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Wogonin Attenuates Ovalbumin Antigen-Induced Neutrophilic Airway Inflammation by Inhibiting Th17 Differentiation
Author(s) -
Rie Takagi,
Masaaki Kawano,
Kazuyuki Nakagome,
Kumiko Hashimoto,
Takehiro Higashi,
Katsuya Ohbuchi,
Atsushi Kaneko,
Sho Matsushita
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of inflammation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.106
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 2090-8040
pISSN - 2042-0099
DOI - 10.1155/2014/571508
Subject(s) - wogonin , kampo , ovalbumin , medicine , inflammation , immunology , immune system , pathogenesis , in vitro , allergic inflammation , pharmacology , chemistry , pathology , scutellaria baicalensis , biochemistry , alternative medicine , traditional chinese medicine
Allergic airway inflammation is generally considered to be a Th2-type immune response. Recent studies, however, have demonstrated that Th17-type immune responses also play important roles in this process, particularly in the pathogenesis of neutrophilic airway inflammation, a hallmark of severe asthma. We scrutinized several Kampo extracts that reportedly exhibit anti-inflammatory activity by using in vitro differentiation system of human and mouse naïve T cells. We found that hange-shashin-to (HST) and oren-gedoku-to (OGT) possess inhibitory activity for Th17 responses in vitro . Indeed, wogonin and berberine, major components common to HST and OGT, exhibit Th17-inhibitory activities in both murine and human systems in vitro . We therefore evaluated whether wogonin suppresses OVA-induced neutrophilic airway inflammation in OVA TCR-transgenic DO11.10 mice. Consequently, oral administration of wogonin significantly improved OVA-induced neutrophilic airway inflammation. Wogonin suppressed the differentiation of naïve T cells to Th17 cells, while showing no effects on activated Th17 cells.

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