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American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 2(188), p. 536-540, 2012

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1101795

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Cutting Edge: Histamine Is Required for IL-4-Driven Eosinophilic Allergic Responses

Journal article published in 2011 by Julie A. Swartzendruber, Adam J. Byrne ORCID, Paul J. Bryce
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract Histamine is an important allergic mediator, and studies have defined roles for both histamine 1 and 4 receptors in allergic airway inflammation. In this study, we show that histamine is necessary to generate IL-4–driven eosinophilic inflammation, as histamine-deficient mice cannot generate eosinophilic lung inflammation in response to intratracheal IL-4 and exogenous histamine restores responsiveness. This is histamine 2 receptor (H2R) dependent because H2R knockout mice fail to respond to IL-4, and a H2R agonist restores inflammation in histidine decarboxylase knockout. Furthermore, alveolar epithelial cells require H2R to produce CCL24, an eosinophil recruitment factor, whereas H2R blockade reduces CCL24 production from wild-type cells. In an allergic inflammation model, H2R knockout mice show significantly reduced eosinophilic inflammation and CCL24 expression. These data demonstrate a previously unidentified role for H2R in allergic inflammation and establishes a synergy between endogenous histamine and IL-4 that supports eosinophilic recruitment to the lung.