loading page

Respiratory infections regulated blood cells IFN-beta-PD-L1 pathway in pediatric asthma
  • +5
  • Julia Koelle,
  • Patricia Haag,
  • Tytti Vuorinen,
  • Alexander Kiefer,
  • Manfred Rauh,
  • Theodor Zimmermann,
  • Nikolaos Papadopoulos,
  • Susetta Finotto
Julia Koelle
mOLECULAR pNEUMOLOGY

Corresponding Author:julia.koelle@uk-erlangen.de

Author Profile
Patricia Haag
Uniklinikum Erlangen
Author Profile
Tytti Vuorinen
University of Turku
Author Profile
Alexander Kiefer
Uniklinikum Erlangen
Author Profile
Manfred Rauh
Uniklinikum Erlangen
Author Profile
Theodor Zimmermann
Uniklinikum Erlangen
Author Profile
Nikolaos Papadopoulos
University of Manchester, University of Manchester
Author Profile
Susetta Finotto
mOLECULAR pNEUMOLOGY
Author Profile

Abstract

Respiratory infections in general and rhinovirus (RV) infection specifically are the main reason for asthma exacerbation in children. Here we found increased level of Programmed cell death protein 1 ligand (PD-L1) mRNA in total blood cells isolated from pre-school children with virus-induced asthma, with lower FEV1% and with high serum levels of the C-Reactive-Protein (CRP). These data indicate that, in the presence of infection in the airways of preschool children, worse asthma is associated with induced PD-L1 mRNA expression. Further, the activation of regulatory elements that induce IFNβ, a cytokine that is involved in immunity of infections, was found to be associated with better lung function in asthmatic children. Finally, IFN-beta released by peripheral blood Mononuclear cells (PBMC) was found associated with an induced expression of PD-L1mRNA in control but no asthmatic children. These data suggest that improving peripheral blood IFN type I expression in PBMCs in pediatric asthma could improve disease exacerbation because suppressing PDL1 expression in blood cells.