Polymorphisms attenuating IL-10 signalling confer genetic risk for inflammatory bowel disease. Yet, how IL-10 prevents mucosal autoinflammation is incompletely understood. We demonstrate using lineage-specific deletions of IL-10Rα that IL-10 acts primarily through macrophages to limit colitis. Colitis depends on IL-6 to support pathologic Th17 cell generation in wild-type mice. However, specific ablation of macrophage IL-10Rα provokes excessive IL-1β production that overrides Th17 IL-6 dependency, amplifying the colonic Th17 response and disease severity. IL-10 not only inhibits pro-IL-1β production transcriptionally in macrophages, but suppresses caspase-1 activation and caspase-1-dependent maturation of pro-IL-1β to IL-1β. Therefore, lineage-specific effects of IL-10 skew the cytokine dependency of Th17 cell development required for colitis pathogenesis. Coordinated interventions may be needed to fully suppress Th17-mediated immunopathology.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4302761 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7131 | DOI Listing |
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