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Investigating mechanisms of regulatory T cell function in inflammatory disease

Regulatory T cells (Treg) play a crucial role in controlling immune homeostasis. Several inflammatory diseases including multiple sclerosis and inflammatory bowel disease have been associated with dysfunctional and/or reduced numbers of Treg. While several mechanisms of action have been discovered by which Treg can exert their function, disease-specific Treg requirements remain unknown. The Treg pool consists of highly diverse subpopulations, indicating that there is a potential to optimise Treg-targeted therapies if disease-relevant mechanisms can be established. Microarray data from our lab suggests a marked upregulation of the integrin αv as well as the IL-33 receptor ST2 in Treg retrieved from the inflamed central nervous system (CNS) during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis compared to peripheral lymphoid organs. These two molecules were further investigated within this PhD project with the aim to understand their role in Treg function during chronic inflammatory disease. αvβ integrins have been reported to be needed for effector T cell migration to inflamed sites through binding of extracellular matrix components and are involved in TGF-β activation by a variety of cell types. Conditional knockout mice lacking the integrin αv specifically in Foxpγ+ Treg were generated to address the role of αv integrins on regulatory T cells in inflammatory disease. αv-/- Treg showed a deficiency in activating latent TGF-β, but were able to suppress responder T cell proliferation in vitro as well as in vivo. αv-/- Treg were also able to migrate to the inflamed CNS during EAE and resolve disease. However, αv-/- Treg were detected at significantly lower numbers and proportions in the inflamed gut during a curative T cell transfer model of colitis; this led to a quantitative impairment in the ability of αv-/- Treg to cure colitis when compared to wild-type (WT) Treg. Whether this is a deficit in migration, survival, proliferation, or Foxp3 stability, remains to be investigated. IL-33 acts as an alarmin and is best studied as a cytokine released upon tissue damage that induces a potent type 2 immune response by acting on a multitude of immune cells. Expression of the IL-33 receptor ST2 on Treg has recently been associated with positive metabolic parameters in visceral adipose tissue, protection from gut inflammation, and tissue-restorative function in other inflamed tissues such as injured muscle or lung. This project showed that in steady state, ST2+ Treg expressed high levels of several markers which have been associated with potent regulatory function. When stimulated in vitro, ST2+ Treg showed a better survival and expansion rate compared to their ST2- counterparts, even more so in the presence of IL-33. T-bet deficiency in Treg resulted in an increased ST2+ Treg pool, and T-bet-associated cytokine IFN-γ was found to antagonise IL-33-induced expansion of the ST2+ Treg pool in a T-bet-independent manner. When ST2+ and ST2- Treg were tested for their respective suppressive capacity in vivo, ST2+ Treg were able to suppress responder T cell expansion despite being found only at low numbers in secondary lymphoid organs compared to ST2- Treg. However, in a curative model of T cell transfer colitis, ST2+ Treg were less capable of controlling the ongoing immune response than ST2- Treg. A possible explanation for the superiority of ST2- Treg in this setting can be found in the fact that injected ST2- Treg acquired a distribution of ST2 expression reminiscent of WT Treg over the course of disease. On the other hand, an increased starting pool of ST2+ Treg as occurs in T-bet-/- Treg significantly enhanced the capacity of Treg to control colitis compared to WT Treg. In conclusion, both ST2- and ST2+ Treg are likely to have a distinct, non-redundant role in suppressing T cell activation in secondary lymphoid organs and controlling ongoing inflammation in peripheral tissue, respectively.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:735734
Date January 2017
CreatorsMair, Iris
ContributorsAnderton, Stephen
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/28705

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