scholarly journals Recombinant human IL-37 inhibited endometriosis development in a mouse model through increasing Th1/Th2 ratio by inducing the maturation of dendritic cells

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lijie Li ◽  
Zhouzhou Liao ◽  
Mingzhu Ye ◽  
Jianfa Jiang

Abstract Background Endometriosis is a serious reproductive and general health consequences. Recombinant human IL-37 (rhIL-37) is an inhibitor of inflammation. Methods ELISA assay was performed to detect the concentration of cytokines. Flow cytometry was used to analyze cell proportion. Besides, qRT-PCR and western blotting assay were used to detect the level of gene and protein, respectively. Transwell co-culture system was used for the co-culture of dendritic cells (DCs) and CD4+T cells. Results Our data showed that rhIL-37 inhibited the development of ectopic lesions in the mice with endometriosis, increased Th1/Th2 ratio and induced DCs maturation. The co-culture system of DCs and CD4+T cells demonstrated that rhIL-37 increased Th1/Th2 cell ratio through promoting DCs maturation. Moreover, the expression of IL-4 in the DCs derived from healthy mice was inhibited by rhIL-37 treatment. rhIL-37 increased Th1/Th2 cell ratio through inhibiting IL-4 in DCs. Subsequently, our results proved that rhIL-37 promoted the maturation of DCs via inhibiting phosphorylation of STAT3. Activation of STAT3 could reverse rhIL-37-induced maturation of DCs. Conclusion Overall, rhIL-37 could protect against endometriosis through increasing the ratio of Th1/Th2 cells via inducing DCs maturation and inhibiting IL-4 expression in the DCs. Furthermore, rhIL-37 induced DCs maturation by inhibiting STAT3 phosphorylation. Our data confirmed the protective effect of rhIL-37 in endometriosis. These data may provide a novel idea for the treatment of the disease. Graphical abstract

1996 ◽  
Vol 184 (2) ◽  
pp. 473-483 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Sornasse ◽  
P V Larenas ◽  
K A Davis ◽  
J E de Vries ◽  
H Yssel

The development of CD4+ T helper (Th) type 1 and 2 cells is essential for the eradication of pathogens, but can also be responsible for various pathological disorders. Therefore, modulation of Th cell differentiation may have clinical utility in the treatment of human disease. Here, we show that interleukin (IL) 12 and IL-4 directly induce human neonatal CD4- T cells, activated via CD3 and CD28, to differentiate into Th1 and Th2 subsets. In contrast, IL-13, which shares many biological activities with IL-4, failed to induce T cell differentiation, consistent with the observation that human T cells do not express IL-13 receptors. Both the IL-12-induced Th1 subset and the IL-4-induced Th2 subset produce large quantities of IL-10, confirming that human IL-10 is not a typical human Th2 cytokine. Interestingly, IL-4-driven Th2 cell differentiation was completely prevented by an IL-4 mutant protein (IL-4.Y124D), indicating that this molecule acts as a strong IL-4 receptor antagonist. Analysis of single T cells producing interferon gamma or IL-4 revealed that induction of Th1 cell differentiation occurred rapidly and required only 4 d of priming of the neonatal CD4+ T cells in the presence of IL-12. The IL-12-induced Th1 cell phenotype was stable and was not significantly affected when repeatedly stimulated in the presence of recombinant IL-4. In contrast, the differentiation of Th2 cells occurred slowly and required not only 6 d of priming, but also additional restimulation of the primed CD4+ T cells in the presence of IL-4. Moreover, IL-4-induced Th2 cell phenotypes were not stable and could rapidly be reverted into a population predominantly containing Th0 and Th1 cells, after a single restimulation in the presence of IL-12. The observed differences in stability of IL-12- and IL-4-induced human Th1 and Th2 subsets, respectively, may have implications for cytokine-based therapies of chronic disease.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Schreiber ◽  
Christoph M. Hammers ◽  
Achim J. Kaasch ◽  
Burkhart Schraven ◽  
Anne Dudeck ◽  
...  

