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Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 345, Institut Necker, Paris, France
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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-chain (IL-2R
or CD25),
participate in this regulation. Indeed, elimination or inactivation of
these regulatory T cells is associated with the onset of autoimmune and
inflammatory diseases and with abnormal peripheral T cell homeostasis
(3, 4, 5, 6, 7). Regulatory CD25+CD4+ T cells differ functionally from CD25-CD4+ T cells, although the latter can acquire CD25 upon activation (8, 9). In particular, CD25+CD4+ T cells differ from their CD25- counterparts by their cytokine profile. CD25+CD4+ T cells produce IL-10, an anti-inflammatory cytokine (10), but do not produce IL-2, making them dependent on exogenous IL-2 for expansion in vivo and in vitro (8, 9, 11, 12, 13). Conversely, CD25-CD4+ T cells produce IL-2 but not IL-10. Regulatory CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cells also differ by their susceptibility to clonal deletion. We have previously shown that CD25+CD4+ T cells are resistant to clonal deletion induced by viral superantigen (vSAG)3 in vivo (11). Although both CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ superantigen (SAG)-specific T cells were activated by vSAG, clonal deletion occurred at the expense of the CD25-CD4+ subset while the CD25+CD4+ T cell subset was spared.
CD25+CD4+ T cell resistance
to clonal deletion may be important in maintaining a permanent
population of regulatory T cells that can control and eventually
suppress autoreactive T cells or harmful T cells activated during
normal immune responses. Several experimental studies have shown that
this regulatory population is needed to avoid autoimmune and
inflammatory diseases. Mice rendered deficient in
CD25+CD4+ T cells by
neonatal thymectomy and nude mice reconstituted with
CD25+-depleted T cells develop autoimmune
diseases. Transfer of
CD25+CD4+ T cells from
normal mice can avoid the onset of autoimmune disease in these models
(14, 15). CD4+ T cells expressing
the CD45RBlow phenotype (which overlap with
CD25+CD4+ T cells) control
the inflammatory diseases that occur in mice transferred with
CD45RBhighCD4+ T cells
(16). IL-2R
knockout (KO) and IL-2 KO mice, which
cannot support CD25+CD4+ T
cell expansion (12), develop inflammatory bowel disease
and lymphadenopathy, suggesting that regulatory
CD25+CD4+ T cells may also
participate in the control of peripheral T cell homeostasis (17, 18). It was recently shown that regulatory
CD45RBlowCD4+ T cells can
control the expansion of
CD45RBhighCD4+ T cells in
vivo (19). The mechanisms by which
CD25+CD4+ T cells control
immune responses are unclear. They may differ according to the model
and the functions analyzed, and also according to the
CD25+CD4+ T cell subset
engaged. Various cytokines are also involved, of which IL-10 and
TGF-
seem to be the most efficient (2, 20, 21, 22, 23).
However, cytokines may participate to different degrees in different
models and may also modulate different functions. IL-10 KO mice raised
in a conventional environment develop inflammatory bowel disease but
not lymphadenopathy, suggesting that IL-10 is involved not in T cell
homeostasis but in the control of inflammatory reactions. The role of
IL-10 in the suppression of T cell proliferation in vitro has not been
demonstrated, but cell-cell interactions are known to be required
(8, 13), and these may involve local cytokine
production.
If CD4+ regulatory T cells are mandatory to avoid autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, and are also necessary to control T cell homeostasis, their resistance to apoptosis may underlie their persistence during ontogenesis and immune responses. By using polyclonal activation of purified regulatory CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cells, we found that the CD25+ subset is more resistant than the CD25- subset to Fas-induced apoptosis. This is in keeping with our previous observation that CD25+CD4+ vSAG-specific T cells are resistant to clonal deletion in vivo. We then investigated whether CD25+CD4+ T cells could be sensitized to Fas-mediated apoptosis by contact with IL-2-producing CD25-CD4+ T cells in vitro. We found that sensitivity to apoptosis could be modulated in both subsets. This was associated with modulation of cytokine production. However, whereas CD25-CD4+ T cell apoptosis is highly dependent on the IL-2, the response of CD25+CD4+ T cells to Fas-induced apoptosis in vitro is IL-2 independent. The results suggest that regulation of apoptosis is a dynamic process that depends on the balance between CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cell numbers and is required for regulatory and effector T cell homeostasis.
