(Applicant's Abstract) Following allergen exposure, eosinophils (Eos) and
basophils (Basos) but not neutrophils (PMNs) are preferentially recruited to
the lung in a Th2 environment supported by dendritic cells. The
sequence of events is likely to include the release of histamine from resident
mast cells within min of allergen binding. The presence of
histamine is expected to lead within min to an upregulation of P-selectin on
vascular endothelial cells that can serve in the initial Eo and Baso
adherence. Within min to hrs, allergen specific Th2 cytokines IL4, IL-5, and
IL-13 are generated by mast cells and T cells. IL4 and IL-13 regulate the
expression of adhesion molecules on the endothelium. IL-5 enables VLA-4
dependent adhesion of Eos and Basos while the asthma specific chemokines that
bind to CCR3 enable VLA-4 and LFA-1 dependent firm adhesion and
transmigration. As a consequence Eos and Basos accumulate in bronchial mucosa
and mucous cell metaplasia can arise later from bronchiolar inflammation.
These considerations provide a temporal and mechanistic framework
for analysis of Eo and Baso recruitment following allergen. We have shown that
Eos use their P-selectin glycoprotein ligand (PSGL-1) to attach to CHO cells
expressing low levels of P-selectin. At the low site density of P-selectin of
endothelial cells, Eos attach preferentially as compared to PMNs in accord
with observations that Eos but not PMNs use PSGL-1 to adhere to venules in the
lung. The first aim will focus on understanding the mechanism by which Eos and
Basos but not PMNs preferentially use their PSGL-1 to engage P-selectin. VLA-4
plays a unique role in the recruitment of Eos and Basos because it can be
regulated in distinct conformations that contribute both to cell capture and
firm adherence. We have developed several novel real-time assays to examine
how IL-5 and chemokine exposure alters the adhesive activity and affinity of
VLA-4 on Eos. The second aim is to understand the relationship between the
affinity of VLA-4 to the rolling and firm attachment of Basos and Eos. In
animal models of allergic asthma, mAbs to P-selectin, VLA-4 and also LFA- 1
block the accumulation of Eos. Because LFA- 1 contributes to specific
recruitment in so far as activated by cell specific stimuli, it must work in
combination with P-selectin and VLA-4 to enable efficient transmigration. The
third aim will evaluate how the adhesion molecules work in combination in the
recruitment. Taken together, the work will provide a novel understanding of
the attachment of PSGL-1 to P-selectin, the use of VLA-4, and the coordination
of the adhesion pathways in asthma.
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