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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Alessandra Gurtner Clear advanced filters
  • Single-cell transcriptomic profiling and functional assays are used to identify subpopulations of eosinophils that are present in the mouse gastrointestinal tract and provide insight into the role of these cells in inflammatory bowel diseases in humans.

    • Alessandra Gurtner
    • Costanza Borrelli
    • Isabelle C. Arnold
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 615, P: 151-157
  • How downstream regulators of Wnt/β-catenin signalling control the fate of intestinal epithelial stem cells (IESCs) is unclear. Here, the authors show that the transcriptional co-factors interacting with the N- and C-terminal domains of β-catenin differentially regulate Wnt target gene activation, in turn differentially affecting the murine IESC proliferation and differentiation.

    • Costanza Borrelli
    • Tomas Valenta
    • Konrad Basler
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-16
  • Abdominal adhesions are a common cause of bowel obstruction, but knowledge regarding adhesion biology and anti-adhesion therapies remains limited. Here the authors report a systematic analysis of mouse and human adhesion tissues demonstrating that visceral fibroblast JUN and associated PDGFRA expression promote adhesions, and JUN suppression can prevent adhesion formation.

    • Deshka S. Foster
    • Clement D. Marshall
    • Michael T. Longaker
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-18
  • Eosinophils are best known for their effector functions in settings of parasitic infection or allergen challenge, but have also increasingly been implicated in immune regulation at mucosal sites. Here, we show using bacterial infection and antigen challenge models that extrathymic Foxp3+ regulatory T-cells that arise de novo in the context of bacterial infection require an intact eosinophil compartment. Mouse strains with a constitutive or conditional eosinophil deficiency, or with an eosinophil-specific ablation of Tgfb, lack bacterially induced neuropilin-negative, RORγt-positive gastrointestinal Treg populations in models of Helicobacter pylori, Helicobacter hepaticus and Citrobacter rodentium infection, as well as in the steady state colon and upon oral ovalbumin challenge. Treg priming in lymph nodes appears not to be impaired. Eosinophil-dependent tissue-resident Tregs express CTLA4, ICOS, CD39 and T-bet in addition to RORγt. Eosinophils reside in close proximity to Tregs in infected tissues, and specifically induce the expansion of newly formed Tregs, but not conventional T-cells in vivo and in vitro. TGF-β expression in eosinophils is induced by bacterial contact and during allergen exposure. Specific Tgfb ablation in eosinophils and the associated Treg defects result in excessive T-cell responses in the examined Th2- but not Th1-polarized settings.

    • Angela Fallegger
    • Martina Priola
    • Anne Müller
    ResearchOpen Access
    Mucosal Immunology
    Volume: 15, P: 504-514