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Food antigens drive spontaneous IgE elevation in the absence of commensal microbiota.


ABSTRACT: Immunoglobulin E (IgE), a key mediator in allergic diseases, is spontaneously elevated in mice with disrupted commensal microbiota such as germ-free (GF) and antibiotics-treated mice. However, the underlying mechanisms for aberrant IgE elevation are still unclear. Here, we demonstrate that food antigens drive spontaneous IgE elevation in GF and antibiotics-treated mice by generating T helper 2 (TH2)-skewed T follicular helper (TFH) cells in gut-associated lymphoid tissues (GALTs). In these mice, depriving contact with food antigens results in defective IgE elevation as well as impaired generation of TFH cells and IgE-producing cells in GALT. Food antigen-driven TFH cells in GF mice are mostly generated in early life, especially during the weaning period. We also reveal that food antigen-driven TFH cells in GF mice are actively depleted by colonization with commensal microbiota. Thus, our findings provide a possible explanation for why the perturbation of commensal microbiota in early life increases the occurrence of allergic diseases.

SUBMITTER: Hong SW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6531000 | biostudies-literature | 2019 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Food antigens drive spontaneous IgE elevation in the absence of commensal microbiota.

Hong Sung-Wook SW   O Eunju E   Lee Jun Young JY   Lee Minji M   Han Daehee D   Ko Hyun-Ja HJ   Sprent Jonathan J   Surh Charles D CD   Kim Kwang Soon KS  

Science advances 20190522 5


Immunoglobulin E (IgE), a key mediator in allergic diseases, is spontaneously elevated in mice with disrupted commensal microbiota such as germ-free (GF) and antibiotics-treated mice. However, the underlying mechanisms for aberrant IgE elevation are still unclear. Here, we demonstrate that food antigens drive spontaneous IgE elevation in GF and antibiotics-treated mice by generating T helper 2 (T<sub>H</sub>2)-skewed T follicular helper (T<sub>FH</sub>) cells in gut-associated lymphoid tissues (  ...[more]

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