FOXP3型
医学
免疫学
炎症
雄激素受体
过敏性炎症
嗜酸性粒细胞
信号转导
哮喘
内科学
生物
免疫系统
细胞生物学
癌症
前列腺癌
作者
Vivek Gandhi,Jacqueline-Yvonne Cephus,Allison E. Norlander,Nowrin U. Chowdhury,Jian Zhang,Zachary J. Ceneviva,Elie Tannous,Vasiliy V. Polosukhin,Nathan D. Putz,Nancy Wickersham,Amrit Singh,Lorraine B. Ware,Julie A. Bastarache,Ciara M. Shaver,Hong Wei Chu,R. Stokes Peebles,Dawn C. Newcomb
摘要
Women have higher prevalence of asthma compared with men. In asthma, allergic airway inflammation is initiated by IL-33 signaling through ST2, leading to increased IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 production and eosinophil infiltration. Foxp3+ Tregs suppress and ST2+ Tregs promote allergic airway inflammation. Clinical studies showed that the androgen dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) reduced asthma symptoms in patients, and mouse studies showed that androgen receptor (AR) signaling decreased allergic airway inflammation. Yet the impact of AR signaling on lung Tregs remains unclear. Using AR-deficient and Foxp3 fate-mapping mice, we determined that AR signaling increased Treg suppression during Alternaria extract (Alt Ext; allergen) challenge by stabilizing Foxp3+ Tregs and limiting the number of ST2+ ex-Tregs and IL-13+ Th2 cells and ex-Tregs. AR signaling also decreased Alt Ext-induced ST2+ Tregs in mice by limiting expression of Gata2, a transcription factor for ST2, and by decreasing Alt Ext-induced IL-33 production from murine airway epithelial cells. We confirmed our findings in human cells where 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), an androgen, decreased IL-33-induced ST2 expression in lung Tregs and decreased Alt Ext-induced IL-33 secretion in human bronchial epithelial cells. Our findings showed that AR signaling stabilized Treg suppressive function, providing a mechanism for the sex difference in asthma.
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