The function of T cells is critically dependent on their ability to generate metabolic building blocks to fulfil energy demands for proliferation and consecutive differentiation into various T helper (Th) cells. Th cells then have to adapt their metabolism to specific microenvironments within different organs during physiological and pathological immune responses. In this context, Th2 cells mediate immunity to parasites and are involved in the pathogenesis of allergic diseases including asthma, while CD8+ T cells and Th1 cells mediate immunity to viruses and tumors. Importantly, recent studies have investigated the metabolism of Th2 cells in more detail, while others have studied the influence of Th2 cell-mediated type 2 immunity on the tumor microenvironment (TME) and on tumor progression. We here review recent findings on the metabolism of Th2 cells and discuss how Th2 cells contribute to antitumor immunity. Combining the evidence from both types of studies, we provide here for the first time a perspective on how the energy metabolism of Th2 cells and the TME interact. Finally, we elaborate how a more detailed understanding of the unique metabolic interdependency between Th2 cells and the TME could reveal novel avenues for the development of immunotherapies in treating cancer.


2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (5) ◽  
pp. E568-E576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jimena Perez-Lloret ◽  
Isobel S. Okoye ◽  
Riccardo Guidi ◽  
Yashaswini Kannan ◽  
Stephanie M. Coomes ◽  
...  

There is a paucity of new therapeutic targets to control allergic reactions and forestall the rising trend of allergic diseases. Although a variety of immune cells contribute to allergy, cytokine-secreting αβ+CD4+ T-helper 2 (TH2) cells orchestrate the type-2–driven immune response in a large proportion of atopic asthmatics. To identify previously unidentified putative targets in pathogenic TH2 cells, we performed in silico analyses of recently published transcriptional data from a wide variety of pathogenic TH cells [Okoye IS, et al. (2014) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 111(30):E3081–E3090] and identified that transcription intermediary factor 1 regulator-alpha (Tif1α)/tripartite motif-containing 24 (Trim24) was predicted to be active in house dust mite (HDM)- and helminth-elicited Il4gfp+αβ+CD4+ TH2 cells but not in TH1, TH17, or Treg cells. Testing this prediction, we restricted Trim24 deficiency to T cells by using a mixed bone marrow chimera system and found that T-cell–intrinsic Trim24 is essential for HDM-mediated airway allergy and antihelminth immunity. Mechanistically, HDM-elicited Trim24−/− T cells have reduced expression of many TH2 cytokines and chemokines and were predicted to have compromised IL-1–regulated signaling. Following this prediction, we found that Trim24−/− T cells have reduced IL-1 receptor (IL-1R) expression, are refractory to IL-1β–mediated activation in vitro and in vivo, and fail to respond to IL-1β–exacerbated airway allergy. Collectively, these data identify a previously unappreciated Trim24-dependent requirement for IL-1R expression on TH2 cells and an important nonredundant role for T-cell–intrinsic Trim24 in TH2-mediated allergy and antihelminth immunity.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Tianyue  Wang ◽  
Qianlan Zhou ◽  
Yunxiao Shang

Children exposed to common aeroallergens may develop asthma that progresses into adulthood. Inflammation regulated by T helper 2 (Th2) cells, a specific subpopulation of CD4+ T lymphocytes, is involved in asthmatic injury. Herein, our microarray data indicated that microRNA-451a-5p (miRNA-451a) expression decreased by 4.6-fold and ETS proto-oncogene 1 (ETS1) increased by 2.2-fold in the peripheral blood lymphocytes isolated from asthmatic children (<i>n</i> = 4) as compared to control individuals (<i>n</i> = 4). The negative correlation between miRNA-451a and ETS1 was further validated in 40 CD4+ T cell samples (10 healthy vs. 30 asthmatic samples). In vitro, naïve CD4+ T cells isolated from control individuals were cultured under Th2 cell polarizing condition. miRNA-451a expression decreased while ETS1 increased in CD4+ T cells in the setting of Th2 cell polarization. Moreover, miRNA-451a knockdown enhanced Th2 cell polarization – cells positive for both GATA3 (GATA binding protein 3, a Th2-transcription factor) and CD4 increased, and the generation of Th2 cell cytokines, interleukin (IL)5 and IL13, increased. In contrast, miRNA-451a overexpression inhibited Th2 cell differentiation. Interestingly, dual-Luciferase assay proved ETS1 as a novel target of miRNA-451a. Moreover, enforced expression of ETS1 partially restored miRNA-451a-induced inhibition of IL5 and IL13, and increased the GATA3+CD4+ cell population. Collectively, our work demonstrates that downregulation of miRNA-451a upregulates ETS1 expression in CD4+ T cells, which may contribute to Th2 cell differentiation in pediatric asthma.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (5) ◽  
pp. 2406-2413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davorka Messmer ◽  
Ralf Ignatius ◽  
Christine Santisteban ◽  
Ralph M. Steinman ◽  
Melissa Pope