| Materials and Methods |
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C57BL/6 (H-2b, Thy 1.2) mice were from CERJ (Le Genest, St. Isles, France), IL-2 KO (H-2b, Thy 1.2) (24) and IL-10 KO (25) mice were from Transgenic Alliance (Larbresle, France), and C57BL/Ba (H2b, Thy 1.1) mice were from our own facilities. All mice were 610 wk old when used.
mAbs and flow cytometry
The following Abs were used for flow cytometry and cell culture. Purified anti-CD8 (clone 53-6.7), purified anti-CD3 (clone 145-2C11), biotinylated anti-CD25 (clone PC61), biotinylated anti-CD4 (clone RM4-5),and FITC anti-TCR (clone H57-597) were prepared and coupled in our laboratory. Rabbit anti-hamster IgG was from Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories (West Grove, PA). PerCP-anti-CD4 (clone RM4-5), PE-anti-CD69 (clone H1.2F3), PE-anti-Fas (clone JO2), PE-anti-Thy1.2 (clone 53-2-1), purified anti-Fas, and purified hamster IgG were from BD PharMingen (San Diego, CA). Flow cytometry was performed using aFACSCalibur device (BD Biosciences, Mountain View, CA) and data were analyzed with CellQuest software (BD Biosciences).
T cell purification
Lymphocyte suspensions were prepared from peripheral (inguinal, axillary, cervical, and popliteal) lymph nodes. CD4+ T cells were prepared by negative selection. Briefly, lymph node cells were incubated with purified anti-CD8 and then with goat anti-rat Ig-coated magnetic beads (Dynabeads; Dynal Biotech, Oslo, Norway). B cells were depleted with goat anti-mouse Ig-coated Dynabeads. CD8+ T cells and B cells coated with beads were removed with a magnet. CD25+CD4+ T cells were positively selected. Briefly, the enriched CD4+ T cells were coated with biotinylated anti-CD25 and mixed with MACS Streptavidin Microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec, Paris, France). Cells coated with microbeads were selected by the magnetic field of a MACS separator (Miltenyi Biotec). Unlabeled (CD25-) cells were negatively selected and CD25+ cells were then eluted from the column after removing the magnetic field. The CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ populations were 90 and 95% pure, respectively.
In vitro activation
Purified CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ lymph node T cells (2 x 105 cells per well) were cultured for 70 h at 37°C in 5% CO2-air in anti-CD3-coated 96-well culture plates, with or without 50 U/ml mouse rIL-2 (BD Biosciences). Plates were coated overnight with anti-CD3 (10 µg/ml; 50 µl per well). Plate-bound anti-CD3 was used for activation in the absence of APC, as APC was shown not to be mandatory for regulatory T cell function (26). All cells were grown in 200 µl of RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% FCS (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY), 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 1% sodium pyruvate (Biomedia, Foster City, CA), 5 mM HEPES (Life Technologies), and 10-5 M 2-ME. At the end of the culture period, the absolute number of living cells per well was measured with the trypan blue exclusion test. In some experiments, indicated numbers of CD25+CD4+ T cells from C57BL/6 (B6) or C57BL/Ba (Ba) mice were cultured alone or with 2 x 105 purified CD25-CD4+ T cells from Ba or IL-2 KO mice. The two subsets were distinguished by their different Thy-1 markers. Pooled supernatants from several wells in each group were stored at -20°C for cytokine assay.
