Th1 not Th17 cells drive spontaneous MS-like disease despite a functional regulatory T cell response.

Acta Neuropathol

Human Disease Immunogenetics Group, Section of Infectious Diseases and Immunity, Department of Medicine, Imperial College, Hammersmith Hospital, London, W12 0NN, UK.

Published: October 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease with unclear mechanisms, and recent research using a specific mouse model showed that the immune response mechanism is complex and may not fit traditional models.
  • In the study, mice with a humanized T cell receptor developed spontaneous paralysis, revealing that while IFNγ-producing T cells are crucial at the onset of MS, IL-17-producing cells emerge only after the disease has progressed.
  • The findings indicate that regulatory T cells (Tregs) can limit disease progression but aren't sufficient to stop it; however, eliminating Tregs leads to an accelerated, severe disease, highlighting the importance of IFNγ responses in this model of MS.

Article Abstract

Multiple sclerosis is considered a disease of complex autoimmune etiology, yet there remains a lack of consensus as to specific immune effector mechanisms. Recent analyses of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, the common mouse model of multiple sclerosis, have investigated the relative contribution of Th1 and Th17 CD4 T cell subsets to initial autoimmune central nervous system (CNS) damage. However, inherent in these studies are biases influenced by the adjuvant and toxin needed to break self-tolerance. We investigated spontaneous CNS disease in a clinically relevant, humanized, T cell receptor transgenic mouse model. Mice develop spontaneous, ascending paralysis, allowing unbiased characterization of T cell immunity in an HLA-DR15-restricted T cell repertoire. Analysis of naturally progressing disease shows that IFNγ(+) cells dominate disease initiation with IL-17(+) cells apparent in affected tissue only once disease is established. Tregs accumulate in the CNS but are ultimately ineffective at halting disease progression. However, ablation of Tregs causes profound acceleration of disease, with uncontrolled infiltration of lymphocytes into the CNS. This synchronous, severe disease allows characterization of the responses that are deregulated in exacerbated disease: the correlation is with increased CNS CD4 and CD8 IFNγ responses. Recovery of the ablated Treg population halts ongoing disease progression and Tregs extracted from the central nervous system at peak disease are functionally competent to regulate myelin specific T cell responses. Thus, in a clinically relevant mouse model of MS, initial disease is IFNγ driven and the enhanced central nervous system responses unleashed through Treg ablation comprise IFNγ cytokine production by CD4 and CD8 cells, but not IL-17 responses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00401-013-1159-9DOI Listing

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