First breath shapes the lung’s immune system
EU-LIFE Science Newsletter 3/2017
News from the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria
Scientists at CeMM and the Medical University of Vienna shed light at a complex immune program that starts right after birth: the study published in Cell Reports reveals how interleukin-33 signaling induced by the first breath shapes the performance of pulmonary immune cells and influences anti-bacterial defenses.
The lung is an important interface between the body and the outside environment: with each breath, a surface of roughly 100 square meters exchanges oxygen for carbon dioxide. More than 10,000 liters of air pass adult lungs every day and with this come numerous viruses, bacteria and pollutants, which need to be prevented from entering the body.
To defend the organism from these intruders, the lungs harbor their own arsenal of highly specialized immune cells that are equipped to maintain the balance between host defense and tissue quiescence. However, how this balanced immune homeostasis in lungs emerged after birth, was largely unexplored. Now, for the first time, the group of Sylvia Knapp, Director of Medical Affairs at CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and Professor of Infection Biology at the Medical University of Vienna showed with the help of mouse models that the very first breath of a newborn releases crucial signals that shape the lifelong immunological milieu of lungs.
The study, published in Cell Reports (DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2017.01.071), reveals that the mechanical forces of spontaneous ventilation at birth lead to the release of interleukin (IL)-33, a cytokine with a wide-range of effects: So-called “type 2 innate lymphoid cells” (ILC2s) follow the IL-33 signal and migrate into the lung tissue, where they release IL-13, another cytokine. This second signal determines the faith of alveolar macrophages by inducing the anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype – they turn into specialized cells that keep the immune system in check and ensure that the lungs stay calm and healthy to provide proper gas exchange.
These ILC2-induced effects protect the lungs from excessive inflammation to daily encountered environmental triggers – however, there is a catch: although the described mechanisms are crucial in achieving lung quiescence after the first contact with the outside world, these processes at the same time increase the susceptibility to bacterial infections, such as caused by pneumococci. In other words: The mechanism that maintains the lung function of gas exchange at the same time explains why bacterial pneumonia is the primary cause of death by an infectious disease in Western countries.
Original Article: Saluzzo S., Gorki A.D., Rana B.M.J., Martins R., Scanlon S., Starkl P., Lakovits K., Hladik A., Korosec A., Sharif O., Warszawska J.M., Jolin H., Mesteri I., McKenzie A.N.J., Knapp S. (2017) First-breath induced type-2 pathways shape the lung immune environment. Cell Reports. 18(8):1893-1905.
Image Caption & Credits: Fluorescent staining of IL-33 in a newborn mouse lung © Seth Scanlon / MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge