Cord blood monocyte-derived inflammatory cytokines suppress IL-2 and induce nonclassic “TH2-type” immunity associated with development of food allergy

Zhang et al. report altered immunity at birth (based on analyzing cord blood immune cell components and cytokine secretion) in kids that later develop food allergies., and skewing towards a Th2 phenotype. These findings are surprising to me- I would guess that these changes would be more related to postnatal exposures and microbiome makeup… I’d also be curious to know correlation with mom’s allergy and/or medication history.

Sci Transl Med. 2016 Jan 13;8(321):321ra8. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aad4322.

Cord blood monocyte-derived inflammatory cytokines suppress IL-2 and induce nonclassic “TH2-type” immunity associated with development of food allergy.

Zhang Y1, Collier F2, Naselli G3, Saffery R4, Tang ML4, Allen KJ4, Ponsonby AL4, Harrison LC5, Vuillermin P6; BIS Investigator Group.

Abstract
Food allergy is a major health burden in early childhood. Infants who develop food allergy display a proinflammatory immune profile in cord blood, but how this is related to interleukin-4 (IL-4)/T helper 2 (TH2)-type immunity characteristic of allergy is unknown. In a general population-derived birth cohort, we found that in infants who developed food allergy, cord blood displayed a higher monocyte to CD4(+) T cell ratio and a lower proportion of natural regulatory T cell (nTreg) in relation to duration of labor. CD14(+) monocytes of food-allergic infants secreted higher amounts of inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-α) in response to lipopolysaccharide. In the presence of the mucosal cytokine transforming growth factor-β, these inflammatory cytokines suppressed IL-2 expression by CD4(+) T cells. In the absence of IL-2, inflammatory cytokines decreased the number of activated nTreg and diverted the differentiation of both nTreg and naïve CD4(+) T cells toward an IL-4-expressing nonclassical TH2 phenotype. These findings provide a mechanistic explanation for susceptibility to food allergy in infants and suggest anti-inflammatory approaches to its prevention.

PMID: 26764159 [PubMed – in process]

Leave a Reply