首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Suppressor T cell function in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) and normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats was analyzed using syngeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction (SMLR) and concanavalin A (Con A) activation. A depressed SMLR was found in adult SHR but not in adult WKY. IL-2 synthesized by SHR was 40-fold lower than that of WKY, and the suppressor T cells generated in the SMLR were incapable of suppressing IgG synthesis. Precursors of cells that can be activated by Con A to become functional suppressor cells are reduced in adult SHR. Supernatant fluids derived from Con A-activated spleen cells from adult SHR failed to significantly inhibit IgG synthesis by cultures of syngeneic spleen cells compared to supernatant fluids from young SHR or WKY Con A-activated spleen cells. However, spleen cells from both adult SHR and WKY proliferated strongly and released equivalent amounts of IL-2 in response to Con A. Addition of exogenous IL-2 to the SMLR cultures in vitro restored the ability of SHR T cells to respond in the SMLR, with generation of cells capable of suppressing IgG synthesis. Administration of SHR with IL-2 in vivo also restored the suppressor T cell function in the SMLR. These results suggest a defective suppressor T cell activation and loss of suppressor T cell activity as the SHR age.  相似文献   

2.
S Antonaci  E Jirillo  I Munno  M Colizzi  A Polignano  L Bonomo 《Cytobios》1989,58(234-35):155-164
Aged individuals exhibit an impairment of T helper and/or T suppressor activity on B cell function in an antibody-specific induction system. Further evidence is now provided that soluble suppressive factors acting on monocytes play a key role in such deficits. In fact, overnight preincubation of isolated monocytes and supplementation of autologous lymphocytes reverses the immunoregulatory imbalance. The suppressive factors are also responsible for a decreased interleukin 2 (IL-2) synthesis since a similar pretreatment of cell suspensions or exogenous human IL-1 and/or IL-2 supplementation of aged cell cultures leads to a recovery of T regulatory effects on B cell differentiation. Similar effects are observed in the presence of thymopentin, a well known IL-2 inducer. Interferon alpha and gamma addition to cultures gives rise to a restoration of T immunoregulatory effects. These findings suggest that several mechanisms are involved in the depressed T immunoregulatory activity in the elderly.  相似文献   

3.
The immunoregulatory function of NKT cells is crucial for prevention of autoimmunity. The prototypical NKT cell Ag alpha-galactosylceramide is not present in mammalian cells, and little is known about the mechanism responsible for NKT cell recruitment and activation. Up-regulation of CD1d, the NKT cell restriction molecule, expressed on mononuclear cells infiltrating the target organ, could represent the physiological trigger for NKT cells to self-contain T cell immunity and to prevent autoimmune disease. Recognition of CD1d, either by itself or bound to self-ligands (selfCD1d), could drive NKT cells toward an immunoregulatory phenotype. Hence, ineffective NKT cell-mediated immunoregulation in autoimmune-prone individuals including nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice could be related to defective signals that regulate CD1d expression at time and site of autoimmunity. To test this hypothesis, we transgenically overexpressed CD1d molecules under the control of the insulin promoter within the pancreatic islets of NOD mice (insCD1d). Recognition of overexpressed CD1d molecules rescued NKT cell immunoregulatory function and prevented autoimmune diabetes in insCD1d transgenic NOD mice. Protection from diabetes was associated with a biased IL-4-secreting cytokine phenotype of NKT cells and alteration of the cytokine microenvironment in the pancreatic lymph nodes of transgenic mice. The net effect was a reduced development of the autoimmune T cell repertoire. Our findings suggest that up-regulation of CD1d expression during inflammation is critical to maintain T cell homeostasis and to prevent autoimmunity.  相似文献   

