Inflammation and lymphopenia trigger autoimmunity by suppression of IL-2-controlled regulatory T cell and increase of IL-21-mediated effector T cell expansion

The dynamic interplay between regulatory T cells (T(regs)) and effector T cells (T(effs)) governs the balance between tolerance and effector immune responses. Perturbations of T(reg) frequency and function or imbalances in T(reg)/T(eff) levels are associated with the development of autoimmunity. The...

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Published inThe Journal of immunology (1950) Vol. 193; no. 10; pp. 4845 - 4858
Main Authors Chevalier, Nina, Thorburn, Alison N, Macia, Laurence, Tan, Jian, Juglair, Laurent, Yagita, Hideo, Yu, Di, Hansbro, Philip M, Mackay, Charles R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 15.11.2014
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Summary:The dynamic interplay between regulatory T cells (T(regs)) and effector T cells (T(effs)) governs the balance between tolerance and effector immune responses. Perturbations of T(reg) frequency and function or imbalances in T(reg)/T(eff) levels are associated with the development of autoimmunity. The factors that mediate these changes remain poorly understood and were investigated in this study in murine autoimmune arthritis. T(regs) displayed a stable phenotype in arthritic mice and were fully functional in in vitro suppression assays. However, their expansion was delayed relative to T(effs) (T follicular helper cells and Th17 cells) during the early stages of autoimmune reactivity. This imbalance is likely to have led to insufficient T(reg) control of T(effs) and induced autoimmunity. Moreover, a counterregulatory and probably IL-7-driven increase in thymic T(reg) production and recruitment to inflamed tissues was too slow for disease prevention. Increased T(eff) over T(reg) expansion was further aggravated by inflammation and lymphopenia. Both these conditions contribute to autoimmune pathogenesis and were accompanied by decreases in the availability of IL-2 and increases in levels of IL-21. IL-2 neutralization or supplementation was used to show that T(reg) expansion mainly depended on this cytokine. IL-21R(-/-) cells were used to demonstrate that IL-21 promoted the maintenance of T(effs). Thus, at inflammatory sites in experimental arthritis, a deficit in IL-2 hampers T(reg) proliferation, whereas exaggerated IL-21 levels overwhelm T(reg) control by supporting T(eff) expansion. This identifies IL-2 and IL-21 as targets for manipulation in therapies for autoimmunity.
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ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.1302966