Background: Associations between vitamin D status and childhood asthma are increasingly reported, but direct causation and mechanisms underlying an effect remain unknown. We investigated the effect of early-life vitamin D deficiency on the development of murine neonatal allergic airways disease (AAD).
Methods: In utero and early-life vitamin D deficiency was achieved using a vitamin D-deficient diet for female mice during the third trimester of pregnancy and lactation. Offspring were weaned onto a vitamin D-deficient or vitamin D-replete diet, and exposure to intranasal house dust mite (HDM) or saline was commenced from day 3 of life for up to 6 weeks, when airway hyper-responsiveness (AHR), airway inflammation and remodelling were assessed.
Results: Neonatal mice that had in utero and early-life vitamin D deficiency had significantly increased pulmonary CD3(+) CD4(+) T1ST2(+) cells and reduced CD4(+) IL-10(+) cells. This effect was enhanced following HDM exposure. AHR in HDM-exposed mice was unaffected by vitamin D status. Introduction of vitamin D into the diet at weaning resulted in a significant reduction in serum IgE levels, reduced pulmonary eosinophilia and peri-bronchiolar collagen deposition.
Conclusion: Peri-natal vitamin D deficiency alone has immunomodulatory effects including Th2 skewing and reduced IL-10-secreting T regulatory cells, exaggerated with additional allergen exposure. Vitamin D deficiency in early life does not affect AHR, but contributes to disease severity with worse eosinophilic inflammation and airway remodelling. Importantly, supplementation with vitamin D improves both of these pathological abnormalities.
Keywords: animal models; asthma; eosinophils; lymphocytes; paediatric.
© 2014 The Authors. Allergy Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.