated (Fig. 6 B). Similarly, the production of
Th2-derived cytokines in the same fluid was decreased
fourfold for IL-5 and threefold for IL-4 both on days 15 and 21 (Fig. 6 B). TNF- production in the BAL fluid was
similar in both groups of mice at both time points (Fig. 6
B). No IFN-
production was detected after OVA or
OVA plus anti-MCP-1 administration at the time points
indicated (Fig. 6 B).
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Discussion |
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We have characterized previously the expression of the chemokines eotaxin, MCP-5, RANTES, and MCP-1 (mRNA and/or protein), and correlated this with the leukocytes migrating to the lung during a murine model of lung inflammation (5, 16). From these experiments, we concluded that MCP-1 mRNA expression paralleled the accumulation of monocytes/macrophages in this organ, both events occurring predominantly at early stages of the response (day 15). Also, eotaxin mRNA expression paralleled lung eosinophilia predominantly at late stages (day 21). In contrast, other chemokines, such as RANTES or MCP-5, were expressed throughout the inflammatory reaction. This underlines the contribution of chemokines at different stages of the response.
From the work presented here, we first conclude that
eosinophil recruitment and development of BHR in this
model system involve the action of both eosinophilic (eotaxin, RANTES, MCP-5, and MIP-1) and noneosinophilic chemokines (MCP-1). This indicates the absence of
redundancy, since these chemokines seem to exert a critical role at different stages and on different pathways of the development of OVA-induced lung eosinophilia and BHR.
Thus, MCP-5 recruits practically all the eosinophils present
in the lung airways at early stages of the inflammatory response (day 15), while eotaxin attracts >60 and 80% of the
BAL and interstitial eosinophils, respectively, at later stages
of the response (day 21; Fig. 2, A and B, and Tables 1 and
2). In addition, MCP-1 mediates its critical influence
throughout during the development of the inflammatory response (days 8-21), whereas eotaxin expression is important for eosinophil recruitment after each antigen provocation (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). MCP-5 also delivers signals at early stages of the response that are involved in the
establishment of BHR. In fact, blockage of MCP-5 at late
stages does not modify the degree of bronchoconstriction
in response to OVA compared with that observed in the
OVA plus Ab control-treated mice (Fig. 4 A). Furthermore, we also conclude that MCP-5 seems to affect leukocyte traffic through the interstitium, since the accumulation of these leukocytes in the interstitium
but not in the airways
was severely impaired after MCP-5 blockage (Figs.
2 and 3, and Tables 1 and 2). This could be due to a differential modulation of adhesion receptors by MCP-5 that results in retention of the leukocytes in the interstitium. In
fact, it has been demonstrated that chemokines such as eotaxin affect the activation state of integrins and their ligands
both in vivo and in vitro (37). MCP-5 blockage could also
accelerate the transit of leukocytes from the lung interstitium to the airway spaces by modulating the expression of
other inflammatory mediators. These hypotheses are currently being investigated in our laboratory.
The use of a RANTES receptor antagonist prevents
completely lung eosinophilia at each time point during
OVA treatment (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). Our data suggest that RANTES and/or other chemokines that bind
RANTES receptor(s) are key lymphocytic chemokines in
our model, because their blockage impedes pulmonary lymphocyte accumulation in response to OVA. Although
both MIP-1 and MIP-1
are chemokines able to bind
RANTES receptor(s), only mRNA expression of MIP-1
is modulated during this OVA model. In a series of elegant
experiments, MIP-1
has been reported to reduce the intensity of the eosinophil recruitment to the lung and airways by 50% during Schistosoma mansoni egg antigen-induced allergic airway inflammation (38). MIP-1
neutralization
does not affect leukocyte accumulation in the lung at early
stages of the inflammatory response in the particular OVA
model studied here (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). At late
stages, only a 20% reduction in airway eosinophilia was detected after anti-MIP-1
Ab administration (Fig. 2, and
Table 1). However, lung eosinophilia does not occur in the
absence of CD4+ T lymphocytes (5), suggesting that
RANTES receptor(s) may induce lung eosinophilia either
by direct attraction of eosinophils or via the activation and
pulmonary accumulation of CD4+ T lymphocytes, or
both. In addition, OVA plus Met-RANTES-treated mice
showed a marked reduction in RANTES and eotaxin
mRNA expression in the lung during OVA treatment (Fig. 5). Thus, RANTES or other as yet unknown chemokines
rather than MIP-1
or MIP-1
act via RANTES receptor(s) and control directly or indirectly the expression of
other chemokines. Therefore, OVA-induced T cell and
eosinophil infiltration in the lung is regulated by RANTES
through itself and eotaxin. However, it is important to note
that the reagent used here, Met-RANTES, may bind to
more than one RANTES receptor and therefore inhibit
the activity of other chemokines. Due to the complexity of
this system, we have reported it in detail elsewhere (31).
