4.6 Article

IL-4-Producing Dendritic Cells Induced during Schistosoma japonica Infection Promote Th2 Cells via IL-4-Dependent Pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 195, Issue 8, Pages 3769-3780

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1403240

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81071382, 81273326]

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Although dendritic cells (DCs) have been widely demonstrated to play essential roles in initiation of Th2 responses in helminth infections and allergic reactions, the mechanisms remain uncertain largely because DCs do not produce IL-4. In present investigation, we have uncovered a novel subset of DCs from mice infected with Th2-provoking pathogens Schistosoma japonica, which independently promoted Th2 cells via IL-4-dependent pathway. These DCs contained similar levels of IL-4 mRNA and higher levels of IL-12p40 mRNA comparing to basophils, correlating to their Th2-promoting and Th1-promoting dual polarization capacities. Characterized by expression of Fc epsilon RI+, these DCs were induced independent of T cells. Further investigations revealed that Th2-promoting Fc epsilon RI+ DCs were monocyte-derived inflammatory DCs, which were sufficient to induce Th2 cells in vivo. Egg Ags together with GM-CSF or IL-3 alone were able to stimulate the generation of Th2-promoting Fc epsilon RI+ DCs from bone marrow cells in vitro. To our knowledge, our data for the first time demonstrate that IL-4-producing DCs are induced under some Th2-provoking situations, and they should play important roles in initiation of Th2 response.

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