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*
Liver Research Laboratories and
Department of Rheumatology, Medical Research Council Centre for Immune Regulation, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and
LeukoSite, Cambridge, MA 02142
| Abstract |
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and -1ß
were largely confined to vessels within portal tracts, the CXCR3
ligands IFN-inducible protein-10 and monokine-induced by IFN-
were
selectively up-regulated on sinusoidal endothelium. In vitro, human
hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells secreted IFN-inducible protein-10
and monokine-induced by IFN-
in response to stimulation with IFN-
in combination with either IL-1 or TNF-
. This suggests that
intrahepatic Th1 cytokines drive the increased expression of
IFN-inducible protein-10 and monokine-induced by IFN-
and thereby
promote the continuing recruitment of CXCR3-expressing T cells into the
hepatic lobule in chronic hepatitis C infection. | Introduction |
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Chemokines can be classified according to their structure into four
groups of which the largest subgroups are the CXC and CC families.
These are defined by the presence (CXC) or absence (CC) of an amino
acid between the first two cysteine residues in a conserved
four-cysteine motif (11, 16). Most of the CXC family
members, of which IL-8 is the best known, contain a glutamic
acid-leucine-arginine (ELR) sequence near the N terminal and are potent
chemoattractants for neutrophils (17), whereas
IFN-inducible protein (IP-10) and monokine induced by IFN-
(Mig) are
members of a subset of CXC chemokines that do not contain the ELR motif
and display potent lymphocyte chemotactic activity
(18, 19, 20). The CC family includes macrophage chemotactic
protein-1, macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1
, MIP-1ß, and
RANTES, all of which have been reported to show chemotactic activity
for T cells in vitro (7).
It has been proposed that the immune response in chronic hepatitis C is
compartmentalized, with a predominantly Th2 or Th0 response in the
periphery (21, 22) and a Th1 response in the liver
(23, 24) associated with progressive liver injury. In
contrast, patients who clear the virus have a peripheral Th1 response
(25). Recent studies suggest that differences in chemokine
receptor expression between Th1 and Th2 cells might explain their
selective recruitment to tissue. In vitro, Th1 cells express CXCR3 and
CCR5 and migrate to their respective chemokines, IP-10 and Mig (CXCR3
ligands) and RANTES, MIP-1
, and MIP-1ß (CCR5 ligands)
(26). CXCR3 and CCR5 have also been demonstrated on Th1
cells from rheumatoid synovial fluid, and these cells migrated to
MIP-1
and IP-10 but not eotaxin (27, 28). CCR3
expression has been demonstrated on Th2 cells (26, 29).
Thus, interactions between specific chemokines in tissue and their
receptors on T cells may regulate the selective recruitment of primed
Th1 cells to sites of inflammation. We examined the expression of
chemokines and their receptors in hepatitis C-infected liver to
determine the Th1/Th2 balance within the liver and if specific
chemokine/chemokine receptor interaction are important for the
selective recruitment of T cells to the liver in chronic hepatitis
C.
| Materials and Methods |
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Liver was obtained within 1 h of explantation from patients with end-stage hepatitis C cirrhosis undergoing liver transplantation. Samples (1 cm3) were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen for later immunohistochemical studies. Peripheral blood was also obtained from patients all of whom had evidence of active HCV infection (HCV RIBA +ve, HCV RNA +ve) by PCR (Roche amplicor assay), and biopsy confirmed cirrhosis. Normal donor liver was obtained from surplus liver tissue removed from surgically reduced grafts used for pediatric liver transplantation (30). Normal donors had no evidence of either hepatitis B or C infection (negative by HCV ELISA and HCV RIBA; hepatitis B sAg and hepatitis B core Ab negative). Donor organs had been perfused with University of Wisconsin preservation fluid and maintained at 4°C for 1224 h before cell isolation. Material was collected in accordance with guidelines for human experimentation and approved by our local ethics committee.
