4.7 Article

Inhibition of endocytic lipid antigen presentation by common lipophilic environmental pollutants

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02229-7

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [ES006096]
  2. Center for Environmental Genetics (CEG)
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [AI115358]
  4. University of Cincinnati University Research Council award
  5. University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Core Enhancement Funding

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Environmental pollutants as non-heritable factors are now recognized as triggers for multiple human inflammatory diseases involving T cells. We postulated that lipid antigen presentation mediated by cluster of differentiation 1 (CD1) proteins for T cell activation is susceptible to lipophilic environmental pollutants. To test this notion, we determined whether the common lipophilic pollutants benzo[a] pyrene and diesel exhaust particles impact on the activation of lipid-specific T cells. Our results demonstrated that the expression of CD1a and CD1d proteins, and the activation of CD1a-and CD1d-restricted T cells were sensitively inhibited by benzo[a] pyrene even at the low concentrations detectable in exposed human populations. Similarly, diesel exhaust particles showed a marginal inhibitory effect. Using transcriptomic profiling, we discovered that the gene expression for regulating endocytic and lipid metabolic pathways was perturbed by benzo[a] pyrene. Imaging flow cytometry also showed that CD1a and CD1d proteins were retained in early and late endosomal compartments, respectively, supporting an impaired endocytic lipid antigen presentation for T cell activation upon benzo[a] pyrene exposure. This work conceptually demonstrates that lipid antigen presentation for T cell activation is inhibited by lipophilic pollutants through profound interference with gene expression and endocytic function, likely further disrupting regulatory cytokine secretion and ultimately exacerbating inflammatory diseases.

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