ABSTRACT Transmission of simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmac239Δnef (Δnef) to macaques results in attenuated replication of the virus in most animals and ultimately induces protection against challenge with some pathogenic, wild-type SIV strains. It has been difficult, however, to identify a culture system in which the replication of Δnef is severely reduced relative to that of the wild type. We have utilized a primary culture system consisting of blood-derived dendritic cells (DCs) and autologous T cells. When the DCs were fully differentiated or mature, the DC–CD4+ T-cell mixtures supported replication of both the parental SIV strain, 239 (the wild type), and its mutant withnef deleted (Δnef), irrespective of virus dose and the cell type introducing the virus to the coculture. In contrast, when immature DCs were exposed to Δnef and cocultured with T cells, virus replication was significantly lower than that of the wild type. Activation of the cultures with a superantigen allowed both Δnef and the wild type to replicate comparably in immature DC–T-cell cultures. Immature DCs, which, it has been hypothesized, capture and transmit SIV in vivo, are deficient in supporting replication of Δnef in vitro and may contribute to the reduced pathogenicity of Δnef in vivo.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Cynthia Morgan

<p><b>Allergy is a condition affecting between 10 and 30% of the world’s population, with incidence rising every year. It is primarily mediated by THelper (TH) 0 cells reacting to an ordinarily harmless environmental antigen to induce an adaptive TH2 response. TH0 cells are presented the antigen by dendritic cells (DC), the immune systems most proficient antigen presenting cell, which act as the bridge between the innate and adaptive immune system. Dendritic cells specific to this study termed Triple Negative (TN) and CD11b+ are able to prime T cells to become TH2 cells, but current research has been unable to fully determine the proteins that mediate this TH2 priming. TN and CD11b+ DC exhibit transcriptional and functional distinction within the TH2 response, but the individual functions they take on during TH2 responses have not fully been determined. Some evidence suggests that the cell surface protein OX40L and the secreted protein TSLP are capable of inducing TH2 priming, but this is not conserved across all TH2 models. In an effort to determine other specific proteins that induce TH2 priming, RNA-sequencing has been utilized on TN and CD11b+ dendritic cells in TH2 inducing conditions. This thesis aims to analyse RNA-sequencing data generated from purified TH2 antigen positive TN and CD11b+ dendritic cells that have taken up a TH2-inducing stimulus – fluorescently labelled (AF488) non-viable Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Due to the majority of DC-TH0 interactions occurring at the cell surface interface, the bioinformatic analysis was focused on genes belonging to the surface and secreted compartments.</b></p> <p>Here I show that AF488-Nippostrongylus brasiliensis positive TN and CD11b+ DC are transcriptionally distinct from each other. Functional roles of differentially expressed genes (DEG) were also markedly distinct. Superfamily analysis revealed TN genes associated with signal transduction and proteases, whereas CD11b+ DEG were linked to cell adhesion and immune responses. This suggests that the different DC subsets have different roles in an immune response, and potentially different roles in the induction of TH2 immune responses. Network analysis of DEG from DC subsets and proteins expressed by TH0 and TH2 cell surfaces identified over 300 predicted interactions. Notably, 33 identified were known interactions – validating the bioinformatic methods used. Finally, I have been developing a method to assess novel interactions via flow cytometry methods that allows detection of binding and identification of the cell population that is bound. This has shown promise with the detection of generated proteins bound to TN and CD11b+ DC during TH2 stimulating conditions, paving the way for future novel interaction analyses.</p>


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 994-1000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Peggs ◽  
Stephanie Verfuerth ◽  
Stephen Mackinnon