Abs for flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry
The following primary Abs were used for immunohistochemistry and
flow cytometry: CD3-PE (UCHT1) IgG1 1:20 (Becton Dickinson, San Diego,
CA); CD45RO (UCHL1) IgG2a FITC 1/10 (a gift from Prof. P Beverley, UCH,
London); CXCR3 IgG1 1:1000 (LeukoSite, Cambridge, MA); CCR5 IgG1 1:1000
(LeukoSite); CCR3 IgG1 1/500 (LeukoSite); MIP-1
rabbit polyclonal,
MIP-1ß rabbit polyclonal (gifts from Dr U. Siebenlist, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD); IP-10 goat anti-human
polyclonal 1:20 (R&D Systems, Abingdon, U.K.), IP-10 IgG1 mouse
monoclonal 1:50 (R&D Systems), Mig goat anti-human polyclonal 1:20
(R&D Systems); IFN-inducible T cell
chemoattractant (I-TAC) rabbit
anti-human polyclonal 1:50 (PeproTech, London, U.K.). HCV core Ab
Mouse monoclonal 1:50 (a gift from Prof. S. H. Jap, University
Hospital Gastuisberg, Leuven, Belgium). Secondary Abs used were rabbit
anti-goat peroxidase 1:50 (Dako, Cambridge, U.K.); rabbit
anti-mouse Igs 1:25 (Dako); alkaline phosphatase anti-alkaline
phosphatase mouse monoclonal 1:50 (Dako); rabbit anti-mouse IgM
FITC 1:20 (Dako).
Immunohistochemistry
The expression of chemokines (MIP-1
, MIP-1ß, IP-10, and
Mig), chemokine receptors (CXCR3, CCR5, and CCR3), and TNF-
were
studied by immunohistochemistry on 6-µm cryostat sections as
previously described (31). Briefly, sections were fixed in
acetone for 10 min and then incubated with primary Ab followed by
secondary rabbit anti-mouse Ab. Double stains were performed using
primary Abs of different species and the relevant secondary Abs. These
were detected by indirect alkaline phosphatase anti-alkaline
phoshatase developed with napthol-AX and fast red TR or by an
avidin-biotin complex peroxidase method. Endogenous peroxidase activity
was blocked using sodium azide. Sections were counterstained with
hematoxylin. All incubations were conducted at room temperature for 45
min, and sections were washed for 5 min with two changes of TBS, pH
7.4, buffer between incubations. Staining intensity of chemokines on
each section was graded by two independent observers including a
pathologist (S.G.H and P.L.S) from 0 to 3, where 0 = absent,
1 = weak, 2 = moderate, and 3 = strong staining using a
scoring system previously validated by confocal microscopy
(32). The mean staining intensity was calculated for all
specimens analyzed. The distribution and intensity of staining in the
following structures was recorded; portal tract venular and arterial
endothelium, biliary epithelium and inflammatory infiltrate;
hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, and sinusoidal and central vein
endothelium.
Isolation of liver infiltrating lymphocytes
Hepatic T cells were isolated from fresh liver tissue collected into RPMI 1640 using two different methods, with or without collagenase digestion.
In the first method, tissue was diced using sterile blades into 1-mm3 pieces in RPMI 1640 containing 1 mg/ml collagenase (type 1a; Sigma, Poole, U.K.) and incubated at 37°C for 2 h. After enzymatic digestion, tissue was passed through a nylon mesh filter (100 µm) to remove cell clumps and undissociated tissue. Cells were washed three times in PBS to remove collagenase, and the cell suspension was layered on a Percol density gradient (70/30%) and centrifuged for 30 min at 2000 rpm. The lymphocyte band was then removed from the interface between 30% and 70% Percoll and further washed three times in PBS. Greater than 95% of cells were viable by trypan blue exclusion.
In the second method, blocks of fresh liver tissue (2 x 2 cm) were perforated repeatedly with a 19-gauge needle (teabagging) and then injected with PBS to flush out cells from within the liver parenchyma. The resultant cell suspension was filtered through fine nylon mesh to remove tissue debris and used with no further preparation for Ab staining and FACS analysis. Cells obtained were compared directly with cells from the same liver isolated by the process of collagenase digestion and Percol gradient centrifugation.
Isolation of autologous PBL
Venous blood was collected into tubes containing EDTA before liver transplantation. PBL were separated by density centrifugation at 1500 rpm for 30 min at room temperature and washed twice with PBS.
