Viral infection and allergy - What equine immune responses can tell us about disease severity and protection

被引:7
|
作者
Larson, Elisabeth M. [1 ]
Wagner, Bettina [1 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Coll Vet Med, Dept Populat Med & Diagnost Sci, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
关键词
Equine herpesvirus type 1; Mucosal immunity; Protection; Culicoides hypersensitivity; Innate immunity; IgE-binding monocytes; INSECT-BITE HYPERSENSITIVITY; PREVENTIVE IMMUNIZATION APPROACH; PULMONARY MONONUCLEAR-CELLS; IN-VITRO EXPOSURE; REAL-TIME PCR; FC-EPSILON-RI; HERPESVIRUS-1; EHV-1; ICELANDIC HORSES; SWEET ITCH; CULICOIDES-OBSOLETUS;
D O I
10.1016/j.molimm.2021.04.013
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Horses have many naturally occurring diseases that mimic similar conditions in humans. The ability to conduct environmentally controlled experiments and induced disease studies in a genetically diverse host makes the horse a valuable intermediate model between mouse studies and human clinical trials. This review highlights important similarities in the immune landscape between horses and humans using current research on two equine diseases as examples. First, equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) infection initiates a series of innate inflammatory signals at its mucosal entry site in the upper respiratory tract. These inflammatory markers are highly synchronized and predictable between individuals during viral respiratory infection and ultimately lead to adaptive immune induction and protection. The timing of early inflammatory signals, followed by specific adaptive immune markers correlating with immunity and protection, allow accurate outbreak tracking and also provide a foundation for understanding the importance of local mucosal immunity during other viral respiratory infections. Second, rare peripheral blood immune cells that promote allergic inflammation can be analyzed during Culicoides hypersensitivity, a naturally occurring type I IgE-mediated allergic disease of horses. Rare immune cells, such as IgE-binding monocytes or basophils, can be studied repeatedly in the horse model to unravel their larger mechanistic role in inflammation during allergic and other inflammatory diseases. We conclude with a survey of all other common equine inflammatory conditions. Together, this review serves as a reference and rationale for the horse as a non-rodent model for immunological research.
引用
收藏
页码:329 / 341
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] What Systems Biology Can Tell Us about Disease
    Gross, Fridolin
    HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE LIFE SCIENCES, 2011, 33 (04): : 477 - 496
  • [2] What can transgenic parasites tell us about the development of Plasmodium-specific immune responses?
    Thompson, J.
    Millington, O. R.
    Garside, P.
    Brewer, J. M.
    PARASITE IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 30 (04) : 223 - 233
  • [3] Norwegian Arthroplasty Register: What can it tell us about trends in disease severity in RA patients?
    Fevang, Bjorg-Tilde S.
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY, 2010, 39 : 16 - 16
  • [4] What can imaging tell us about influenza virus transmission and protection?
    Meliopoulos, Victoria A.
    Karlsson, Erik A.
    Schultz-Cherry, Stacey
    FUTURE VIROLOGY, 2016, 11 (08) : 583 - 590
  • [5] What can cutans tell us about?
    T. A. Sokolova
    Eurasian Soil Science, 2008, 41 (1) : 102 - 104
  • [6] WHAT CAN VARIATIONS IN DISEASE OUTCOME TELL US ABOUT RISK
    MANJI, F
    NAGELKERKE, N
    COMMUNITY DENTISTRY AND ORAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1990, 18 (02) : 106 - 107
  • [7] What can lipidomics tell us about the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease?
    Xiang, Yanhui
    Lam, Sin Man
    Shui, Guanghou
    BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2015, 396 (12) : 1281 - 1291
  • [8] What can regeneration processes tell us about coral disease?
    Kramarsky-Winter, E
    CORAL HEALTH AND DISEASE, 2004, : 217 - 230
  • [9] What can urban/rural differences in food allergy prevalence tell us about the drivers of food allergy?
    Allen, Katrina J.
    Koplin, Jennifer J.
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2019, 143 (02) : 554 - 556
  • [10] What can reunification of East and West Germany tell us about the cause of the allergy epidemic?
    Kraemer, U.
    Schmitz, R.
    Ring, J.
    Behrendt, H.
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY, 2015, 45 (01): : 94 - 107