A162 INTERLEUKIN-4 SIGNALING IS NOT A PREREQUISITE FOR HELMINTH-THERAPY PROTECTION AGAINST COLITIS
L Kraemer, D McKay, A Wang

TL;DR
This study shows that mice lacking IL-4 signaling can still be protected from colitis by helminth infection, with protection depending on IL-10 and macrophages.
Contribution
The study reveals that IL-4 signaling is not essential for helminth-induced protection against colitis, with IL-10 and macrophages playing key roles.
Findings
Mice lacking IL-4 signaling (il-4ra-/-) are protected from DNBS-induced colitis after helminth infection.
Protection in il-4ra-/- mice depends on IL-10 and macrophages, as neutralizing IL-10 or depleting macrophages abolishes protection.
Helminth-induced anti-colitic effects are redundant, allowing compensation in the absence of IL-4 signaling.
Abstract
Infection with helminth parasites drives Th2 immunity, characterized by the cytokines IL-4, -5, -13, and IL-10, and expansion of regulatory cells. These orchestrated immune responses promote an immunomodulatory/immunosuppressive environment, which can protect the host from concomitant inflammation. Mice infected with the tapeworm Hymenolepis diminuta display a strong Th2 immune response and they are protected from DNBS-induced colitis. Surprisingly, preliminary data indicated that il-4ra-/- mice (where the worm establishes) were protected from DNBS-induced colitis. Here we sought to confirm or refute the findings in il-4ra-/- and, if positive, investigate the role of IL-10 and macrophages in the anti-colitic effect. To determine if IL-10 and macrophages play key roles in the protection against colitis in il-4ra-/- mice infected with H. diminuta. BALB/c (WT) and il-4ra-/- mice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