Flow cytometry
Two- and three-color flow cytometry was performed on freshly isolated autologous PBL and liver-infiltrating cells from patients with hepatitis C cirrhosis. Cell staining for flow cytometry was conducted using standard techniques (33). Briefly, cells were incubated with normal human Ig to block Fc receptors, washed with PBS, and then incubated on ice for 1 h with primary mouse anti-chemokine receptor mAb at predetermined optimal concentrations in 100 µl of PBS with 0.2% BSA. Cells were washed twice with cold PBS and further incubated on ice for 45 min with FITC-conjugated F(ab')2 of rabbit anti-mouse Ig. Cells were washed twice and incubated with normal mouse serum to saturate free binding sites on the FITC-conjugated F(ab')2. PE-conjugated anti-CD3 (Dako) was used as a second primary Ab to detect T cells in two-color analysis. In three-color analysis, T cells were incubated with PE-conjugated CD45RO and biotin-conjugated CD3 labeled with Red670 (Life Technologies, Paisley, U.K.). After final incubation, cells were washed twice and fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde. The lymphocyte population was gated using forward and side scatter parameters to exclude debris and dead cells and by back gating on CD3-positive cells. Two- and three-color analysis was performed using a Coulter flow cytometer (Coulter, Palo Alto, CA), and the data were analyzed using WinMdi software (Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA).
The effect of collagenase isolation method on chemokine receptor expression by T cells
PBMC were cultured in RPMI 1640 with or without PHA (10 µg/ml) for 24 h and then with collagenase 1A (1 mg/ml; Sigma) for 1 h. Cells were washed once in PBS/50% FCS and then twice in PBS before being stained with a panel of mAb and analyzed by FACS. Median channel fluorescence (MCF) and percentage positive cells were calculated using WinMdi software. Expression of T cell markers and chemokine receptors was also examined on freshly isolated T cells obtained by the collagenase method and by the "teabagging" method, which did not involve the use of collagenase or density gradient centrifugation.
Culture of intrahepatic human sinusoidal endothelial cells (HSEC)
Intrahepatic HSEC were isolated from human livers as described
previously (34, 35) by mechanical and enzymatic digestion
of liver tissue followed by immunomagnetic purification using Abs to
the endothelial adhesion molecule CD31. Cells were established in
culture in endothelial basal medium containing 20% human AB serum, 10
ng/ml of vascular endothelial growth factor (Bachem, Saffron Walden,
Essex, U.K.) and 10ng/ml of hepatocyte growth factor (Bachem). The
cells grew to confluence with the classical cobblestone appearance of
endothelial cells and expressed CD31 (>95%). HSEC were grown to
confluence in 24-well plates and stimulated for 24 h with human
recombinant TNF-
(R&D Systems), IFN-
(R&D Systems), and IL-1
(Genzyme, West Malling, U.K.), and combinations thereof, at final
concentrations of 10 ng/ml, 100 U/ml, and 10 U/ml, respectively.
ELISA for IP-10 and Mig
Extracellular IP-10 and Mig levels in culture supernatants were measured via a sandwich-type ELISA using a monoclonal anti-human IP-10 or Mig capture Ab and a matched biotinylated polyclonal detection Ab (Ab pairs from R&D Systems). The substrate was 3,5,2',5'-tetramethylbenzidine (Sigma), the color reaction was stopped with 2.5 M H2SO4, and absorbance was determined at 450 nm. The detection limit of these assays was 100 pg/ml.
RT-PCR
IP-10 and Mig chemokine gene expression was analyzed by RT-PCR amplification of RNA from HSEC, comparing stimulated and unstimulated cells. Total RNA was extracted from cells using RNAzol extraction (Biogenesis, Bournemouth, U.K.), and single-stranded cDNA synthesis was conducted as previously described (36). The PCR reaction was conducted using 1 µl of cDNA per reaction. Reaction conditions were 1x (95°C, 5 min), 1x (55°C, 5 min), 35x (94°C, 30 s; 55°C, 30 s; 72°C, 2 min), and 1x (72°C, 5 min). Primers were designed from GenBank sequences for ß-actin, IP-10, and Mig: ß-actin forward, 5'-CAT CAC CAT TGG CAA TGA GC-3'; ß-actin reverse, 5'-CGA TCC ACA CGG AGT ACT TG-3'; IP-10 forward, 5'-TCT AGA ACC GTA CGC TGT ACC TGC-3'; IP-10 reverse, 5'-CTG GTT TTA AGG AGA TCT-3'; Mig forward, 5'-GGA ACT CCA TTC TAT CAC-3'; Mig reverse, 5'-TAT TGG TGA AGT GGT CTC-3'. Product size for each set of primers were: ß-actin, 284 bp; IP-10, 231 bp; and Mig, 414 bp. Positive and negative controls were included in each assay. Amplified products were analyzed on 2% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide.
