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Determining how memory T helper type 2 (Th2) initiate recall responses to aeroallergens has the potential to change the therapeutic approach to allergic asthma, the most common asthma subtype. ~5-10% of effector Th2 cells recruited into the lung give rise to long-lived tissue resident memory cells that are poised to respond upon allergen re-exposure.Consequently, targeting memory Th2 cell activation is an attractive therapeutic strategy. However, it is not well understood how allergen inhalation initiates a memory Th2 cell response in the lung. The focus of this new study on the role of lung-resident memory Th2 cells in orchestrating the recall response to allergen in the lung, including the recruitment and activation of circulating Th2 cells, is a natural, timely and exciting extension of the investigators' ongoing Allergen Challenge Protocol.
Full description
The objective of this study is to define the mechanisms whereby Th2-Trm persisting in the lung orchestrates a recall response to inhaled allergens. The investigators' central hypothesis is that Th2-Trm ignite allergic airway inflammation via a rapid and enhanced response to cognate antigen in the airway and the ability to recruit circulating Th2 cells (Th2-Tcr) to the sites of antigen presentation in the lung. Mechanistically, the investigators hypothesize that Th2-Trm co-localize with DCs expressing the Th2 cell-attracting chemokine CCL17 and after allergen re-challenge rapidly produce type 2 cytokines that initiate allergic inflammation and markedly enhance DC expression of CCL17. This increased CCL17 expression recruits Th2-Tcr cells from the blood to sites of antigen presentation where Th2-Tcr receive a "second touch" from cognate antigen loaded and activated DCs and become fully competent to amplify allergic inflammation. The investigators propose to use innovative experimental systems to define the function of Th2-Trm, including single cell RNA-seq analysis of human airway mucosal CD4+ T cells obtained via bronchial brushing. Specifically, the investigators propose to define the transcriptional phenotype of human lung Th2-Trm and Th2-Tcr. Defining the mechanisms regulating Th2-Trm function in the asthmatic airway has the potential to yield new therapeutic approaches for allergic asthma. Memory CD4+ T helper type 2 (Th2) cells are critical in promoting allergic asthma, the most common asthma endotype. The investigators propose to define the function of newly described lung-resident memory Th2 cells in driving recurrent allergic airway inflammation. The successful completion of the proposed study has the potential to focus new asthma therapies on specifically targeting the biology of lung-resident memory Th2 cells.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Mild to moderate allergic asthma (AA) subjects
Inclusion Criteria:
All subjects will have a baseline FEV1 no less than 75% of the predicted value.
All subjects will have a clinical history of allergic symptoms to an indoor allergen present in their home environment, either cat, dog or dust mite allergen, and confirmed skin reactivity (a positive allergen prick test) to the same allergen. The investigators will recruit both:
Life-long absence of cigarette smoking (lifetime total of < 5 pack-years and none in 5 years).
Willing and able to give informed consent.
Expressed the desire to participate in an interview with the principal investigator.
Age between 18 and 55 years.
All subjects will have a positive methacholine challenge with a PC20 < 16 mg/ml.
Exclusion Criteria:
Healthy Control (HC) Subjects HC subjects will be individuals who are in good overall health, age and sex matched to the asthmatic group, age 18 - 55 and nonallergic, i.e. entirely negative on a panel of prick skin tests that includes trees, grasses, weeds, cat, dog, dust mites, cockroach and molds, with no history of allergic rhinitis or asthma, no history of allergic symptoms caused by cats, dogs, or dust mite allergen exposure, life-long nonsmokers of cigarettes (defined as a lifetime total of < 5 packyears and none in 5 years), normal spirometry (i.e. FEV1 and FVC of at least 90% of predicted) and with a negative methacholine challenge test (PC20 of > 25 mg/ml).
Exclusion Criteria:
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37 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Rod A Rahimi, MD PhD; Ben D Medoff
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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