4.
In the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse, pathogenic and suppressor CD4(+) T cells can be distinguished by the constitutive expression of CD25. In this study, we demonstrate that the progression of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice reflects modifications in both T cell subsets. CD4(+)CD25(+) suppressor T cells from 8-, but not 16-wk-old NOD mice delayed the onset of diabetes transferred by 16-wk-old CD25-depleted spleen cells. These results were paralleled by the inhibition of alloantigen-induced proliferation of CD4(+)CD25(-) cells, indicating an age-dependent decrease in suppressive activity. In addition, CD4(+)CD25(-) pathogenic T cells became progressively less sensitive to immunoregulation by CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells during diabetes development. CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells showed a higher proliferation and produced more IFN-gamma, but less IL-4 and IL-10, whereas CD4(+)CD25(+) T suppressor cells produced significantly lower levels of IL-10 in 16- compared with 8-wk-old NOD mice. Consistent with these findings, a higher frequency of Th1 cells was observed in the pancreas of 16-wk-old compared with 8-wk-old NOD mice. An increased percentage of CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells expressing CD54 was present in 16-wk-old and in diabetic NOD, but not in BALB/c mice. Costimulation via CD54 increased the proliferation of CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells from 16-, but not 8-wk-old NOD mice, and blocking CD54 prevented their proliferation, consistent with the role of CD54 in diabetes development. Thus, the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice is correlated with both an enhanced pathogenicity of CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells and a decreased suppressive activity of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells.  相似文献   

5.
The present study was undertaken to analyze the regulatory T cells generated in response to class I derived self-I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide. It was observed T cells from young unprimed type 1 diabetes (T1D) prone NOD mice did not respond to self-I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide although T cells from primed young NOD mice showed a strong response. T cells from young unprimed BALB/c mice responded to self-I-A beta(d) (62-78) peptide. However, a breakdown of tolerance to these peptides was observed with age in both the strains. Culture supernatant from I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide-primed cells secreted large amounts of TGF-beta and inhibited T cell responses in allogeneic-MLR. Further, I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide specific T cell lines from young (I-A.Y) and diabetic (I-A.D) NOD mice were established. I-A.Y secreted IL-4, TGF-beta and IL-10 while I-A.D T cell line secreted IL-10 and IFN-gamma. We found that I-A.D T cell line induced diabetes when transferred in NOD/SCID mice but I-A.Y T cell line did not induce disease. These results show that immunization of NOD mice with I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide at a younger age induces a regulatory T cell response suggesting that correcting the defects in immunoregulatory mechanisms using self-MHC peptides may be one of the approaches to prevent autoimmune diseases like T1D.  相似文献   

6.
In nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, T cells play a major role in mediating autoimmunity against pancreatic islet beta-cells. We and others previously reported that age-related alterations in the thymic and peripheral T cell repertoire and function occur in prediabetic NOD mice. To study the mechanism responsible for these T cell alterations, we examined whether a defect exists in the thymus of NOD mice at the level of TCR-mediated signaling after activation by Con A and anti-CD3. We found that thymocytes from NOD mice respond weakly to Con A- and anti-CD3-induced proliferation, compared with thymocytes from control BALB/c, BALB.B, (BALB.B x BALB.K)F1, C57BL/6, and nonobese non-diabetic mice. This defect correlates with the onset of insulitis, because it can be detected at 7 to 8 weeks of age, whereas younger mice displayed a normal T cell responsiveness. Thymic T cells from (NOD x BALB/c)F1 mice, which are insulitis- and diabetes-free, exhibit an intermediate stage of unresponsiveness. This T cell defect is not due to a difference in the level of CD3 and IL-2R expression by NOD and BALB/c thymocytes, and both NOD CD4+ CD8- and CD4- CD8+ mature thymic T cells respond poorly to Con A. BALB/c but not NOD thymic T cells respond to Con A in the presence of either BALB/c or NOD thymic APC, suggesting that the thymic T cell defect in NOD mice is intrinsic to NOD thymic T cells and is not due to an inability of NOD APC to provide a costimulatory signal. The defect can be partially reversed by the addition of rIL-2 to NOD thymocytes. To determine whether a defect in signal transduction mediates this NOD thymic T cell unresponsiveness, we tested whether these cells elevate their intracellular free Ca2+ ion concentration in response to Con A. An equivalent Con A-induced increase in Ca2+ ion concentration in both NOD and BALB/c thymocytes was observed, suggesting a normal coupling between the CD3 complex and phospholipase C in NOD thymocytes. In contrast to their low proliferative response to Con A or anti-CD3, NOD thymocytes respond normally (i.e., as do BALB/c thymocytes) to the combinations of PMA plus the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin and PMA plus Con A but weakly to Con A plus ionomycin. Our data suggest that the age-related NOD thymocyte unresponsiveness to Con A and anti-CD3 results from a defect in the signaling pathway of T cell activation that occurs upstream of protein kinase C activation.  相似文献   