| Results |
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MIP-1
and MIP-1ß were detected on vascular endothelium,
particularly portal vein endothelium within portal tracts, both in
normal and hepatitis C cirrhotic liver with similar staining intensity
(results are shown in Table I
and Fig. 1
, ah). Sinusoidal
endothelium stained weakly for MIP-1
and MIP-1ß both in
nondiseased liver and hepatitis C cirrhotic liver. Mig was detected on
sinusoidal endothelium in normal and hepatitis C cirrhotic liver, but
staining intensity was increased markedly in hepatitis C
(p = 0.002; Mann-Whitney U test).
Mig was also detected weakly on portal venules within normal and
hepatitis C-infected liver. In arterioles, Mig was detected within the
vessel wall, staining elastic and smooth muscle fibers, but not in the
endothelium. IP-10 was selectively expressed by sinusoidal endothelium
and was absent from vascular endothelium in portal tracts both in
normal and hepatitis C cirrhotic liver. IP-10 staining of sinusoidal
endothelium within hepatitis C cirrhotic liver was increased compared
with normal liver (p = 0.015; Mann-Whitney
U test). The more recently characterized chemokine I-TAC has
also been recognized as a ligand of the CXCR3 receptor. We found I-TAC
in normal (n = 5) and HCV cirrhotic liver
(n = 8) showing a similar distribution to IP-10 with
expression by sinusoidal endothelial cells within hepatocyte lobules
but not portal vascular endothelium.
|
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was expressed within the liver in chronic hepatitis C by portal
vascular endothelial cells and by mononuclear cells within inflamed
portal tracts (Fig. 1Liver-infiltrating lymphocytes show increased expression of CXCR3 and CCR5
Immunohistochemistry.
CXCR3 staining was strong on the majority of infiltrating lymphocytes
within portal tracts and lobules in hepatitis C cirrhotic liver (Fig. 1
f). In nondiseased livers from organ donors
(n = 6) and in biopsy samples from patients with
histologically mild chronic hepatitis C (n = 5), the
few mononuclear cells infiltrating portal tracts and hepatic parenchyma
were also positive for CXCR3. No other structures within liver
expressed CXCR3. CCR5 was also detected on the majority of mononuclear
cells infiltrating hepatitis C and normal liver, although the staining
was weaker than for CXCR3. CCR5 was absent from other structures. CCR3
was strongly positive on a few cells that had the morphology of
eosinophils and monocytes in HCV liver, both in portal tracts and
hepatic lobules. CCR3 was absent from T cells as demonstrated by double
immunostaining with CD3 and CCR3, which failed to show
co-localization.
Flow cytometry.
Freshly isolated liver-infiltrating T cells from patients with
hepatitis C cirrhosis (n = 9) were all CXCR3 positive
(MCF (±SEM), 12.03 ± 4.9) with increased expression compared
with autologous peripheral blood T cells (2.82 ± 0.47,
p = 0.0039) and in normal donors (n =
6; 8.83 ± 1.81 vs 2.79 ± 0.44, p = 0.03)
(Fig. 2
A). CCR5 expression on
peripheral blood T cells revealed two distinct populations of
CCR5-positive and CCR5-negative cells. This heterogeneity was lost on
liver-infiltrating cells, the majority of which were positive compared
with autologous peripheral blood. In hepatitis C-infected patients
(n = 9), the mean percentage of positive liver-derived
T cells was 76.2 ± 3.1% vs 29.75 ± 2.9% on autologous
peripheral blood T cells (p = 0.004). In normal
donors (n = 6), a greater proportion of liver T cells
expressed CCR5 than peripheral blood T cells (58.6 ± 9.3% vs
27.4 ± 3.5%, p = 0.009) (Fig. 2
B).
