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1 Pathology & Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jordanam{at}mcmaster.ca.
Asthma is a chronic airway inflammatory disease that encompasses three cardinal processes: Th2-polarized inflammation, bronchial hyperreactivity and airway wall remodeling. However, the link between the immune-inflammatory phenotype and the structural-functional phenotype remains to be fully defined. The objective of these studies was to evaluate the relationship between the immunological nature of chronic airway inflammation and the development of abnormal airway structure and function in a mouse model of chronic asthma. Using IL-4 competent and IL-4 deficient mice, we created divergent immune-inflammatory responses to chronic aeroallergen challenge. Immune-inflammatory, structural and physiological parameters of chronic allergic airway disease were evaluated in both strains of mice. While both strains developed airway inflammation, the profiles of the immune-inflammatory responses were markedly different: IL-4 competent mice elicited a Th2-polarized response and IL-4 deficient mice developed a Th1-polarized response. Importantly, this chronic Th1-polarized immune response was not associated with airway remodeling or bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Transient reconstitution of IL-4 in IL-4 deficient mice via an airway gene transfer approach led to partial Th2 re-polarization and increased bronchial hyperresponsiveness, along with full reconstitution of airway remodeling. These data show that distinct structural-functional phenotypes associated with chronic airway inflammation are strictly dependent on the nature of the immune-inflammatory response.
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