Repeated antigen painting and sublingual immunotherapy in mice convert sublingual dendritic cell subsets
2014
Abstract The sublingual mucosa (SLM) is utilized as the site for sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) to induce tolerance against allergens. The contribution of SLM-dendritic cells (SLM-DCs) has not been clarified. The aim of this study was to examine the dynamics and phenotype of SLM-DCs after topical antigen painting and SLIT. SLM-DCs were histologically evaluated after FITC painting. A novel murine Japanese cedar pollinosis (JCP) model was generated and change in SLM-DCs after SLIT was examined. The density of SLM-DCs was clearly lower compared with the buccal mucosa and dorsal surface of the tongue. Topical FITC painting on the SLM induced maximal recruitment of submucosal DCs (smDCs) at 6 h, but most smDCs had vanished at 24 h. Repeated painting on the SLM induced exhaustion and conversion of the smDC phenotype. CD206 high CD11c low round-type cells with fewer dendrites and less lymph node migration capacity became dominant. In the murine model of JCP, SLIT efficiently inhibited clinical symptoms and allergen-mediated immunological responses. SLIT markedly reduced the number of SLM-DCs, converted to the round-type dominant phenotype and inhibited the activation of regional lymph node DCs. Topical antigen painting on the SLM induced rapid exhaustion and conversion of smDCs. The unique dynamics of SLM-DCs may contribute to tolerance induction in SLIT.
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