Cytokine trafficking of IL‐9 and IL‐13 through TfnRc+ vesicles in activated human eosinophils.

Autor: Almas, Sarah, Fayad, Nawell, Srivastava, Ojas, Siddique, Mujtaba, Touret, Nicolas, Lacy, Paige
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Leukocyte Biology; Apr2021, Vol. 109 Issue 4, p753-762, 10p
Abstrakt: Eosinophils are granulocytes that are elevated in lung mucosa in approximately half of patients with allergic asthma. These highly granulated cells can synthesize and secrete many cytokines, including IL‐9 and IL‐13. We hypothesized that IL‐9 and IL‐13 are found as preformed mediators in crystalloid granules and secreted using distinct trafficking pathways. Human eosinophils were purified from peripheral venous blood, adhered to coverslips, and stimulated with platelet activating factor (PAF). Cells were immunolabeled with antibodies to IL‐9 or IL‐13 and colocalized with markers for secretory organelles, using CD63 for crystalloid granules and transferrin receptor (TfnRc) for vesicles. Fixed cells were imaged using super‐resolution microscopy and quantified by colocalization using Pearson's correlation coefficient. IL‐9 immunofluorescence increased in a time‐dependent manner to PAF, whereas colocalization of IL‐9 and CD63 significantly increased from 0.52 to 0.67 after 5 min PAF. Colocalization of IL‐9 with TfnRc significantly increased at 60 min of stimulation with PAF (0.54 at 0 min to 0.60 at 60 min). IL‐13 showed lower colocalization with CD63 (0.55) than TfnRc (0.63) in unstimulated cells. Upon PAF stimulation, IL‐13 intensity transiently decreased at 5 and 60 min, whereas colocalization of IL‐13 with CD63 decreased throughout stimulation to 0.43. While colocalization of IL‐13 with TfnRc transiently increased to 0.66 at 5 min PAF, it returned to near baseline levels (0.64) after 15 min PAF. Our results suggest that IL‐9 and IL‐13 are stored in crystalloid granules as well as endosomal structures, and that IL‐9 is primarily trafficked to the cell surface via TfnRc+ endosome‐like vesicles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index