Increased asthma in mice after recovery from oxazolone-induced dermatitis
Atopic dermatitis (AD)-like disease was elicited by repeated exposures of the ear skin of mice to oxazolone. Disease course could be divided into three phases (): (I) sensitization, which is a critical step in determining the intensity of subsequent inflammation; (II) acute inflammation manifested as continuously increasing ear swelling; (III) chronic inflammation, starting from approximately the fifth challenge onwards in which ear thickness reaches a plateau. Following withdrawal of oxazolone treatment (, arrow) ear swelling gradually subsided and stabilized by 20 days post-withdrawal. As shown in , chronic airway hyper-reactivity was subsequently induced using a protocol of OVA challenges without adjuvant. In this model, MCs have been shown to be key participants and can considerably intensify the inflammatory response to OVA (
14). When OVA sensitization was initiated 5 weeks after the last oxazolone challenge () airway hyper-reactivity was more severe, with increased resistance (, left panel) and, to a lesser but nonetheless significant extent, reduced compliance (, right panel). Having ruled-out a direct effect of oxazolone dermatitis on lung functions (
Supplemental Fig, S1A) we hypothesized that it may enhance airway disease by increasing sensitization to OVA. However, OVA-specific IgE was not increased at the post-dermatitis state (
Supplemental Fig.S1B) in spite of the diverse cytokines induced by oxazolone (
Supplemental Fig. S2A-C), which included IL-4 that is required for full development of dermatitis (
Supplemental Fig. S2B).
We previously reported (
15) that, during the course of oxazolone-induced chronic AD in mice, MCs become activated, they migrate from the skin to the draining lymph nodes and spleen, and expand in the tissues. In this setting, MCs were found to suppress inflammation during the late stages of disease by producing IL-2 and supporting Treg function at the site of inflammation. In humans, it is well known that MC numbers increase in the affected skin of individuals with AD (
16). Thus, we postulated that the exacerbation of post-AD airway disease, in our mouse model, might be caused by increased numbers of tissue MCs. We evaluated MC numbers in the spleen of mice with dermatitis and found their numbers were increased (data not shown) consistent with prior findings (
15). The increased numbers of MCs in tissues remained during convalesence and following challenge with OVA (). Our previous study (
15) demonstrated that during dermatitis a significant proportion of splenic MCs produced IL-2. In contrast, five weeks post-dermatitis splenic MCs were no longer producing IL-2 () suggesting that these cells were no longer activated, or could be non-responsive. To test the latter possibility we conducted a systemic anaphylactic challenge of dermatitis-induced mice five weeks after convalescence. As shown in , an enhanced anaphylactic response was observed for dermatitis-induced mice relative to those treated with solvent alone and this enhanced response was still present after five weeks of convalescence. This demonstrated that MCs are not readily cleared from the tissues and remain fully capable of responding to a subsequent challenge. Moreover, examination of the spleen of mice challenged with oxazolone, allowed to convalesce and subsequently challenged with OVA disclosed more MCs than in the spleen of mice challenged with OVA alone (). This demonstrates that the development of dermatitis is the cause of the marked increase in tissue MCs seen in post-dermatitis airway challenged mice.
Because we previously found (
15) that MCs dampen chronic AD, we asked whether MCs can function as regulatory and effector cells in dermatitis and airway disease, respectively. MC-deficient (
KitW-sh/W-sh) and appropriate control C57BL/6 mice (colony established from F1 wild type progeny of a
KitW-sh/+ mating) were subjected to oxazolone-induced dermatitis. Control C57BL/6 mice demonstrated milder inflammation relative to
KitW-sh/W-sh mice, consistent with our prior results (
15). In a separate experiment, induction of airway disease revealed increased airway hyper-reactivity in control C57BL/6 mice when compared to
KitW-sh/W-sh (). This suggests that MCs, which dampen chronic AD (
15), conversely promote the induction of OVA-mediated airway hyper-responsiveness. To formally demonstrate that this transition from regulatory to effector MCs could occur in the same mouse, we performed an adoptive (intra-dermal (
i.d.)) transfer of MCs in
KitW-sh/W-sh and afterwards we induced oxazolone-dermatitis in these mice as well as in non-reconstituted
KitW-sh/W-sh mice. Disease induction was followed by five weeks of convalescence and subsequent OVA-induced airway hyper-reactivity. As shown in , MC-reconstituted
KitW-sh/W-sh mice showed reduced inflammation during the late stages of oxazolone-induced dermatitis when compared to their non-reconstituted counterparts. No protection was observed at early stages of disease. In contrast, OVA-induced airway hyper-reactivity was markedly increased in MC-reconstituted
KitW-sh/W-sh mice () when compared to non-reconstituted littermates. These findings demonstrate that, whereas MCs play a protective role in one disease, they are conversely able to promote the severity of another disease. The findings are consistent with the view that induction of a T
H2 response in one disease may well predispose one to another disease, as previously reported for
lyn-/- mice (
10,
17). Examination of the tissues of MC-reconstituted
KitW-sh/W-sh mice revealed that
i.d. injected MCs not only engrafted the skin but were also found in the cervical LNs and the spleen (), consistent with our previous findings (
15). These dynamics were associated with increased inflammation, as judged by airway inflammation () and by increased numbers of eosinophils in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (). While some MCs could be found in the trachea of WT mice (
14) (), we observed no MC engraftment in the lungs or large airways of MC-reconstituted mice () demonstrating that the dermatitis-induced effect on airway hyper-reactivity is mediated distal to the site of inflammation.
In summary, the work presented herein provides a murine model for the atopic march with several characteristics of the syndrome in humans. First, accumulation of MCs during chronic allergic dermatitis was observed consistent with reports in human disease (
16). While in our model of oxazolone-induced AD the accumulation of MCs was protective (
15), these cells were also able to enhance anaphylaxis as reported in some humans with AD (
1). Second, post-dermatitis mice developed more severe airway disease, which is consistent with the well described observations of increased incidence and severity of asthma following AD (
18). Finally, exposure to one allergen caused increased responsiveness to another allergen suggesting potential epigenetic regulation, consistent with a role of the epigenome in increasing susceptibility and/or severity of allergic disease (
19). Thus, the atopic model described herein, provides a mechanistic link between the dermatitis-driven MC expansion and the increased risk and/or severity of asthma. It appears that, whereas the expansion of MCs in AD is beneficial at late stages of this disease, the cost is an increased risk for development or severity of airway hyper-reactivity.