CCR5 expression was increased on freshly isolated
CD45RO+ cells from HCV liver compared with
autologous peripheral blood CD45RO+ cells (Fig. 3
). There was low level expression of
CCR3 on both peripheral blood- and liver-derived T cells (Fig. 4
). Incubation with collagenase 1a in
vitro had no significant effect on the percentage of lymphocytes
staining positively or the MCF intensity for CD3 or CD45RO. Chemokine
receptor expression of CCR3 and CCR5 were not greatly affected by
collagenase, but CXCR3 expression was reduced on PHA blasts after
incubation with collagenase 1a (MCF, 23.7 (control) vs 8.0 (collagenase
1a)). Comparison of the collagenase digestion/Percol density gradient
isolation technique with the "teabagging technique" where
collagenase was not used revealed no significant change for the
majority of markers but a significant reduction in median fluorescence
intensity from 72.3 to 14.6 for the chemokine receptor CXCR3.
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and TNF-
in vitro
Culture supernatants from HSEC incubated in fresh complete medium
for 24 h contained undetectable levels of IP-10 and Mig.
Incubation of HSEC with TNF-
(10 ng/ml) or IFN-
(100 U/ml) for
24 h significantly increased secretion of IP-10 but not Mig (Fig. 5
A). Combinations of IFN-
with either TNF-
or IL-1 synergistically increased IP-10 compared
with each cytokine alone and induced Mig secretion although levels of
Mig were consistently lower than for IP-10. RT-PCR amplification of
total RNA gave PCR products of predicted size on ethidium
bromide-stained gels. RNA from LPS-stimulated PBMC was used as a
positive control throughout. A negative control (no template) was
included in all amplification runs. Levels of IP-10 and Mig mRNA were
undetectable in unstimulated HSEC. IP-10 was detected at low levels
after IFN-
and TNF-
stimulation alone, whereas Mig mRNA was
undetectable. IFN-
plus TNF-
and IFN-
plus IL-1 stimulation
resulted in expression of both IP-10 and Mig mRNA (Fig. 5
B).
Actin expression was similar for all samples measured, and, bearing in
mind that the mRNA levels were measured at one time point (24 h) and
the protein levels were accumulated over the 24 h, these data for
mRNA expression are consistent with the secretion data.
|
| Discussion |
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and MIP-1ß were expressed predominantly by
vascular endothelium within portal tracts in both normal and hepatitis
C liver, whereas the CXC chemokines Mig and IP-10 were preferentially
expressed by sinusoidal endothelium. Although Mig was detected in
normal liver, the strongest expression was on sinusoidal endothelium in
hepatitis C, and IP-10 expression was restricted to sinusoidal
endothelium within hepatocyte lobules and was up-regulated within
inflamed hepatitis C-infected liver compared with normal. Thus, it
seems likely that IP-10 and Mig play a specific role in the recruitment
of T cells to the hepatic parenchyma via the sinusoids and may thereby
determine the outcome of chronic hepatitis. We also have preliminary
data on a more recently characterized chemokine I-TAC, a ligand for the
receptor CXCR3, which appears to be expressed in both normal and
inflamed HCV-infected liver. I-TAC has a similar distribution to IP-10
in that the protein is predominantly seen within sinusoidal endothelial
cells in liver lobules and is absent from portal vascular
endothelium. Infiltration of the parenchyma determines the severity of chronic viral hepatitis but may have a dualistic effect. On one hand, lobular inflammation is associated with liver damage and progression to cirrhosis, while on the other, cytolytic T cells must enter the lobules if they are to destroy hepatitis virus within infected hepatocytes (38).
