Defining a Link with Asthma in Mice Congenitally Deficient in Eosinophils
University of Vermont · Illinois College · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Eosinophils are often dominant inflammatory cells present in the lungs of asthma patients. Nonetheless, the role of these leukocytes remains poorly understood. We have created a transgenic line of mice (PHIL) that are specifically devoid of eosinophils, but otherwise have a full complement of hematopoietically derived cells. Allergen challenge of PHIL mice demonstrated that eosinophils were required for pulmonary mucus accumulation and the airway hyperresponsiveness associated with asthma. The development of an eosinophil-less mouse now permits an unambiguous assessment of a number of human diseases that have been linked to this granulocyte, including allergic diseases, parasite infections, and tumorigenesis.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
16- JJJames J. LeeCorresponding
University of Vermont, Illinois College, University of Illinois Chicago, Mayo Clinic in Arizona
- DDDawn Dimina
University of Vermont, Illinois College, University of Illinois Chicago, Mayo Clinic in Arizona
- MPMiMi P. MaciasCorresponding
University of Vermont, Illinois College, University of Illinois Chicago, Mayo Clinic in Arizona
- SISergei I. Ochkur
University of Vermont, Illinois College, University of Illinois Chicago, Mayo Clinic in Arizona
- MPMichael P. McGarry
University of Vermont, Illinois College, University of Illinois Chicago, Mayo Clinic in Arizona
Topics & keywords
- Eosinophil
- Immunology
- Asthma
- Genetically modified mouse
- Allergy
- Mucus
- Granulocyte
- Biology
- Good health and well-being