Infection of mice with the nematode Trichinella spiralis triggers recruitment and differentiation of intra-epithelial intestinal mucosal mast cells expressing mouse mast cell protease 1 (Mcpt-1), which contributes to expulsion of the parasite. Expression of Mcpt-1 is transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1-dependent in vitro. TGF-β1, which is secreted within tissues as a biologically inactive complex with latency-associated peptide, requires extracellular modification to become functionally active. The integrin-αvβ6 mediates local activation of TGF-β1 in association with epithelia. Using T. spiralis-infected β6-/- mice, we show accumulation of mucosal mast cells in the lamina propria of the small intestine with minimal recruitment into the epithelial compartment. This was accompanied by a coordinate reduction in expression of both Mcpt-1 and -2 in the jejunum and increased tryptase expression, whereas Mcpt-9 became completely undetectable. In contrast, the cytokine stem cell factor, a regulator of mast cell differentiation and survival, was significantly up-regulated in T. spiralis-infected β6-/- mice compared with infected β+/+ controls. Despite these changes, β6-/- mice still appeared to expel the worms normally. We postulate that compromised TGF-β1 activation within the gastrointestinal epithelial compartment is a major, but not the only, contributing factor to the observed changes in mucosal mast cell protease and epithelial cytokine expression in β6-/- mice. Copyright © American Society for Investigative Pathology.
CITATION STYLE
Knight, P. A., Brown, J. K., Wright, S. H., Thornton, E. M., Pate, J. A., & Miller, H. R. P. (2007). Aberrant mucosal mast cell protease expression in the enteric epithelium of nematode-infected mice lacking the integrin αvβ 6, a transforming growth factor-β1, activator. American Journal of Pathology, 171(4), 1237–1248. https://doi.org/10.2353/ajpath.2007.061245
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