We suggest that hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells are an important
source of IP-10 and Mig during hepatitis C infection. It has been shown
recently that HUVEC can secrete IP-10 (39) and Mig
(40) and that both IP-10 and Mig can induce adhesion of
activated T cells to endothelium via activation of the CXCR3 receptor
(40). Thus, expression of CXC chemokines on endothelium at
sites of inflammation may promote the recruitment of CXCR3-bearing
effector T cells. In our study, IP-10 and Mig staining was largely
restricted to sinusoidal endothelial cells, and we were able to induce
secretion from isolated HSEC in vitro. Unstimulated HSEC isolated from
normal donor liver failed to secrete IP-10 or Mig. IL-1 alone failed to
induce chemokine expression, although IP-10 was produced after
stimulation with TNF-
or IFN-
. The combination of IFN-
with
either IL-1 or TNF-
induced expression of IP-10 and Mig mRNA and
protein secretion into HSEC culture supernatants. We detected higher
levels of IP-10 than Mig protein, and further studies will be required
to address the significance of this finding. It is known that
expression of Th1 cytokines, including IFN-
, are increased in the
hepatitis C-infected liver and that these levels correlate with liver
injury (23). Furthermore, the TNF system is activated in
chronic hepatitis C with increased levels of TNF-
(41, 42) and its receptor (43, 44) in the serum and
elevated levels of TNF-
within the liver (43) compared
with controls. We demonstrated strong TNF-
expression by Kupffer
cells within liver lobules but more patchy expression by hepatocytes in
hepatitis C patients. TNF protein was also expressed by a small
population of mononuclear cells within T cell areas in portal tracts
and by portal vascular endothelial cells. The expression of TNF-
protein within the liver in chronic hepatitis B (although not chronic
hepatitis C) has been localized to mononuclear cells and hepatocytes in
one previous study (45). Thus, local Th1 cytokines
produced by infiltrating mononuclear cells and Kupffer cells could
induce IP-10 and Mig expression by sinusoidal endothelium in vivo,
thereby promoting lymphocyte recruitment to the parenchyma. Further
support for the role of IP-10 in hepatitis C infection comes from a
recent study (46) in which serum levels of IP-10
correlated with histological activity in chronic hepatitis C. It is
unclear why IP-10 is not induced on vascular endothelium in inflamed
portal tracts. This may represent different sensitivities for IP-10
induction by endothelium at the two sites or differences in the local
cytokine milieu.
To determine whether the chemokines studied might have a functional role in lymphocyte recruitment to the liver, we looked for expression of their respective receptors on liver-infiltrating lymphocytes using both immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry of freshly isolated liver-infiltrating T cells. CXCR3 was detected on all liver-infiltrating T cells by immunohistochemistry, and flow cytometry revealed that CXCR3 receptor density was consistently higher on liver-infiltrating compared with autologous peripheral blood T cells both in normal donor and hepatitis C cirrhotic liver. CCR5 was also detected on the majority of liver-infiltrating T cells by immunohistochemistry, although staining was weaker than for CXCR3. Staining for CCR5 by flow cytometry revealed two populations of T cells in peripheral blood that could be differentiated by whether or not they expressed CCR5, whereas nearly all liver-infiltrating T cells were CCR5high. In contrast, there were no differences in the level of expression of CCR3 between peripheral blood- and liver-derived T cells, and very few T cells within the liver stained for CCR3. This suggests that both CXCR3 and CCR5 are important for T cell recruitment to the inflamed hepatitis C liver. Because both CXCR3 and CCR5 can be up-regulated on lymphocytes by activation in vitro, it was important that we used freshly isolated cells that had not been activated or expanded ex vivo. Using freshly isolated T cells, we directly compared levels of CCR5 on tissue-infiltrating T cells with circulating memory T cells. It has been reported that circulating memory T cells express higher levels of CCR5 than naive T cells (27), and we now demonstrate that levels of CCR5 are higher on tissue-infiltrating memory T cells when compared with memory cells in the circulation. Greater than 70% of liver infiltrating CD45RO+ T cells were CCR5high, compared with <40% of circulating CD45RO+ cells. Thus, there is heterogeneity of CCR5 expression within CD45RO+ memory T cells, and we propose that high levels of CCR5 expression denote a tissue-infiltrating phenotype. The levels of CXCR3 on the liver-derived T cells are likely to be an underestimate given that collagenase, which we used to isolate T cells from liver tissue, resulted in reduced staining for CXCR3. T cells isolated using the collagenase-independent method showed very high levels of CXCR3. CCR5, CCR3, and other markers were not affected by collagenase (47).