7.
The outcome of Trypanosoma cruzi infection in inbred strains of mice is under genetic control. The lymphocyte responses to T-cell mitogens and their regulation were investigated in strains of mice resistant or susceptible to T. cruzi. Six to eight days after the inoculation of T. cruzi, resistant and susceptible mice had depressed responses to T-cell mitogens. In resistant B6 mice, suppression was maximal 18 days after infection and it persisted for at least 320 days. The duration of immunosuppression correlated with the persistence of a subpatent parasitemia. In cell mixing experiments, it was determined that the concanavalin A (Con A) responses in the resistant B6 and B6C3F1 mouse strains were suppressed by highly active T-suppressor cells. In the susceptible C3H mice, intense suppression of the Con A responses was detected 14 days after inoculation of T. cruzi. Nevertheless, only weak suppressor cell activity was detected in the infected C3H mice, and suppression was not abrogated by passage through a nylon wool column nor by treatment with antitheta antibodies and complement. Thus, it was suggested that, during the course of infection with T. cruzi, splenic T cells from C3H mice acquired a block in the metabolic pathway for cellular activation by Con A. The influences of T. cruzi epimastigotes on the Con A responses of spleen cells from uninfected mice were then studied. The Con A responses of spleen cells from C3H mice were depressed in the presence of epimastigotes, whereas they were either unaffected or enhanced in spleen cells from B6 mice. Hence, the immunoregulatory events provoked by T. cruzi infection differed in genetically resistant and susceptible mice, and lymphocytes from C3H mice were predisposed to a parasite-induced block in the responses to Con A. Thus, the gene(s) determining the outcome of infection with T. cruzi may be phenotypically expressed through an influence on immunoregulatory events.  相似文献   

8.
Several studies have provided indirect evidence in support of a role for beta cell-specific Th2 cells in regulating insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM). Whether a homogeneous population of Th2 cells having a defined beta cell Ag specificity can prevent or suppress autoimmune diabetes is still unclear. In fact, recent studies have demonstrated that beta cell-specific Th2 cell clones can induce IDDM. In this study we have established Th cell clones specific for glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), a known beta cell autoantigen, from young unimmunized nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. Adoptive transfer of a GAD65-specific Th2 cell clone (characterized by the secretion of IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10, but not IFN-gamma or TGF-beta) into 2- or 12-wk-old NOD female recipients prevented the progression of insulitis and subsequent development of overt IDDM. This prevention was marked by the establishment of a Th2-like cytokine profile in response to a panel of beta cell autoantigens in cultures established from the spleen and pancreatic lymph nodes of recipient mice. The immunoregulatory function of a given Th cell clone was dependent on the relative levels of IFN-gamma vs IL-4 and IL-10 secreted. These results provide direct evidence that beta cell-specific Th2 cells can indeed prevent and suppress autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice.  相似文献   

9.
Linomide prevents the development of autoimmune insulitis and insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus in female NOD mice. Linomide prevents development of autoimmune manifestations in other experimentally induced and spontaneous autoimmune diseases as well, but the mechanism of action is unknown. The present report summarizes our investigations on the effect of Linomide on different functional T cell subsets in NOD mice analyzed according to their cytokine profile. Supernatants from cultured splenocytes and peritoneal cells taken from Linomide-treated mice contained lower levels of TNFalpha, IL-1 beta, IFN gamma and IL-12 versus higher levels of IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 in comparison with supernatants from cultures of untreated mice. Our results suggest that regulation of autoimmunity following oral Linomide administration in NOD mice induces a shift from Th(1) to Th(2) phenotype response, thereby preventing the development of diabetes by active cytokine-induced immunoregulation of T cell subsets, including downregulation of Th(1) and upregulation of Th(2).  相似文献   