Apoptosis assay
T cells (1 x 106) activated in vitro were incubated for 30 min at 37°C in 5% CO2-air with 1 µg/ml hamster anti-Fas Ab or hamster IgG as control. Cells were then washed and cultured for 1, 2, 4, or 20 h in 96-well plates (2 x 105 cells per well) with 1 µg/ml goat anti-hamster IgG. At each time point, anti-Fas-induced apoptosis was measured with the annexin V test (Boehringer Ingelheim, Gagny, France). Cells were counted, washed in PBS/10% FCS, and stained with biotinylated anti-CD4, PE-anti-CD25, and streptavidin-allophycocyanin. Cells were then washed twice and stained with FITC-labeled annexin V according to the manufacturers instructions. The rate of apoptosis was determined by flow cytometry. Dead cells were excluded after labeling with 25 µg/ml propidium iodide, and annexin-positive cells were detected among CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cells. In mixed cultures of CD25-CD4+ and CD25+CD4+ T cells, the two subsets were distinguished by labeling with PE-conjugated anti-Thy1.2. In some experiments, hypodiploid nuclei (sub-G1 peak) were detected by propidium iodide staining (27). Briefly, 2 x 105 cells were fixed in 70% cold ethanol for 30 min, washed, and incubated with 10 µg/ml propidium iodide and subjected to flow cytometry analysis.
Cytokine assays
IL-2, IFN-
, TNF-
, and IL-10 were assayed in culture
supernatants with ELISA kits (R&D Systems, Abingdon, U.K.) according to
the manufacturers recommendations. Results are expressed as picograms
per milliliter of supernatant.
Statistical analysis
Data are expressed as means ± SEM. Comparisons were made using Students t test and differences were considered significant if p < 0.05.
| Results |
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Purified CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ lymph node T
cells were activated with anti-CD3 for 70 h in vitro, then
washed and counted before incubation (2 x
105 living cells per well) with hamster
anti-Fas or an isotype control Ab for 30 min. The cells were
incubated for 120 h with anti-hamster IgG to determine the time
of maximum apoptosis. The percentage of apoptotic cells was measured by
two different techniques: the FITC-labeled annexin V method, which
detects cells at an early stage of the apoptotic process, and the
intracellular propidium iodide staining, which measures hypodiploid
nuclei (sub-G1 peak). As shown in Fig. 1
A, the highest percentage of
annexin V-positive apoptotic
CD25-CD4+ T cells was
observed 1 h after Fas cross-linking (29% of
CD25-CD4+ cells were
annexin V positive and PI negative). When the Fas cross-linking period
was increased from 1 to 20 h, the percentage of apoptotic
CD25-CD4+ T cells fell
gradually, possibly owing to gradual deletion of Fas-sensitive cells.
In contrast, only 9% of
CD25+CD4+ T cells were
apoptotic 1 h after Fas cross-linking. No apoptotic cells were
detected in this population when Fas cross-linking was extended up to
20 h. Results were confirmed using a second apoptosis test (Fig. 1
B). The percentage of apoptotic
CD25-CD4+ T cells with
hypodiploid nuclei was clearly higher (37%) than the percentage of
apoptotic CD25+CD4+ T cells
(7%) 1 h after Fas cross-linking. The percentage of
CD25-CD4+ T cells with
hypodiploid nuclei remained high up to 6 h after Fas cross-linking
(data not shown). In subsequent experiments, Fas-dependent apoptosis
was tested 1 h after Fas cross-linking with the annexin V
method.
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Because the kinetics of Fas-dependent apoptosis could differ in the two
subsets with the duration of the activation period, we studied
susceptibility to apoptosis earlier during activation by anti-CD3,
in the presence and absence of IL-2 (Fig. 2
). When the activation period was
increased from 24 to 70 h, the percentage of apoptosis increased
among CD25-CD4+ cells
1 h after Fas cross-linking. In contrast,
CD25+CD4+ T cells remained
resistant to apoptosis. Similar results were obtained when IL-2 was
added during the activation period.
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Both CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cells acquire an activated phenotype and express Fas after anti-CD3 stimulation
Resistance to Fas-dependent apoptosis could be linked
to a lack of activation or Fas expression following activation.
Purified CD25+CD4+
and CD25-CD4+ lymph node T
cells were incubated with anti-CD3 for 70 h in vitro, with and
without IL-2, before measuring cell size and CD69 and Fas expression.
Before activation, the cell size of the two populations was identical.
In contrast, more CD25+CD4+
T cells than CD25-CD4+ T
cells expressed the CD69 activation marker (26 vs 12%, respectively;
Fig. 3
A).
