Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism

Mucosal immune diseases such as asthma and inflammatory bowel disease are associated with major environmental factors - diet, geography, hygiene, infections - that contribute to disease risk. The mucosal immune system is in direct contact with the external environment and must balance protective imm...

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Main Author: Chenery, Alistair Lee
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57723
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-577232018-01-05T17:28:56Z Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism Chenery, Alistair Lee Mucosal immune diseases such as asthma and inflammatory bowel disease are associated with major environmental factors - diet, geography, hygiene, infections - that contribute to disease risk. The mucosal immune system is in direct contact with the external environment and must balance protective immune responses with tolerance to innocuous antigens. Since chronic inflammation at mucosal sites depends on a diverse set of T cell-driven responses, understanding the factors that regulate mucosal T cell differentiation and function is key to developing better treatments to a variety of inflammatory diseases. Further, immunological cross-talk can occur between mucosal organs such as the intestine and the lung, but the role of T cells in this cross-talk is poorly defined. The work herein investigates the effect of external factors, specifically intestinal infections and dietary immunomodulators, on mucosal T cell responses in the context of inflammation in the intestine and the lungs. Using a mouse model of infection with the intestinal helminth Trichuris muris, I show infection-mediated alterations in the lung microenvironment that can protect against murine models of allergic airway inflammation. I further show that intestinal T. muris infection has a systemic effect on hematopoiesis in the bone marrow. In other studies, I examine the role of the dietary vitamin A metabolite, retinoic acid, on T cell function during intestinal inflammation. Specifically, I investigate how metabolism of retinoic acid by the enzyme Cyp26b1 modulates T cell differentiation and function and show that Cyp26b1 controls regulatory T cell and T helper 17 differentiation in vitro. Further, I posit a role of Cyp26b1 in regulating effector T cell function in vivo using a murine model of T cell-driven inflammatory bowel disease. Thus, the results presented here provide further insight into helminth-mediated immune regulation, intestine-to-lung mucosal immune crosstalk, and dietary immunomodulation that regulate mucosal T cell responses. Medicine, Faculty of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Department of Graduate 2016-04-20T15:43:04Z 2016-04-21T02:02:30 2016 2016-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57723 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Mucosal immune diseases such as asthma and inflammatory bowel disease are associated with major environmental factors - diet, geography, hygiene, infections - that contribute to disease risk. The mucosal immune system is in direct contact with the external environment and must balance protective immune responses with tolerance to innocuous antigens. Since chronic inflammation at mucosal sites depends on a diverse set of T cell-driven responses, understanding the factors that regulate mucosal T cell differentiation and function is key to developing better treatments to a variety of inflammatory diseases. Further, immunological cross-talk can occur between mucosal organs such as the intestine and the lung, but the role of T cells in this cross-talk is poorly defined. The work herein investigates the effect of external factors, specifically intestinal infections and dietary immunomodulators, on mucosal T cell responses in the context of inflammation in the intestine and the lungs. Using a mouse model of infection with the intestinal helminth Trichuris muris, I show infection-mediated alterations in the lung microenvironment that can protect against murine models of allergic airway inflammation. I further show that intestinal T. muris infection has a systemic effect on hematopoiesis in the bone marrow. In other studies, I examine the role of the dietary vitamin A metabolite, retinoic acid, on T cell function during intestinal inflammation. Specifically, I investigate how metabolism of retinoic acid by the enzyme Cyp26b1 modulates T cell differentiation and function and show that Cyp26b1 controls regulatory T cell and T helper 17 differentiation in vitro. Further, I posit a role of Cyp26b1 in regulating effector T cell function in vivo using a murine model of T cell-driven inflammatory bowel disease. Thus, the results presented here provide further insight into helminth-mediated immune regulation, intestine-to-lung mucosal immune crosstalk, and dietary immunomodulation that regulate mucosal T cell responses. === Medicine, Faculty of === Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Department of === Graduate
author Chenery, Alistair Lee
spellingShingle Chenery, Alistair Lee
Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
author_facet Chenery, Alistair Lee
author_sort Chenery, Alistair Lee
title Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
title_short Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
title_full Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
title_fullStr Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
title_full_unstemmed Regulation of mucosal T cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
title_sort regulation of mucosal t cell responses by intestinal helminths and retinoic acid metabolism
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57723
work_keys_str_mv AT cheneryalistairlee regulationofmucosaltcellresponsesbyintestinalhelminthsandretinoicacidmetabolism
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