Effects of IL-13 on airway responses in the guinea pig

B Morse, JP Sypek, DD Donaldson… - American Journal of …, 2002 - journals.physiology.org
B Morse, JP Sypek, DD Donaldson, KJ Haley, CM Lilly
American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular …, 2002journals.physiology.org
Levels of interleukin (IL)-13 are increased in asthmatic airways. IL-13 has been shown to be
necessary and sufficient for allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness and increased
inflammatory cell counts in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid in a murine model of asthma
but is thought to protect against airway inflammation when low doses are provided to the
guinea pig lung. To determine the role of IL-13 in the guinea pig, we studied the effects of a
360-μg/kg dose of nebulized IL-13 in naive animals and of IL-13 abrogation after airway …
Levels of interleukin (IL)-13 are increased in asthmatic airways. IL-13 has been shown to be necessary and sufficient for allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness and increased inflammatory cell counts in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid in a murine model of asthma but is thought to protect against airway inflammation when low doses are provided to the guinea pig lung. To determine the role of IL-13 in the guinea pig, we studied the effects of a 360-μg/kg dose of nebulized IL-13 in naive animals and of IL-13 abrogation after airway challenge of sensitized animals. Nebulized IL-13 significantly decreased the dose of histamine required to double baseline respiratory system resistance (ED100, 22 ± 3 vs. 13 ± 2 nmol/kg;P < 0.05) and was associated with recovery of significantly greater numbers of macrophages, lymphocytes, eosinophils, and neutrophils in BAL fluid. Guinea pigs pretreated with a fusion protein that binds IL-13 [soluble IL-13 receptor α2 (sIL-13Rα2)] were protected from developing antigen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness (ED100, 210 ± 50 vs. 20 ± 10 nmol/kg; P <0.01). sIL-13Rα2 (2 doses of 20 mg/kg) significantly reduced the histological grade of allergen-induced lung eosinophil accumulation, whereas the effects of two doses of 10 mg/kg were not significant. These findings demonstrate that the tissue levels of IL-13 induced by allergen challenge of sensitized animals induce airway hyperresponsiveness and inflammation and that IL-13 is required for the expression of allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness in the guinea pig ovalbumin model.
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