4 research outputs found

    Early and Long-Term Effects of Dupilumab Treatment on Circulating T-Cell Functions inĀ Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Atopic Dermatitis

    Full text link
    Dupilumab, a mAb targeting IL-4 receptor alpha (IL-4RĪ±), markedly improves disease severity in patients with atopic dermatitis. However, the effect of IL-4RĪ± blockade on dynamics of circulating skin-homing T cells, which are crucial players in the pathologic mechanism of atopic dermatitis, has not been studied yet. In addition, it remains unknown whether dupilumab treatment induces long-lasting T- and B-cell polarization. Therefore, we studied the short- and long-term effects of dupilumab treatment on IL-4RĪ± expression and T-cell cytokine production within total and skin-homing (cutaneous lymphocyte antigen+/CCR4+) subpopulations in patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. Dupilumab treatment completely blocked IL-4RĪ± expression and signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 phosphorylation in CD19+ B cells and CD4+ T cells within 2 hours of administration and through week 52. Although no change in the proportion of skin-homing T-cell subsets was found, dupilumab treatment significantly decreased the percentage of proliferating (Ki67+) and T helper type 2 and T helper type 22 cytokine-producing skin-homing CD4+ T cells at week 4. No evidence of general T helper type cell skewing following a year of dupilumab treatment was found. In summary, dupilumab treatment rapidly and stably inhibited IL-4RĪ±, which was accompanied by a strong early functional immunological effect specifically on skin-homing T cells without affecting overall T helper type cell skewing in the long term

    Evolution and function of interleukin-4 receptor signaling in adaptive immunity and neutrophils

    Get PDF
    The cytokines interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13, signaling via the IL-4 receptor (IL-4R), orchestrate type 2 immunity to helminth infections and toxins. Activation of epithelial and myeloid cells, and a transient neutrophils influx initiates type 2 immune responses, which are dominated by basophils, eosinophils, mast cells, B cell immunoglobulin E production, and type 2ā€‰T helper and T follicular helper cells. Interestingly, IL-4 and IL-13 can curtail chemotaxis and several effector functions of neutrophils in mice and humans. This inhibitory role of IL-4 and IL-13 probably developed to limit tissue damage by neutrophils during type 2 immunity where a ā€œweep and sweepā€ response aims at expulsion and decreased fecundity, instead of killing, of macroparasites. Here, we review when IL-4R signaling cytokines appeared during evolution relative to neutrophils and adaptive immunity. Neutrophil-like granular phagocytes were present in invertebrates throughout the bilaterian clade, but we were unable to find data on IL-4, IL-13, or their receptors in invertebrates. Conversely, vertebrates had both adaptive immunity and IL-4, IL-13, and IL-4Rs, suggesting that type 2 cytokines evolved together with adaptive immunity. Further studies are necessary to determine whether IL-4R signaling in neutrophils was established simultaneously with the appearance of adaptive immunity or later

    Comprehensive analysis of human IL-4 receptor subunits shows compartmentalization in steady state and dupilumab treatment

    Full text link
    Background: Insight into the pathomechanism of atopic diseases demonstrated a pivotal role of the cytokines interleukin-4 (IL-4) and IL-13, which has spurred the development of tailored therapeutics targeting their common IL-4 receptor (IL-4R). However, several aspects of the IL-4R system remain ill-defined in humans. Methods: We used multicolor spectral flow cytometry to characterize IL-4R subunit expression in 28 human immune cell subsets on protein and mRNA levels and assessed their subcellular distribution by applying a specifically adapted protocol that avoided influence of fixation and permeabilization on fluorochrome and antibody performance. In patients, we investigated possible changes in IL-4RĪ± distribution before and during treatment with dupilumab, a monoclonal antibody-targeting IL-4RĪ±. Results: Whereas all immune cell subsets investigated expressed IL-4RĪ± and common Ī³ chain protein and mRNA, expression of IL-13RĪ±1 was restricted to myeloid and B cells. Interestingly, some cells contained considerably more intracellular IL-4R protein than on their surface. Naive B cells were found to carry the highest levels of IL-4RĪ± distributed evenly between surface and intracellular space, whereas IL-4RĪ± was found predominantly in intracellular pools in neutrophils. In patients with atopic diseases treated with dupilumab, we observed that engagement of IL-4RĪ± by dupilumab resulted in internalization of the antibody and decreased total IL-4RĪ± expression. Notably, even after months of treatment not all intracellular IL-4RĪ± molecules were occupied by dupilumab, indicating the presence of a "dormant" intracellular IL-4RĪ± pool that could be mobilized upon certain extrinsic or intrinsic cues. Conclusion: Collectively, our findings suggest that distinct human immune cell subsets contain surface and intracellular IL-4R pools, which are differently affected by targeted biologic treatment. Keywords: atopy; cytokine receptors; interleukin-4; intracellular; patients

    Regulation of neutrophils in type 2 immune responses

    Full text link
    Type 2 immune responses contribute to the resistance to helminths and toxins as well as several physiological processes. Although they usually do not participate in type 2 immune responses, neutrophils have been shown in mice to enhance the anti-helminth response, but they also contribute to increased target tissue damage. Increased pathology and morbidity is also observed in type 2 immune-mediated disorders, such as allergic asthma, when neutrophils become a predominant subset of the infiltrate. How neutrophil recruitment is regulated during type 2 immune responses is now starting to become clear, with recent data showing that signaling via the prototypic type 2 cytokine interleukin-4 receptor mediates direct and indirect inhibitory actions on neutrophils in mice and humans
    corecore