The progressive liver injury in chronic hepatitis C is associated with
up-regulation of intrahepatic Th1 cytokines (IFN-
, IL-2) and down
regulation of Th2 cytokines (IL-10) (23) and a reduced Th1
response in the periphery (21, 22). This suggests that the
peripheral blood pool is depleted of Th1 cells as they are recruited to
the liver. Recent evidence has shed light on the potential mechanisms
of Th1 recruitment to tissue. In vitro studies show that CCR5 and CXCR3
are preferentially expressed on Th1 lymphocyte clones, and these cells
migrate in response to CCR5 and CXCR3 ligands (26).
Furthermore, CCR5 and CXCR3 have been associated with tissue
infiltration by T cells into rheumatoid synovium, multiple sclerosis
(28), and hepatocellular carcinoma (60). Conversely, it
has been reported that CCR3 is up-regulated on Th2 cells (26, 48). Our study provides the first in vivo evidence in humans
that tissue-infiltrating T cells in a chronic viral infection in which
Th1 responses predominate are CXCR3high and
CCR5high and CCR3low.
Our findings suggest that CCR5 and CXCR3 are important, not only for the recruitment of T cells to inflamed hepatitis C liver but also to normal liver. The "normal" livers we studied were obtained from organ donors, and we cannot exclude the possibility that T cells are recruited to these livers as part of a low-grade inflammatory response. However, there was no biochemical or histological evidence of pathological inflammation. T cells can be detected in most nondiseased livers by immunohistochemistry, where they are probably patrolling the tissue as part of the continual process of physiological immune surveillance (49). An alternative theory has been proposed in the mouse suggesting that the liver is a major site of T cell clearance via apoptosis (50), although we have failed to detect large numbers of apoptotic T cells in normal human liver (51). Most T cells in normal livers are detected in the portal tracts, and this might be a consequence of the reduced expression of chemokines IP-10 and Mig on noninflamed sinusoidal endothelium.
The different patterns of chemokine expression that were observed
within portal tracts and the liver parenchyma provide further evidence
for different pathways of lymphocyte recruitment to the liver
(52). Portal inflammation is a frequent finding in many
inflammatory liver diseases and is the predominant pattern of
inflammation seen in cases of chronic viral hepatitis, including
hepatitis C (53). Portal tracts are also the main site in
which lymphocytes are found in the normal liver (54). The
present study suggests that interaction between the CC chemokines
MIP-1
and MIP-1ß and CCR5 receptor may be involved in the
recruitment of T cells to portal areas. Because these CCR5 ligands are
constitutively expressed on portal vessels, they provide a pathway
whereby CCR5high memory T cells migrate into
portal areas in normal livers during immune surveillance. The same
pathway may also be used for recruiting T cells to portal areas in
other inflammatory liver diseases (55). Cases of chronic
hepatitis in which inflammation is confined to portal areas ("chronic
persistent hepatitis") are generally associated with a favorable
outcome. In contrast, extension of the inflammatory process into the
adjacent liver parenchyma in the form of interface hepatitis
("piecemeal necrosis") may be associated with destruction of
periportal hepatocytes and progressive periportal fibrosis ("chronic
active hepatitis") (56). Little is known about the
factors that promote migration of lymphocytes from portal areas into
the adjacent liver parenchyma. However, there is increasing evidence to
suggest that bursts of necroinflammatory activity within liver lobules
may be important in the pathogenesis of progressive liver injury
(57, 58, 59). This pattern of damage may be particularly
relevant in cases of chronic hepatitis C infection, which despite being
characterized by relatively mild changes in portal/periportal areas,
with little or no interface activity, has a high risk of progression to
chronic liver damage and cirrhosis. The present study suggests that the
expression of the CXCR3 ligands IP-10 and Mig on sinusoidal endothelium
may be an important mechanism for the direct recruitment of
CXCR3high T cells to the liver parenchyma. The
fact that expression of IP-10 and Mig increased in HCV-positive livers
compared with normal controls supports a role for this pathway in the
recruitment of lymphocytes to the inflamed liver. Clearly in hepatitis
C, where the majority of the viral load is within the lobules, in
hepatocytes and sinusoidal cells (37), T cell access to
the parenchyma will be crucial for the effective clearance of
virus-infected hepatocytes.
