Allergic Airway Inflammation Emerges from Gut Inflammation and Leakage in Mouse Model of Asthma

Author:

Selvakumar Balachandar1,Eladham Mariam Wed1,Hafezi Shirin1,Ramakrishnan Rakhee1,Hachim Ibrahim Yaseen2,Bayram Ola Salam2,Sharif‐Askari Narjes Saheb12,Sharif‐Askari Fatemeh Saheb13,Ibrahim Saleh Mohamed45,Halwani Rabih126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute for Medical and Health Sciences University of Sharjah Sharjah 27272 UAE

2. Department of Clinical Sciences College of Medicine University of Sharjah Sharjah 27272 UAE

3. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Pharmaceutics College of Pharmacy University of Sharjah Sharjah 27272 UAE

4. Institute of Experimental Dermatology University of Lübeck 23562 Lübeck Germany

5. Deapartment of Biotechnology Khalifa University Abu Dhabi 127788 UAE

6. Prince Abdullah Ben Khaled Celiac Disease Research Chair Department of Pediatrics Faculty of Medicine King Saud University Riyadh 11461 Saudi Arabia

Abstract

AbstractAsthma is an allergic airway inflammatory disease characterized by type 2 immune responses. Growing evidence suggests an association between allergic airways and intestinal diseases. However, the primary site of disease origin and initial mechanisms involved in the development of allergic airway inflammation (AAI) is not yet understood. Therefore, the initial contributing organs and mechanisms involved in the development of AAI are investigated using a mouse model of asthma. This study, without a local allergen challenge into the lungs, demonstrates a significant increase in intestinal inflammation with signature type‐2 mediators including IL‐4, IL‐13, STAT6, eosinophils, and Th2 cells. In addition, gut leakage and mRNA expressions of gut leakage markers significantly increase in the intestine. Moreover, reduced mRNA expressions of tight junction proteins are observed in gut and interestingly, in lung tissues. Furthermore, in lung tissues, an increased pulmonary barrier permeability and IL‐4 and IL‐13 levels associated with significant increase of lipopolysaccharide‐binding protein (LBP‐gut leakage marker) and eosinophils are observed. However, with local allergen challenges into the lungs, these mechanisms are further enhanced in both gut and lungs. In conclusion, the primary gut originated inflammatory responses translocates into the lungs to orchestrate AAI in a mouse model of asthma.

Funder

University of Sharjah

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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