4.6 Article

Dysfunctional blood and target tissue CD4(+)CD25(high) regulatory T cells in psoriasis: Mechanism underlying unrestrained pathogenic effector T cell proliferation

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 174, Issue 1, Pages 164-173

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.174.1.164

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Funding

  1. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTHRITIS AND MUSCULOSKELETAL AND SKIN DISEASES [P30AR039750, R01AR051498] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NIAMS NIH HHS [R01 AR051498, P30 AR039750-15, R01 AR051498-04, P30 AR039750-14, R01 AR051498-01, P30 AR039750, R01 AR051498-03, R01 AR051498-05, P30 AR039750-16, R01 AR051498-02] Funding Source: Medline

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The balance between regulatory and effector functions is important for maintaining efficient immune responses, while avoiding autoimmunity. The inflammatory skin disease psoriasis is sustained by the ongoing activation of pathogenic effector T cells. We found that a CD4(+) T lymphocyte subpopulation in peripheral blood, phenotypically CD25(high), CTLA-4(+), Foxp3(high) (regulatory T (Treg) cells), is deficient in its suppressor activity in psoriasis. This was associated with accelerated proliferation of CD4(+) responder T cells in psoriasis, the majority of which expressed CXCR3. Nevertheless, criss-cross experiments isolated the defect to psoriatic Treg cells. To examine Treg cells in a nonlymphoid tissue of a human T cell-mediated disease, Treg cells were also analyzed and isolated from the site of inflammation, psoriatic lesional skin. At the regulatory vs effector T cells ratios calculated to be present in skin, however, the psoriatic Treg cell population demonstrated decreased suppression of effector T cells. Thus, dysfunctional blood and target tissue CD4(+)CD25(high) Treg cell activity may lead to reduced restraint and consequent hyperproliferation of psoriatic pathogenic T cells in vivo. These findings represent a critical component of human organ-specific autoimmune disease and may have important implications with regard to the possible therapeutic manipulation of Treg cells in vivo.

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