Dysregulated invertebrate tropomyosin-dectin-1 interaction confers susceptibility to allergic diseases.
Naina GourStephane LajoieUrsula SmoleMarquitta WhiteDonglei HuPagé C GoddardScott HuntsmanCeleste EngAngel C Y MakSam S OhJung-Hyun KimAnnu SharmaSophie PlanteIkhlass Haj SalemYvonne ReschXiao XiaoNu YaoAnju SinghSusanne VrtalaJamila ChakirEsteban González BurchardAndrew P LaneMarsha Wills-KarpPublished in: Science immunology (2018)
The key factors underlying the development of allergic diseases-the propensity for a minority of individuals to develop dysfunctional responses to harmless environmental molecules-remain undefined. We report a pathway of immune counter-regulation that suppresses the development of aeroallergy and shrimp-induced anaphylaxis. In mice, signaling through epithelially expressed dectin-1 suppresses the development of type 2 immune responses through inhibition of interleukin-33 (IL-33) secretion and the subsequent recruitment of IL-13-producing innate lymphoid cells. Although this homeostatic pathway is functional in respiratory epithelial cells from healthy humans, it is dramatically impaired in epithelial cells from asthmatic and chronic rhinosinusitis patients, resulting in elevated IL-33 production. Moreover, we identify an association between a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the dectin-1 gene loci and reduced pulmonary function in two cohorts of asthmatics. This intronic SNP is a predicted eQTL (expression quantitative trait locus) that is associated with reduced dectin-1 expression in human tissue. We identify invertebrate tropomyosin, a ubiquitous arthropod-derived molecule, as an immunobiologically relevant dectin-1 ligand that normally serves to restrain IL-33 release and dampen type 2 immunity in healthy individuals. However, invertebrate tropomyosin presented in the context of impaired dectin-1 function, as observed in allergic individuals, leads to unrestrained IL-33 secretion and skewing of immune responses toward type 2 immunity. Collectively, we uncover a previously unrecognized mechanism of protection against allergy to a conserved recognition element omnipresent in our environment.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- immune response
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- signaling pathway
- chronic kidney disease
- dna methylation
- chronic rhinosinusitis
- transcription factor
- long non coding rna
- toll like receptor
- newly diagnosed
- high resolution
- risk assessment
- dendritic cells
- prognostic factors
- copy number
- cystic fibrosis
- inflammatory response
- peritoneal dialysis
- mass spectrometry
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- climate change