Hyper-Inflammatory Monocyte Activation Following Endotoxin Exposure in Food Allergic Infants

In this study, detailed immune cell and cytokine profiling was performed on peripheral blood mononuclear cells at baseline from 27 1 year old infants in the HealthNuts cohort (n = 16 egg allergic and n = 11 non-allergic healthy controls) and following monocyte stimulation. We show that egg allergic infants have increased frequency of circulating monocytes, reduced numbers of regulatory CD4 T cells and increased monocyte: CD4 T cell ratios relative to healthy controls. Monocytes from both egg allergic and non-allergic infants responded to endotoxin stimulation with rapid cytokine production and downregulation of the surface receptor CD16, however monocytes from egg allergic infants were hyper-responsive, producing significantly more inflammatory cytokines (TNFα, IL-6, IL-1β, IL-8) and innate cell recruiting factors (MIP-1α) than healthy controls. This work indicates that monocytes of food allergic infants are programmed to a hyper-inflammatory phenotype and that the development of food allergy may be associated with trained immunity in early life.
Source: Frontiers in Immunology - Category: Allergy & Immunology Source Type: research