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Glucocorticosteroids administration is associated with increased regulatory T cells in equine asthmatic lungs.

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Recurrent inflammation in severe equine asthma causes a remodeling of the airways leading to incompletely reversible airway obstruction. Despite the improvement of clinical signs and lung function with glucocorticoids (GC),… Click to show full abstract

Recurrent inflammation in severe equine asthma causes a remodeling of the airways leading to incompletely reversible airway obstruction. Despite the improvement of clinical signs and lung function with glucocorticoids (GC), inflammation, translated by an increased percentage of neutrophils, persists in the airways. Regulatory T cells (Treg) have been shown to have anti-inflammatory properties and play an important role in balancing the immune response by suppressing effector lymphocyte activity. However, interactions between Treg, neutrophils and glucocorticosteroids in vivo are unclear, particularly in asthma. Furthermore, the effects of GC on Treg in the airway of asthmatic horses have not been investigated. We hypothesized that horses with severe asthma display a decreased population of pulmonary Treg when compared to heathy controls, and that treatment with GC lead to an increased pulmonary Treg cell population only in affected horses. Using lung function measurements and flow cytometry with surface antigens CD4 and FoxP3, we investigated Treg in airway luminal cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from 6 asthmatic horses in exacerbation of the disease and 6 aged-match controls, kept in the same environment, before and following a 2-week treatment with dexamethasone. Results showed that the number of Treg increases only in the lungs of asthmatic horses following GC therapy, despite continued presence of increased numbers of neutrophils. Our results support the complexity of the interaction between Treg, neutrophils and GC.

Keywords: treg; glucocorticosteroids administration; administration associated; regulatory cells; associated increased; asthmatic horses

Journal Title: Veterinary immunology and immunopathology
Year Published: 2018

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