10.
This study shows that the normal thymus produces immunoregulatory CD25+4+8- thymocytes capable of controlling self-reactive T cells. Transfer of thymocyte suspensions depleted of CD25+4+8- thymocytes, which constitute approximately 5% of steroid-resistant mature CD4+8- thymocytes in normal naive mice, produces various autoimmune diseases in syngeneic athymic nude mice. These CD25+4+8- thymocytes are nonproliferative (anergic) to TCR stimulation in vitro, but potently suppress the proliferation of other CD4+8- or CD4-8+ thymocytes; breakage of their anergic state in vitro by high doses of IL-2 or anti-CD28 Ab simultaneously abrogates their suppressive activity; and transfer of such suppression-abrogated thymocyte suspensions produces autoimmune disease in nude mice. These immunoregulatory CD25+4+8- thymocytes/T cells are functionally distinct from activated CD25+4+ T cells derived from CD25-4+ thymocytes/T cells in that the latter scarcely exhibits suppressive activity in vitro, although both CD25+4+ populations express a similar profile of cell surface markers. Furthermore, the CD25+4+8- thymocytes appear to acquire their anergic and suppressive property through the thymic selection process, since TCR transgenic mice develop similar anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8- thymocytes and CD25+4+ T cells that predominantly express TCRs utilizing endogenous alpha-chains, but RAG-2-deficient TCR transgenic mice do not. These results taken together indicate that anergic/suppressive CD25+4+8- thymocytes and peripheral T cells in normal naive mice may constitute a common T cell lineage functionally and developmentally distinct from other T cells, and that production of this unique immunoregulatory T cell population can be another key function of the thymus in maintaining immunologic self-tolerance.  相似文献   

11.
IL-12 and IL-12 antagonist administration to nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice accelerates and prevents insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), respectively. To further define the role of endogenous IL-12 in the development of diabetogenic Th1 cells, IL-12-deficient NOD mice were generated and analyzed. Th1 responses to exogenous Ags were reduced by approximately 80% in draining lymph nodes of these mice, and addition of IL-12, but not IL-18, restored Th1 development in vitro, indicating a nonredundant role of IL-12. Moreover, spontaneous Th1 responses to a self Ag, the tyrosine phosphatase-like IA-2, were undetectable in lymphoid organs from IL-12-deficient, in contrast to wild-type, NOD mice. Nevertheless, wild-type and IL-12-deficient NOD mice developed similar insulitis and IDDM. Both in wild-type and IL-12-deficient NOD mice, approximately 20% of pancreas-infiltrating CD4+ T cells produced IFN-gamma, whereas very few produced IL-10 or IL-4, indicating that IDDM was associated with a type 1 T cell infiltrate in the target organ. T cell recruitment in the pancreas seemed favored in IL-12-deficient NOD mice, as revealed by increased P-selectin ligand expression on pancreas-infiltrating T cells, and this could, at least in part, compensate for the defective Th1 cell pool recruitable from peripheral lymphoid organs. Residual Th1 cells could also accumulate in the pancreas of IL-12-deficient NOD mice because Th2 cells were not induced, in contrast to wild-type NOD mice treated with an IL-12 antagonist. Thus, a regulatory pathway seems necessary to counteract the pathogenic Th1 cells that develop in the absence of IL-12 in a spontaneous chronic progressive autoimmune disease under polygenic control, such as IDDM.  相似文献   

