AI Article Synopsis

  • Dysregulated T-cell immune responses contribute significantly to various liver diseases, but the mechanisms controlling liver immune balance and specific therapies to manage T-cell overactivation are poorly understood.
  • The study analyzed metabolic changes in ConA mice and autoimmune hepatitis patients, focusing on purine metabolism and its link to liver injury, highlighting the increased expression of purine catabolism nucleases CD39 and CD73 during liver injury.
  • Findings indicate that a specific subset of cells, called MCregs, can suppress CD4 T-cell overactivation and liver damage by releasing extracellular vesicles that convert AMP to immunosuppressive metabolites, suggesting that MCreg or MCreg-EV therapy could be effective in treating liver diseases linked to T-cell overactivation.

Article Abstract

Dysregulated T-cell immune response-mediated inflammation plays critical roles in the pathology of diverse liver diseases, but the underlying mechanism of liver immune homeostasis control and the specific therapies for limiting T-cell overactivation remain unclear. The metabolic changes in concanavalin A (ConA) mice and autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) patients and their associations with liver injury were analyzed. The expression of purine catabolism nucleases (e.g., CD39 and CD73) on liver cells and immune cells was assessed. The effects of MCregs and their extracellular vesicles (EVs) on CD4 T-cell overactivation and the underlying mechanism were also explored. Our findings revealed significant alterations in purine metabolism in ConA mice and AIH patients, which correlated with liver injury severity and therapeutic response. CD39 and CD73 were markedly upregulated on CD11bGr-1 MCs under liver injury conditions. The naturally expanded CD39CD73Gr-1CD11b MCreg subset during early liver injury effectively suppressed CD4 T-cell hyperactivation and liver injury both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, MCregs released CD73 EVs, which converted extracellular AMP to immunosuppressive metabolites (e.g., adenosine and inosine), activating the cAMP pathway and inhibiting glycolysis and cytokine secretion in activated CD4 T cells. This study provides insights into the mechanism controlling immune homeostasis during the early liver injury phase and highlights that MCreg or MCreg-EV therapy may be a specific strategy for preventing diverse liver diseases induced by T-cell overactivation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11373623PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.97427DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

liver injury
24
t-cell overactivation
12
liver
11
purine metabolism
8
diverse liver
8
liver diseases
8
underlying mechanism
8
immune homeostasis
8
cona mice
8
aih patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!