Abstract Recipients of allogeneic transplants are at risk of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and disease during the period of immune compromise after transplantation. The limitations of current antiviral pharmacotherapy have led to attempts to develop alternative strategies for preventing or treating CMV infection, such as adoptive transfer of donor-derived virus-specific T cells. Methods for generating CMV-specific T cells either use live CMV to infect autologous antigen-presenting cells (APCs) or require some knowledge of the immunodominant peptides involved in the immune response. A novel culture system was developed that does not use live virions and in which the APCs are monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs). APCs were pulsed with CMV antigen and cocultured with autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes from donors seropositive for CMV. The culture-output cells consisted of both CD4- and CD8-expressing T cells. Proliferation, as determined by a tritium-thymidine–incorporation assay, showed significant CMV-antigen specificity in cultures from 15 of 15 donors seropositive for CMV. In cytotoxicity assays, cytotoxic T lymphocytes from 10 of 12 cocultures specifically lysed autologous CMV-infected fibroblasts or DCs but not HLA-mismatched or uninfected target cells, and this activity was shown to be blocked by HLA class 1 blocking antibodies. T-cell–receptor spectratyping of cells from the cultures typically showed complex size-distribution patterns, with all size classes of a normal preculture distribution present. However, a few size-class peaks were expanded compared with the preculture patterns and these may have represented expansions of CMV-specific T-cell clones. Advantages of this culture system are that it requires no live virions and no detailed knowledge of the antigenic peptides involved and it is applicable to CMV-seropositive donors of any HLA type.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 308-308
Author(s):  
Qing Ma ◽  
Dan Li ◽  
Roza Nurieva ◽  
Hernan G. Vasquez ◽  
Richard E Champlin ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 308 Graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) is an alloimmune response after allogeneic hematopoietic stem transplantation (HSCT) mediated by donor T cells against antigen presented by recipient dendritic cells. Our studies with a murine model of GVHD indicate that the complement system regulates the alloimmune response leading to acute GVHD. We used the disparity in MHC class I and II antigens between BALB/c (H-2d) as donors and either wild-type (WT) or complement deficient C57BL/6 (H-2b) as recipients. We found that mice deficient in the central component of the complement system (C3−/−) had significantly lower GVHD-related mortality and morbidity compared to WT recipient mice. Within 8 weeks after BMT, 80% of WT recipient mice and only 25% of C3−/− mice died (p=0.0008, n=20 in each group). While WT mice showed a moderate to severe GVHD in the skin, intestine, liver, lung and kidney, C3−/− mice had mild changes in these organs, reflected in a significantly lower GVHD scores compared to WT mice. Donor T cells proliferation is a critical step in development of GVHD. Therefore, we analyzed donor-derived T cells in C3−/− mice 7 days post-transplant, and found a significantly lower number of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in spleen, lymph node and Peyer's patches compared to those in WT mice. Complement deficiency not only affected the number of T cells but also their polarization. In the spleen and lymph nodes of C3−/−mice, we found a significantly lower number of IFNg-producing T cells and Th17+IFNg+ cells compared to WT recipients, consistent with a reduced Th1 and Th17+ differentiation of donor T cells in C3−/− recipient mice. Since the interaction between recipient-derived dendritic cells (DCs) and donor T cells is one of the initial events in the pathogenesis of the alloimmune response in GVHD, we analyzed both lymphoid and nonlymphoid DCs in the C3−/− recipient mice. Murine lymphoid DCs are divided into CD8a+ and CD8a− subsets that stimulate Th1 and Th2 cells, respectively. We detected a significantly lower number of CD8a+ (Th1-driven) and higher number of CD8a− (Th2-driven) DCs in the spleen of C3−/− recipient compared to WT mice. Additionally, the number of CD8a+ DCs was significant decreased in lymph node of C3−/− mice. In the nonlymphoid tissues, CD103+ DCs are developmentally and functionally related to the CD8a+ DCs. We studied DCs in the lung, liver, intestine and skin of recipient mice and found a significant reduction in the number of CD103+ DCs in the lung of C3−/− compared to WT recipient mice. Thus, C3 deficiency is associated with a decrease in Th1-driven DCs in both lymphoid (CD8a+) and nonlymphoid organs (CD103+) resulting in a reduced donor Th1 differentiation in C3−/− recipient mice. In the present study, we show for the first time that complement plays a role in GVHD. Our results are consistent with the findings of previous studies showing that C3 production by DCs in allograft is essential for maturation of DCs, effective antigen presentation to alloreactive T cells, and the development of Th1 response. We demonstrated that a similar effect of complement after BMT might be important in regulating Th1-driven DC activation and donor Th1/Th17differentiation, and in determining the severity of GVHD. Our study improves the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of GVHD and provides a rationale for using complement inhibitors as a novel potential therapeutic tool in GVHD. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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