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Peter J. Jose

Universitat de València

Publishes on Asthma and respiratory diseases, Allergic Rhinitis and Sensitization, Immune Response and Inflammation. 88 papers and 6.3k citations.

88Publications
6.3kTotal Citations

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Eotaxin: a potent eosinophil chemoattractant cytokine detected in a guinea pig model of allergic airways inflammation.
Peter J. Jose, D A Griffiths-Johnson, Paul Collins et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|1994
Cited by 819Open Access

Eosinophil accumulation is a prominent feature of allergic inflammatory reactions, such as those occurring in the lung of the allergic asthmatic, but the endogenous chemoattractants involved have not been identified. We have investigated this in an established model of allergic inflammation, using in vivo systems both to generate and assay relevant activity. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid was taken from sensitized guinea pigs at intervals after aerosol challenge with ovalbumin. BAL fluid was injected intradermally in unsensitized assay guinea pigs and the accumulation of intravenously injected 111In-eosinophils was measured. Activity was detected at 30 min after allergen challenge, peaking from 3 to 6 h and declining to low levels by 24 h. 3-h BAL fluid was purified using high performance liquid chromatography techniques in conjunction with the skin assay. Microsequencing revealed a novel protein from the C-C branch of the platelet factor 4 superfamily of chemotactic cytokines. The protein, "eotaxin," exhibits homology of 53% with human MCP-1, 44% with guinea pig MCP-1, 31% with human MIP-1 alpha, and 26% with human RANTES. Laser desorption time of flight mass analysis gave four different signals (8.15, 8.38, 8.81, and 9.03 kD), probably reflecting differential O-glycosylation. Eotaxin was highly potent, inducing substantial 111In-eosinophil accumulation at a 1-2 pmol dose in the skin, but did not induce significant 111In-neutrophil accumulation. Eotaxin was a potent stimulator of both guinea pig and human eosinophils in vitro. Human recombinant RANTES, MIP-1 alpha, and MCP-1 were all inactive in inducing 111In-eosinophil accumulation in guinea pig skin; however, evidence was obtained that eotaxin shares a binding site with RANTES on guinea pig eosinophils. This is the first description of a potent eosinophil chemoattractant cytokine generated in vivo and suggests the possibility that similar molecules may be important in the human asthmatic lung.

Cooperation between interleukin-5 and the chemokine eotaxin to induce eosinophil accumulation in vivo.
Paul Collins, Sylvie Marleau, D A Griffiths-Johnson et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|1995
Cited by 657Open Access

Experiments were designed to study the effect of systemically administered IL-5 on local eosinophil accumulation induced by the intradermal injection of the chemokine eotaxin in the guinea pig. Intravenous interleukin-5 (IL-5) stimulated a rapid and dramatic increase in the numbers of accumulating eosinophils induced by i.d.-injected eotaxin and, for comparison, leukotriene B4. The numbers of locally accumulating eosinophils correlated directly with a rapid increase in circulating eosinophils: circulating eosinophil numbers were 13-fold higher 1 h after intravenous IL-5 (18.3 pmol/kg). This increase in circulating cells corresponded with a reduction in the number of displaceable eosinophils recovered after flushing out the femur bone marrow cavity. Intradermal IL-5, at the doses tested, did not induce significant eosinophil accumulation. We propose that these experiments simulate important early features of the tissue response to local allergen exposure in a sensitized individual, with eosinophil chemoattractant chemokines having an important local role in eosinophil recruitment from blood microvessels, and IL-5 facilitating this process by acting remotely as a hormone to stimulate the release into the circulation of a rapidly mobilizable pool of bone marrow eosinophils. This action of IL-5 would be complementary to the other established activities of IL-5 that operate over a longer time course.

Kinetics of Eotaxin Generation and Its Relationship to Eosinophil Accumulation in Allergic Airways Disease: Analysis in a Guinea Pig Model In Vivo
Alison A. Humbles, Dolores M. Conroy, Sylvie Marleau et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|1997
Cited by 255Open Access

Challenge of the airways of sensitized guinea pigs with aerosolized ovalbumin resulted in an early phase of microvascular protein leakage and a delayed phase of eosinophil accumulation in the airway lumen, as measured using bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Immunoreactive eotaxin levels rose in airway tissue and BAL fluid to a peak at 6 h falling to low levels by 12 h. Eosinophil numbers in the tissue correlated with eotaxin levels until 6 h but eosinophils persisted until the last measurement time point at 24 h. In contrast, few eosinophils appeared in BAL over the first 12 h, major trafficking through the airway epithelium occurring at 12-24 h when eotaxin levels were low. Constitutive eotaxin was present in BAL fluid. Both constitutive and allergen-induced eosinophil chemoattractant activity in BAL fluid was neutralized by an antibody to eotaxin. Allergen-induced eotaxin appeared to be mainly in airway epithelium and macrophages, as detected by immunostaining. Allergen challenge of the lung resulted in a rapid release of bone marrow eosinophils into the blood. An antibody to IL-5 suppressed bone marrow eosinophil release and lung eosinophilia, without affecting lung eotaxin levels. Thus, IL-5 and eotaxin appear to cooperate in mediating a rapid transfer of eosinophils from the bone marrow to the lung in response to allergen challenge.

Human airway smooth muscle cells express and release RANTES in response to T helper 1 cytokines: regulation by T helper 2 cytokines and corticosteroids
M John, S. J. Hirst, Peter J. Jose et al.|The Journal of Immunology|1997
Cited by 242Open Access

RANTES is a basic 8-kDa polypeptide of the C-C chemokine subfamily with strong chemotactic activity for eosinophils, lymphocytes, and monocytes. We determined the regulation of RANTES production by human airway smooth muscle cells in culture. While TNF-alpha, but not IFN-gamma, increased RANTES mRNA expression and protein release, the combination of TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma caused a greater degree of expression and release in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Sequential treatment of airway smooth muscle cells with TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma showed that IFN-gamma sensitized the cells to the stimulatory effect of TNF-alpha. Using a modified Boyden chamber technique, RANTES separated by reverse-phase liquid chromatography from cell culture supernatants of airway smooth muscle cells stimulated by TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma showed a strong chemoattractant effect on human eosinophils, an effect inhibited by an anti-RANTES Ab. RANTES production induced by TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma was inhibited partly by the Th2-derived cytokines, IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13, as well as by dexamethasone. Our studies indicate that, in addition to contractile responses and mitogenesis, airway smooth muscle cells have synthetic and secretory potential with the release of RANTES. They may participate in chronic airway inflammation by interacting with both Th1- and Th2-derived cytokines to modulate chemoattractant activity for eosinophils, activated T lymphocytes, and monocytes/macrophages.