CD25+CD4+ T cells also
expressed a slightly higher level of Fas protein on their surface. Cell
size and CD69 expression increased in both subsets after 70 h of
incubation with anti-CD3, although slightly less in
CD25+ than in CD25- cells
(Fig. 3
B). When IL-2 was added during the activation period,
CD25+CD4+ T cells
proliferated (12) and cell recovery increased (Fig. 3
C) to the level observed with
CD25-CD4+ T cells, which
do not require exogenous IL-2 to proliferate. CD69 expression was
identical when CD25-CD4+ T
cells were activated with or without IL-2. CD69 expression was lower on
CD25+CD4+ T cells activated
with IL-2 than on CD25+CD4+
T cells activated without IL-2. However, the peak of CD69 expression on
the CD25+ subset was maximum 48 h after
activation with IL-2 (data not shown) and was already down-regulated
after 70 h. Fas expression increased on both
CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ T cells after
anti-CD3 stimulation, in both the absence and presence of IL-2,
although to a lesser degree on the CD25+ subset
(Fig. 3
B).
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IL-10 production by isolated CD25+CD4+ cells is not involved in their resistance to Fas-induced apoptosis in vitro
CD25+CD4+ T cells
constitutively express IL-10 mRNA (8, 11). It has been
reported that IL-10 can prevent T cell apoptosis in vitro
(34) and also protect T cells against AICD in vivo
(35). Therefore, we investigated the possible involvement
of IL-10 production by
CD25+CD4+ cells in their
resistance to Fas-induced apoptosis in vitro. Purified
CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ T cells from B6
mice and IL-10-deficient mice were activated by anti-CD3 for
70 h before testing Fas-dependent apoptosis after 1 h of Fas
cross-linking. As shown in Fig. 4
, CD25+CD4+ T cells from both
B6 and IL-10 KO mice were resistant to apoptosis, contrary to
CD25-CD4+ T cells. Thus,
IL-10 production by
CD25+CD4+ T cells was not
responsible for their resistance to Fas-dependent apoptosis in
vitro.
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Cell-cell contacts are necessary for the suppressor activity of
regulatory CD25+CD4+ T
cells in vitro (8, 13). Thus, we investigated whether the
sensitivity of the two populations to Fas-dependent apoptosis was
modified by mixing CD25+ and
CD25- cells in vitro.
CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ T cells were
cultured alone or together at ratios of 1:10 (the physiological
steady-state ratio in vivo) and 1:1. Cells were incubated with
anti-CD3 for 70 h in vitro. Following activation, cells were
collected, washed, counted, and submitted for 1 h to Fas
cross-linking. Cells initially selected as
CD25+CD4+ or
CD25-CD4+ T cells in
Thy1.2+ and Thy1.2- mice
were detected in coculture by their respective expression of Thy1 (Fig. 5
A). The percentage of
apoptotic CD25-CD4+ cells
was high (20%), whether the latter were cultured alone or together
with CD25+CD4+ T cells at a
ratio of 10 CD25- cells to 1
CD25+ cell (Fig. 5
B). In contrast, at
a ratio of 1:1, most
CD25-CD4+ T cells became
resistant to Fas-induced apoptosis (7% of apoptotic cells). Thus,
CD25+CD4+ T cells modulated
the sensitivity of
CD25-CD4+ T cells to
apoptosis. At a 1:1 ratio, the percentage of apoptotic
CD25+CD4+ T cells was not
markedly different from that observed when
CD25+CD4+ T cells were
cultured alone (9 and 6%, respectively). However, at a ratio of one
CD25+ cell to 10 CD25-
cells, the proportion of apoptotic
CD25+CD4+ T cells increased
to 23%. These results suggested that induction of Fas-dependent
apoptosis could be modulated by interactions between the
CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ T cell subsets,
depending on the ratio between the two populations. To examine whether
interactions between CD25- and
CD25+ cells during the activation phase were
required to modulate Fas-induced apoptosis, each cell population was
activated separately and then combined for 1 h during the
apoptosis assay. Modulation of Fas-dependent apoptosis was no longer
observed (Fig. 5
C). At a 1:1 ratio,
CD25-CD4+ T cells remained
sensitive to apoptosis, whereas, at a 1:10 ratio,
CD25+CD4+ T cells remained
resistant, as when cultured and tested separately. These results showed
that the two cell subsets had to be combined during the activation
phase to modulate their sensitivity to Fas-dependent apoptosis.
