The cannabinoid WIN55212‐2 suppresses effector T cell responses and promotes regulatory T cells in human tonsils

Allergy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alba Angelina ◽  
Mario Pérez‐Diego ◽  
Angel Maldonado ◽  
Beate Rückert ◽  
Mübeccel Akdis ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 60 (12/2014) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuezhen Cao ◽  
Chengli Li ◽  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Rong Xia

mBio ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaozhou Zhang ◽  
Timothy C. Borbet ◽  
Angela Fallegger ◽  
Matthew F. Wipperman ◽  
Martin J. Blaser ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Antibiotic exposure early in life and other practices impacting the vertical transmission and ordered assembly of a diverse and balanced gut microbiota are associated with a higher risk of immunological and metabolic disorders such as asthma and allergy, autoimmunity, obesity, and susceptibility to opportunistic infections. In this study, we used a model of perinatal exposure to the broad-spectrum antibiotic ampicillin to examine how the acquisition of a dysbiotic microbiota affects neonatal immune system development. We found that the resultant dysbiosis imprints in a manner that is irreversible after weaning, leading to specific and selective alteration of the colonic CD4+ T-cell compartment. In contrast, colonic granulocyte and myeloid lineages and other mucosal T-cell compartments are unaffected. Among colonic CD4+ T cells, we observed the most pronounced effects on neuropilin-negative, RORγt- and Foxp3-positive regulatory T cells, which are largely absent in antibiotic-exposed mice even as they reach adulthood. Immunomagnetically isolated dendritic cells from antibiotic-exposed mice fail to support the generation of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) from naive T cells ex vivo. The perinatally acquired dysbiotic microbiota predisposes to dysregulated effector T-cell responses to Citrobacter rodentium or ovalbumin challenge. The transfer of the antibiotic-impacted, but not healthy, fecal microbiota into germfree recipients recapitulates the selective loss of colonic neuropilin-negative, RORγt- and Foxp3-positive Tregs. The combined data indicate that the early-life acquisition of a dysbiotic microbiota has detrimental effects on the diversity and microbial community composition of offspring that persist into adulthood and predisposes to inappropriate T-cell responses that are linked to compromised immune tolerance. IMPORTANCE The assembly of microbial communities that populate all mucosal surfaces of the human body begins right after birth. This process is prone to disruption as newborns and young infants are increasingly exposed to antibiotics, both deliberately for therapeutic purposes, and as a consequence of transmaternal exposure. We show here using a model of ampicillin administration to lactating dams during their newborn offspring’s early life that such exposures have consequences that persist into adulthood. Offspring acquire their mother’s antibiotic-impacted microbiota, which compromises their ability to generate a colonic pool of CD4+ T cells, particularly of colonic regulatory T cells. This Treg deficiency cannot be corrected by cohousing with normal mice later and is recapitulated by reconstitution of germfree mice with microbiota harvested from antibiotic-exposed donors. As a consequence of their dysbiosis, and possibly of their Treg deficiency, antibiotic-impacted offspring generate dysregulated Th1 responses to bacterial challenge infection and develop more severe symptoms of ovalbumin-induced anaphylaxis.