These findings have potential therapeutic implications. Progression of hepatitis to cirrhosis is related to the severity of inflammatory activity and particularly the presence of parenchymal inflammation. Thus, specific inhibitors of CXCR3 interactions may be effective in selectively reducing recruitment into the parenchyma, thereby slowing progression to cirrhosis. Such a strategy might be of benefit in autoimmune hepatitis but in chronic viral hepatitis will have the disadvantage of reducing access of lymphocytes to infected hepatocytes. Thus, in adoptive immunotherapy for chronic viral hepatitis, it may be equally important to promote IP-10 and Mig/CXCR3 interactions so that effector T cells have access to the parenchyma.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to either Dr. Philip L. Shields or Dr. David H. Adams, Liver Laboratories, Clinical Research Block, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TH, U.K. E-mail addresses: ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: HCV, hepatitis C virus; MIP, macrophage inflammatory protein; IP-10, IFN-inducible protein; Mig, monokine induced by IFN-
; I-TAC, IFN-inducible T cell
chemoattractant; HSEC, human sinusoidal endothelial cells; MCF, median channel fluorescence. ![]()
Received for publication April 20, 1999. Accepted for publication September 17, 1999.
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in chronic liver disease. J. Clin. Pathol. 43:298.
-interferon in lymphocyte recruitment to hepatocellular carcenoma. Hepatology 30:100.[Medline]
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P. J. Holst, C. Orskov, K. Qvortrup, J. P. Christensen, and A. R. Thomsen CCR5 and CXCR3 Are Dispensable for Liver Infiltration, but CCR5 Protects against Virus-Induced T-Cell-Mediated Hepatic Steatosis J. Virol., September 15, 2007; 81(18): 10101 - 10112. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Rotondi, R. Minelli, F. Magri, P. Leporati, P. Romagnani, M. C. Baroni, R. Delsignore, M. Serio, and L. Chiovato Serum CXCL10 levels and occurrence of thyroid dysfunction in patients treated with interferon-{alpha} therapy for hepatitis C virus-related hepatitis Eur. J. Endocrinol., April 1, 2007; 156(4): 409 - 414. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. L. Hokeness, E. S. Deweerd, M. W. Munks, C. A. Lewis, R. P. Gladue, and T. P. Salazar-Mather CXCR3-Dependent Recruitment of Antigen-Specific T Lymphocytes to the Liver during Murine Cytomegalovirus Infection J. Virol., February 1, 2007; 81(3): 1241 - 1250. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. N. Ajuebor, J. A. Carey, and M. G. Swain CCR5 in T Cell-Mediated Liver Diseases: What's Going On? J. Immunol., August 15, 2006; 177(4): 2039 - 2045. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Heydtmann, D. Hardie, P. L. Shields, J. Faint, C. D. Buckley, J. J. Campbell, M. Salmon, and D. H. Adams Detailed Analysis of Intrahepatic CD8 T Cells in the Normal and Hepatitis C-Infected Liver Reveals Differences in Specific Populations of Memory Cells with Distinct Homing Phenotypes J. Immunol., July 1, 2006; 177(1): 729 - 738. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Dagan-Berger, R. Feniger-Barish, S. Avniel, H. Wald, E. Galun, V. Grabovsky, R. Alon, A. Nagler, A. Ben-Baruch, and A. Peled Role of CXCR3 carboxyl terminus and third intracellular loop in receptor-mediated migration, adhesion and internalization in response to CXCL11 Blood, May 15, 2006; 107(10): 3821 - 3831. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M Diago, G Castellano, J Garcia-Samaniego, C Perez, I Fernandez, M Romero, O L Iacono, and C Garcia-Monzon Association of pretreatment serum interferon {gamma} inducible protein 10 levels with sustained virological response to peginterferon plus ribavirin therapy in genotype 1 infected patients with chronic hepatitis C Gut, March 1, 2006; 55(3): 374 - 379. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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