12.
Expression of IL-10 transgene (tg) in pancreatic beta cells failed to induce autoimmune insulitis and diabetes in (BALB/c x NOD)F1 mice. However, IL-10-expressing tg littermates from backcrosses (N2 and N3) with NOD mice became diabetic at 5 to 10 weeks of age in an MHC-dependent manner. In this study, we tested the possibility that enhancement in frequency of islet antigen (Ag)-specific T cells overrides the protective effects of a diabetes-resistant genetic background and promotes diabetes in IL-10 tg (BALB/c x NOD)F1 mice. For this test, we introduced the IL-10 transgene into tg BDC2.5 mice expressing the islet Ag-specific Vbeta4 T cell repertoire by breeding Ins-IL-10+/BALB/c mice with BDC2.5 mice. The progeny (Ins-IL-10+/BALB/c x BDC2.5+)F1 mice doubly tg for IL-10 and Vbeta4 (BDC2.5) T cell repertoire, developed diabetes at 10 to 18 weeks of age with a much more aggressive T cell infiltrate in the pancreatic islets than in single tg mice. Surprisingly, these diabetic mice were free from acute pancreatitis but had apoptotic beta cells in the islet infiltrate. Conversely, mice tg for Vbeta4 (BDC2.5) T cell repertoire but not IL-10 had no diabetes and no apoptotic beta cells in the islet infiltrate. Therefore, an increase in the frequency of islet-specific T cells apparently overcomes the protection from diabetes by a resistant genetic background. Interestingly, N2 backcross mice doubly tg for Vbeta4 (BDC2.5) T cell repertoire and IL-10, compared to N2 backcross mice tg for IL-10 only, eventually became diabetic but with a delayed onset and reduced incidence of disease. These findings demonstrate that, along with IL-10, an increase in frequency of islet antigen-specific T cells (a) overrides the protective effect of genetic resistance to autoimmune diabetes in F1 mice and (b) delays the onset of an otherwise accelerated diabetes in (Ins-IL-10+/NOD)N2 backcross mice.  相似文献   

13.
B cell-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice are protected from the development of spontaneous autoimmune diabetes, suggesting a requisite role for Ag presentation by B lymphocytes for the activation of a diabetogenic T cell repertoire. This study specifically examines the importance of B cell-mediated MHC class II Ag presentation as a regulator of peripheral T cell tolerance to islet beta cells. We describe the construction of NOD mice with an I-Ag7 deficiency confined to the B cell compartment. Analysis of these mice, termed NOD BCIID, revealed the presence of functionally competent non-B cell APCs (macrophages/dendritic cells) with normal I-Ag7 expression and capable of activating Ag-reactive T cells. In addition, the secondary lymphoid organs of these mice harbored phenotypically normal CD4+ and CD8+ T cell compartments. Interestingly, whereas control NOD mice harboring I-Ag7-sufficient B cells developed diabetes spontaneously, NOD BCIID mice were resistant to the development of autoimmune diabetes. Despite their diabetes resistance, histologic examination of pancreata from NOD BCIID mice revealed foci of noninvasive peri-insulitis that could be intentionally converted into a destructive process upon treatment with cyclophosphamide. We conclude that I-Ag7-mediated Ag presentation by B cells serves to overcome a checkpoint in T cell tolerance to islet beta cells after their initial targeting has occurred. Overall, this work indicates that the full expression of the autoimmune potential of anti-islet T cells in NOD mice is intimately regulated by B cell-mediated MHC class II Ag presentation.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work has indicated that an important component for the initiation of autoimmune insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in the NOD mouse model entails MHC class I-restricted CD8 T cell responses against pancreatic beta cell Ags. However, unless previously activated in vitro, such CD8 T cells have previously been thought to require helper functions provided by MHC class II-restricted CD4 T cells to exert their full diabetogenic effects. In this study, we show that IDDM development is greatly accelerated in a stock of NOD mice expressing TCR transgenes derived from a MHC class I-restricted CD8 T cell clone (designated AI4) previously found to contribute to the earliest preclinical stages of pancreatic beta cell destruction. Importantly, these TCR transgenic NOD mice (designated NOD.AI4alphabeta Tg) continued to develop IDDM at a greatly accelerated rate when residual CD4 helper T cells were eliminated by introduction of the scid mutation or a functionally inactivated CD4 allele. In a previously described stock of NOD mice expressing TCR transgenes derived from another MHC class I-restricted beta cell autoreactive T cell clone, IDDM development was retarded by elimination of residual CD4 T cells. Hence, there is variability in the helper dependence of CD8 T cells contributing to the development of autoimmune IDDM. The AI4 clonotype represents the first CD8 T cell with a demonstrated ability to progress from a naive to functionally activated state and rapidly mediate autoimmune IDDM development in the complete absence of CD4 T cell helper functions.  相似文献   