2010 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 147
Author(s):  
I. G. Harper ◽  
K. Saeb-Parsy ◽  
C. J. Callaghan ◽  
R. Motallebzadeh ◽  
E. M. Bolton ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 377-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J Hui ◽  
Gary C Pien ◽  
Etiena Basner-Tschakarjan ◽  
Federico Mingozzi ◽  
Jonathan D Finn ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 377 Hemophilia B represents a promising model for the development of adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors-based gene therapeutics. In the first clinical trial for AAV serotype 2 mediated gene transfer of Factor IX (F.IX) to the liver of severe hemophilia B subjects, transgene expression was short-lived with a gradual decline of F.IX levels. The loss of transgene expression was accompanied by a transient transaminitis, which we hypothesized to be the result of the reactivation of a pool of capsid-specific memory CD8+ T cells originated from a previous exposure to wild-type AAV. These results were unanticipated since previous work in small and large animal models showed that AAV administration is uneventful, allowing prolonged expression of F.IX transgene at therapeutic levels. We developed an in vitro cytotoxicity assay using a human hepatocyte cell line expressing HLA-B*0702, a common MHC class I allele for which the AAV capsid immunodominant epitope VPQYGYLTL was identified. Using this model, we demonstrated that HLA-matched AAV-specific effector CD8+ T cells were able to lyse target hepatocytes transduced with AAV-2. We now use this in vitro model of CTL killing of AAV-transduced hepatocytes to demonstrate the efficacy of a novel strategy to circumvent undesirable immune response through the engagement of regulatory T cells. A recently characterized MHC Class II-restricted T cell epitope (Tregitope) in the Fc fragment of IgG has been shown to induce regulatory T cells in vitro and in vivo (Blood, 2008; 112: 3303-3311). AAV-specific HLA-B*0702 effector cells expanded in the presence of a human Tregitope peptide resulted in 79% to 89% inhibition of cytotoxic activity against peptide-pulsed and AAV-transduced target cells, respectively. These results were confirmed using PBMCs from 5 different donors. A similar degree of inhibition of CTL activity was observed for the HLA allele A*0101, which binds to the AAV-derived epitope SADNNNSEY; co-culture of effector cells with the Tregitope inhibited CTL-mediated killing by 60%. Interestingly, the same Tregitope efficiently mediated suppression of CTL activity in subjects carrying different HLA alleles, indicating a high level of promiscuity of Tregitope binding. Staining for the regulatory T cell markers CD4, CD25, and FoxP3 supported the hypothesis that Tregitopes suppress T cell responses by expanding regulatory T cells; 62.2% of the CD4+ population stained positive for CD25 and FoxP3 in PBMCs expanded against AAV epitopes in the presence of Tregitope, compared with PBMCs expanded against an AAV epitope alone (3.63%), or against an AAV epitope and an irrelevant control peptide (1.94%). Polyfunctional analysis for markers for T cell activation showed that CD8+ T cells incubated in the presence of Tregitope had an approximately 5-fold decrease in production of IL-2 and IFN-γand a 2-fold reduction in TNF-α production, indicating levels of activation close to naïve CD8+ T cells. We further characterized the mechanism of action of Tregitopes by showing that Tregitopes are required at the time of CD8+ T cell priming, as CTL activity of AAV-expanded CD8+ T cells against transduced hepatocytes was not inhibited by the CD4+ T cell fraction of PBMC expanded separately in vitro with Tregitopes only. We conclude that the use of Tregitopes represents a promising strategy for antigen-specific, Treg-mediated modulation of capsid-specific T cell responses. Disclosures: Martin: EpiVax: Employment. De Groot:EpiVax, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2003 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 1755-1762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Lundgren ◽  
Elisabeth Suri-Payer ◽  
Karin Enarsson ◽  
Ann-Mari Svennerholm ◽  
B. Samuel Lundin

ABSTRACT Helicobacter pylori colonizes the gastric and duodenal mucosa. The infection normally persists for life and causes peptic ulcers and gastric cancer in a subset of infected individuals. We hypothesized that the inability to clear the infection may be a consequence of H. pylori-specific regulatory T cells that actively suppress T-cell responses. Therefore, we characterized the T-cell responses to H. pylori in H. pylori-infected individuals without any subjective symptoms and in uninfected control subjects and investigated the role of regulatory CD4+ CD25high T cells during infection. The stimulation of CD4+ peripheral blood T cells with monocyte-derived dendritic cells pulsed with a membrane preparation of H. pylori resulted in proliferation and gamma interferon production in both infected and uninfected individuals. Sorted memory cells from infected individuals responded less than cells from uninfected subjects, and the unresponsiveness could be abolished by depletion of CD4+ CD25high regulatory T cells or the addition of interleukin 2. Furthermore, CD4+ CD25high T cells suppressed H. pylori-induced responses in cocultures with CD25low/− cells. Tetanus toxoid induced comparable responses in memory cells from infected and uninfected individuals in both the presence and the absence of regulatory T cells, suggesting that the suppression was H. pylori specific. In conclusion, we have shown that H. pylori-infected individuals have impaired memory CD4+ T-cell responses to H. pylori that are linked to the presence of H. pylori-specific regulatory T cells that actively suppress the responses.


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