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in
vitro was not significantly modified in the different culture
conditions, while IFN-
and IL-2 were decreased by cocultures in a
cell dose-dependent manner, as previously shown (8, 36),
compared with CD25-CD4+ T
cells cultured alone. IL-10 production in the supernatants was
increased by increasing the
CD25+:CD25- T cell ratio.
However, we could not demonstrate the mandatory role of IL-10 in this
system by using CD25+CD4+ T
cells from IL-10 KO (data not shown).
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, and little IL-10 and IFN-
.
CD25+CD4+ T cells (0.2
x 105) produced very low levels of each
cytokine. The level of TNF-
was increased when
CD25-CD4+ T cells from
IL-2 KO mice were activated with normal
CD25+CD4+ T cells at the
10:1 ratio (p < 0.02, activated together vs
activated alone). In conclusion, although modulation of apoptosis is associated with modulation of cytokine production, we cannot demonstrate the role of IL-10 or IL-2 in the modulation of the apoptosis sensitivity of CD25+CD4+ T cells.
| Discussion |
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6+CD25+CD4+
T cells remains constant during infection by MMTV (SW), while
the number of
V
6+CD25-CD4+
T cells gradually falls. We concluded that
CD25+CD4+ T cells were
resistant to clonal deletion induced by vSAG activation in vivo
(11). Other reports show the differential susceptibility
of T cell subsets to AICD. The Th1 and Th2 T cell subsets are
functionally distinct and are defined on the basis of their cytokine
profiles. In vitro, Th1 effectors, contrary to Th2 effectors, undergo
rapid Fas/Fas ligand-mediated AICD upon reactivation with Ag (39, 40). Resistance of Th2 clones to AICD is not due to a lack of
Fas expression. The susceptibility of memory T cells to AICD also
differs from that of naive T cells (41, 42). Primed T
cells are more resistant than naive T cells to Fas-mediated AICD in
vitro and in vivo. In the present study, we found that isolated
CD25+CD4+ T cells were more
resistant than their
CD25-CD4+ counterparts to
apoptosis through polyclonal activation by anti-CD3 and triggering
of the Fas pathway. This resistance of isolated
CD25+CD4+ T cells was not
due to an inability to be activated or to express Fas. Indeed,
anti-CD3 cross-linking in the absence of IL-2 up-regulated CD69 and
Fas expression and increased the cell size of both populations. Fas
expression was similar in the two populations. CD25+CD4+ T cells do not produce IL-2, even after activation (8, 11, 13), and do not proliferate in response to anti-CD3 in the absence of IL-2 (8, 9, 12). Furthermore, IL-2 is involved in cell death by enhancing sensitivity to Fas-dependent AICD (29). T cells activated in vivo are not susceptible to Fas-dependent apoptosis when IL-2/IL-2R signaling is disrupted by a lack of IL-2 or its receptor, although Fas is expressed on their surface (17, 28, 30, 31, 32). Additionally, there is a relationship between proliferation and apoptosis: no apoptosis is detected among nonproliferating T cells following Ag stimulation (33). However, while addition of IL-2 to cultured CD25+CD4+ T cells induces their proliferation (8, 9, 12) and enhances their numbers in vitro (this study), it did not modify resistance to Fas-dependent apoptosis. Isolated activated CD25+CD4+ T cells were thus resistant to Fas-induced apoptosis independently of IL-2.
IL-2 also promotes T cell survival (43). CD25+CD4+ T cells show poor proliferation (8, 9, 12, 13) and poor survival when incubated in the absence of IL-2. Like human CD4+ T cells (44), these regulatory T cells are prone to nonspecific death in vitro, despite being resistant to specific Fas-mediated apoptosis. This susceptibility to cytokine privation in vitro may be explained by down-regulation of Bcl-2 or other members of the Bcl protein family (45, 46).