15.
Mice infected with the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of human Chagas' disease, are profoundly immunodepressed in their response to various Ag and mitogens. A key factor in this immunosuppression is the essential inability to produce the T cell growth factor IL-2. In this study we demonstrate that this failure to produce IL-2 in response to mitogen stimulation is not the result of the absence of production of soluble or membrane-bound IL-1 by macrophages. Limiting dilution analysis of the precursor frequency of IL-2 producers suggests that an adequate number of precursors for IL-2 production are present in the spleens of infected mice, but that their activity may be regulated by suppressor cells. The presence of precursor cells for IL-2 production is supported by experiments showing that the combination of calcium ionophores and PMA elicits IL-2 production by spleen cells from both normal and T. cruzi-infected mice. Although Con A can provide either of the signals necessary for IL-2 production, calcium flux or protein kinase C activation, to T cells from normal mice, Con A in combination with either calcium ionophore or phorbol ester failed to activate T cells from infected mice to produce IL-2. Preculture of spleen cells from infected mice for 48 to 72 h before addition of Con A results in near normal production of IL-2. This recovery of the capacity to produce IL-2 does not occur if parasite Ag is present during the preculture period. These results suggest that the inability of T cells from T. cruzi-infected mice to produce IL-2 in vitro in response to Con A is not due to the lack of IL-2-producing cells, but may be the result of the maturational state of the T cells or to the presence of a suppressor population.  相似文献   

16.
With the aim of clarifying the mechanism of the suppressive action of BCG against insulitis and overt diabetes in NOD mice, we studied the effects of BCG on spleen cell populations and on the in vitro immune responses of spleen cells. The spleen cells of BCG-vaccinated mice showed much lower responsiveness to various mitogens such as Con A, PHA, PWM, and LPS than those of saline-treated mice. Low responsiveness to alloantigens was also observed. Flow cytometric analysis of the spleen cells revealed that Mac-1+ and Mac-2+ cells had increased while T and B cells had decreased in the BCG-vaccinated mice compared with the saline-treated mice at the time when the maximum level of inhibition of mitogen responses of BCG-vaccinated mice was observed. This suggests that the decreased in vitro immune response was due to the increase in macrophages which suppress lymphocyte functions. Support for this interpretation comes from the following two findings: (1) the restoration of mitogen responses of spleen cells when macrophages were eliminated by plastic adhesion or FACS sorting and (2) resuppression of PHA and Con A responses of plastic-nonadherent spleen cells by addition of adherent cells or flow cytometrically sorted Mac-1+ cells obtained from BCG-vaccinated mice. These results indicate the generation of suppressor macrophages after BCG vaccination and suggest that these macrophages prevent the autoimmune pathogenesis leading to diabetes in NOD mice.  相似文献   

