4 research outputs found

    Airway Epithelial Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Inhibits CD4+ T Cells during Aspergillus fumigatus Antigen Exposure

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    Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) suppresses the functions of CD4+ T cells through its ability to metabolize the essential amino acid tryptophan. Although the activity of IDO is required for the immunosuppression of allergic airway disease by the Toll-Like-Receptor 9 (TLR9) agonist, oligonucleotides comprised of cytosine and guanine nucleotides linked by phosphodiester bonds (CpG) DNA, it is unclear whether IDO expression by resident lung epithelial cells is sufficient to elicit these effects. Therefore, we created a transgenic mouse inducibly overexpressing IDO within nonciliated airway epithelial cells. Upon inhalation of formalin-fixed Aspergillus fumigatus hyphal antigens, the overexpression of IDO from airway epithelial cells of these mice reduced the number of CD4+ T cells within the inflamed lung and impaired the capacity of antigen-specific splenic CD4+ effector T cells to secrete the cytokines IL-4, IL-5, IL-13, and IFN-γ. Despite these effects, allergic airway disease pathology was largely unaffected in mice expressing IDO in airway epithelium. In support of the concept that dendritic cells are the major cell type contributing to the IDO-inducing effects of CpG DNA, mice expressing TLR9 only in the airway epithelium did not augment IDO expression subsequent to the administration of CpG DNA. Furthermore, the systemic depletion of CD11c+ cells rendered mice incapable of CpG DNA-induced IDO expression. Our results demonstrate that an overexpression of IDO within the airway epithelium represents a novel mechanism by which the number of CD4+ T cells recruited to the lung and their capacity to produce cytokines can be diminished in a model of allergic airway disease, and these results also highlight the critical role of dendritic cells in the antiasthmatic effects of IDO induction by CpG DNA

    Aneuploidy Arises at Early Stages of Apc-Driven Intestinal Tumorigenesis and Pinpoints Conserved Chromosomal Loci of Allelic Imbalance between Mouse and Human

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    Although chromosomal instability characterizes the majority of human colorectal cancers, the contribution of genes such as adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), KRAS, and p53 to this form of genetic instability is still under debate. Here, we have assessed chromosomal imbalances in tumors from mouse models of intestinal cancer, namely Apc(+/1638N), Apc(+/1638N)/KRAS(V12G), and Apc(+/1638N)/Tp53(−/−), by array comparative genomic hybridization. All intestinal adenomas from Apc(+/1638N) mice displayed chromosomal alterations, thus confirming the presence of a chromosomal instability defect at early stages of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. Moreover, loss of the Tp53 tumor suppressor gene, but not KRAS oncogenic activation, results in an increase of gains and losses of whole chromosomes in the Apc-mutant genetic background. Comparative analysis of the overall genomic alterations found in mouse intestinal tumors allowed us to identify a subset of loci syntenic with human chromosomal regions (eg, 1p34-p36, 12q24, 9q34, and 22q) frequently gained or lost in familial adenomas and sporadic colorectal cancers. The latter indicate that, during intestinal tumor development, the genetic mechanisms and the underlying functional defects are conserved across species. Hence, our array comparative genomic hybridization analysis of Apc-mutant intestinal tumors allows the definition of minimal aneuploidy regions conserved between mouse and human and likely to encompass rate-limiting genes for intestinal tumor initiation and progression
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