Finally, the blockage of the mononuclear phagocyte chemokine MCP-1 throughout both the induction and later phases of the response affects these four leukocyte populations that migrate to the lung in response to OVA as well as blocking the induction of BHR (Figs. 2, 3, and 4, and Tables 1 and 2). Monocytes and macrophages are the first cell types to accumulate during OVA-induced lung inflammation in this model (5), and the strongest expression of MCP-1 occurs at early stages of the inflammatory response (Fig. 1; reference 5). Moreover, modification of the OVA-induced inflammatory response exclusively occurs when anti-MCP-1 mAb is administered from very early stages of the inflammatory process (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). In the absence of MCP-1-mediated signals, there is an ~50% reduction in the number of lung monocytes/macrophages after OVA administration, but interestingly, there is an almost complete reduction in lymphocyte and eosinophil infiltration of the lung (Fig. 2, and Tables 1 and 2). Taken together, these data suggest that MCP-1 acts upstream of the inflammatory process and is a strong candidate to regulate the expression of the other chemokines during this physiological response. Nevertheless, comparable mRNA expression of eotaxin, RANTES, and MCP-1 was detected in the lung of OVA plus anti-MCP-1-treated mice and OVA-treated controls (Fig. 5). This indicates that MCP-1 is involved in other regulatory pathways rather than chemokine expression. Based on our present knowledge of MCP-1 function, it can be hypothesized that the regulatory pathways are critically affected by the reduction in monocyte/macrophage numbers after anti-MCP-1 treatment and/or by the depletion of a specific subset of the cells that is essential for this inflammatory process.
Both lung-resident macrophages distributed along the
airways and circulating macrophages release mediators that
can modulate the function of other cell types and amplify
the lung inflammatory reactions (10, 39). Macrophages can
release eosinophil chemoattractants, including LTB4 (10),
or modulate the generation of LTC4 by eosinophils (12).
They also produce PGE2 and TXB2, which are mediators
of increased vascular permeability. In fact, levels of LTB4,
PGE2, or TXB2 were detectable in the BAL fluid of OVA-treated mice but greatly diminished in the BAL fluid of
OVA plus anti-MCP-1-treated littermates (Fig. 6 A). This
indicates that the observed production of these factors is
due either to infiltrating cells at this point, to increased activation of resident cells at late stages of the response, or to a
combination of these two events. LTC4 was not detectable
in the BAL fluid of either group of mice (Fig. 6 A). Macrophages can act as APCs and drive the proliferation of effector T cells that have been demonstrated to be required
to achieve a functional response. In this scenario, macrophage-induced IL-4 production by T cells after antigen
presentation drives the switch in Ig synthesis by B cells to
IgE and potentiates the subsequent priming of mast cells by
IgE plus antigen (40). MCP-1 blockage correlates with a
clear decrease in the BAL levels of IgE and IL-4 after OVA
treatment (Fig. 6 B). Similarly, IL-5 production is also affected by the MCP-1 blockage during OVA-induced lung allergic inflammation. These results indicate that MCP-1
function(s) (probably through monocyte/macrophage recruitment) are also involved in B and T cell activation. No
IFN- production was detected in the BAL fluid of test or
control mice, mainly because this model has a predominant
Th2-type response. Macrophages and monocytes also represent the major source of inflammatory cytokines such as
TNF (39). Despite the fact that only low levels of TNF-
were detected in the BAL fluid of OVA-treated mice,
MCP-1 blockage reduced these levels by half at the time
point of maximal macrophage and monocyte infiltration in
the lung (day 15; Fig. 6 B).
In conclusion, this paper reports the functional relevance of chemokines at different stages of a complex inflammatory response in vivo. Chemokines not only ensure the physical presence of specific leukocytes at the site of inflammation by acting directly on them, but also regulate the expression of other chemokines and the activation of a variety of inflammatory mediators made by different cell types. Our results suggest that specific chemokines are involved in different cellular and molecular pathways that in a coordinated fashion contribute to the complex pathophysiology of asthma. Understanding all the components involved in lung allergic inflammation as well as the critical timing of their actions could represent a crucial step in the prevention and therapy of this disease. We believe that the in vivo results presented here may contribute to the support of clinical applications for the improvement of asthma therapy.
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Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to J.-C. Gutierrez-Ramos, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 640 Memorial Dr., Cambridge, MA 02139. Phone: 617-679-7262; Fax: 617-374-9379; E-mail: gutierrez{at}mpi.com
Received for publication 11 December 1997 and in revised form 6 April 1998.
This work was partially funded by Astra Draco AB.We thank Profs. Drazen and Butcher for critical reading of this manuscript, Drs. MacKay, Tepper, and Zlotnik for their comments and important suggestions, and Dr. L. Kremer, Centro Nacional Biotecnologia, for providing antibodies against MCP-5. We are also indebted to T. Delaney and N. Bikkal for skilled technical assistance, and M. Melzer for editorial assistance.
Abbreviations used in this paper BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; BHR, bronchial hyperresponsiveness; Eot, eotaxin; LT, leukotriene; MCP, monocyte chemoattractant protein; Met-RANTES, methionylated RANTES; MIP, macrophage-inflammatory protein; OVA, ovalbumin; RANTES, regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted; RPA, RNase protection assay; TX, thromboxane.
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