17.
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice and some human type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients manifest low to high levels of other autoimmune pathologies. Skewing their cytokine production from a Th1 (primarily IFN-gamma) to a Th2 (primarily IL-4 and IL-10) pattern is a widely proposed approach to dampen the pathogenicity of autoreactive diabetogenic T cells. However, it is important that altered cytokine balances not enhance any other autoimmune proclivities to dangerous levels. Murine CD4 T cells are characterized by a reciprocal relationship between the production of IFN-gamma and expression of the beta-chain component of its receptor (IFN-gamma RB). Thus, NOD mice constitutively expressing a CD2 promoter-driven IFN-gamma RB transgene in all T cells are Th1-deficient. Unexpectedly, NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg mice were found to develop a lethal early paralytic syndrome induced by a CD8 T cell-dependent autoimmune-mediated myositis. Furthermore, pancreatic insulitis levels were not diminished in 9-wk-old NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg females, and overt T1D developed in the few that survived to an older age. Autoimmune-mediated myositis is only occasionally detected in standard NOD mice. Hence, some manipulations diminishing Th1 responses can bring to the forefront what are normally secondary autoimmune pathologies in NOD mice, while also failing to dependably abrogate pancreatic beta cell destruction. This should raise a cautionary note when considering the use of protocols that induce alterations in cytokine balances as a means of blocking progression to overt T1D in at-risk humans.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Disturbed peripheral negative regulation might contribute to evolution of autoimmune insulitis in type 1 diabetes. This study evaluates the sensitivity of naïve/effector (Teff) and regulatory T cells (Treg) to activation-induced cell death mediated by Fas cross-linking in NOD and wild-type mice.

Principal Findings

Both effector (CD25, FoxP3) and suppressor (CD25+, FoxP3+) CD4+ T cells are negatively regulated by Fas cross-linking in mixed splenocyte populations of NOD, wild type mice and FoxP3-GFP tranegenes. Proliferation rates and sensitivity to Fas cross-linking are dissociated in Treg cells: fast cycling induced by IL-2 and CD3/CD28 stimulation improve Treg resistance to Fas-ligand (FasL) in both strains. The effector and suppressor CD4+ subsets display balanced sensitivity to negative regulation under baseline conditions, IL-2 and CD3/CD28 stimulation, indicating that stimulation does not perturb immune homeostasis in NOD mice. Effective autocrine apoptosis of diabetogenic cells was evident from delayed onset and reduced incidence of adoptive disease transfer into NOD.SCID by CD4+CD25 T cells decorated with FasL protein. Treg resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis retain suppressive activity in vitro. The only detectable differential response was reduced Teff proliferation and upregulation of CD25 following CD3-activation in NOD mice.

Conclusion

These data document negative regulation of effector and suppressor cells by Fas cross-linking and dissociation between sensitivity to apoptosis and proliferation in stimulated Treg. There is no evidence that perturbed AICD in NOD mice initiates or promotes autoimmune insulitis.  相似文献   

19.
Leading hypotheses to explain helminth-mediated protection against autoimmunity postulate that type 2 or regulatory immune responses induced by helminth infections in the host limit pathogenic Th1-driven autoimmune responses. We tested these hypotheses by investigating whether infection with the filarial nematode Litomosoides sigmodontis prevents diabetes onset in IL-4-deficient NOD mice and whether depletion or absence of regulatory T cells, IL-10, or TGF-β alters helminth-mediated protection. In contrast to IL-4-competent NOD mice, IL-4-deficient NOD mice failed to develop a type 2 shift in either cytokine or Ab production during L. sigmodontis infection. Despite the absence of a type 2 immune shift, infection of IL-4-deficient NOD mice with L. sigmodontis prevented diabetes onset in all mice studied. Infections in immunocompetent and IL-4-deficient NOD mice were accompanied by increases in CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cell frequencies and numbers, respectively, and helminth infection increased the proliferation of CD4(+)Foxp3(+) cells. However, depletion of CD25(+) cells in NOD mice or Foxp3(+) T cells from splenocytes transferred into NOD.scid mice did not decrease helminth-mediated protection against diabetes onset. Continuous depletion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine TGF-β, but not blockade of IL-10 signaling, prevented the beneficial effect of helminth infection on diabetes. Changes in Th17 responses did not seem to play an important role in helminth-mediated protection against autoimmunity, because helminth infection was not associated with a decreased Th17 immune response. This study demonstrates that L. sigmodontis-mediated protection against diabetes in NOD mice is not dependent on the induction of a type 2 immune shift but does require TGF-β.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号