Resistance of CD25+CD4+ T
cells to clonal deletion induced by vSAG in vivo (11) and
to Fas-induced apoptosis after activation in vitro might also be
dependent on IL-10, which is constitutively produced by these cells
(8, 12). IL-10 protects T cells from apoptosis both in
vitro, as shown for human T cells infected by EBV (34)
and, in vivo, IL-10 KO mice injected with the bacterial SAG
Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin B display enhanced
SAG-specific T cell clonal deletion in the thymus (35).
However, we detected no difference between IL-10 KO and normal mice as
regards Fas-induced apoptosis of isolated peripheral
CD25+CD4+ and
CD25-CD4+ T cells,
suggesting that IL-10 is not involved in resistance, at least in vitro.
It is possible that peripheral T cells compensate for their IL-10
deficiency by using another cytokine for Fas-induced apoptosis in
vitro. TGF-
expressed by
CD25+CD4+ T cells may be
involved in protection from apoptosis, as both
CD4+ and CD8+ T cell
apoptosis is increased in mice lacking TGF-
(47, 48).
The suppressive function of regulatory
CD25+CD4+ T cells is
mediated in vitro by cell-cell contacts that lead to down-regulation of
IL-2 production by the
CD25-CD4+ subset (8, 13). Induction of Fas-mediated apoptosis might thus be regulated
by such contacts. Interestingly, both the sensitivity of
CD25-CD4+ T cells and the
resistance of CD25+CD4+ T
cells to Fas-dependent apoptosis were modified when the two populations
were cocultured. The presence of both cell subsets during the
activation phase is mandatory for this phenomenon, as mixing
preactivated cells during the apoptotic assay alone is ineffective.
Modulation depended on the ratio of the two cell subsets. At a ratio of
1:1, CD25-CD4+ T cells
became resistant to apoptosis.
CD25+CD4+ T cells regulated
the activation and proliferation of CD25- cells
during the activation phase (data not shown) and thereby reduced the
sensitivity of the latter to AICD. This is in keeping with previous
reports showing that
CD25+CD4+ T cells suppress
IL-2 production and thus the proliferation of polyclonally activated
CD25-CD4+ T cells in vitro
(8, 13). To elucidate the mechanism involved in the
modulation of apoptosis, we tested the role of IL-10 and/or IL-2 in
this modulation. We found that coculture of
CD25-CD4+ and
CD25+CD4+ T cells at a 1:1
ratio totally inhibited both IL-2 and IFN-
production and enhanced
IL-10 production. However, we found that IL-10 privation did not modify
the sensitivity of isolated
CD25-CD4+ or
CD25+CD4+ T cells to
Fas-mediated apoptosis. An attempt to demonstrate the mandatory
role of IL-10 in apoptosis regulation by using
CD25+CD4+ T cells from
IL-10 KO mice was inconclusive (data not shown). IL-10 is not the only
suppressive factor used by
CD25+CD4+ T cells for
regulation (6). Alternative mechanisms may be used in the
absence of IL-10 to counteract the effect of proapoptotic factors.
Engagement of membrane-linked cytokines may be one of these mechanisms.
Indeed, it has been suggested that membrane-bound TGF-
, expressed by
CD25+CD4+ T cells, is
involved in their regulatory function (47). TGF-
is
also involved in apoptosis regulation (48), which may
explain why cell to cell interaction is needed for both regulation and
modulation of apoptosis (8, 13, 47).
Interestingly, these results are in keeping with our previous in vivo data showing that vSAG-induced clonal deletion spares not only the vSAG-specific CD25+CD4+ T cell subset but also a residual CD25-CD4+ T cell subset (11). The ratio of the two populations at the end of the clonal deletion process is 1:1. Resistance to apoptosis and its modulation may protect not only the regulatory suppressive population but also a small specific effector population, which may have a role in subsequent immune responses.
The question of why, when the ratio of the two subsets in coculture was 10 CD25-CD4+ T cells to 1 CD25+CD4+ T cell, the former remained sensitive and the latter became sensitive to apoptosis is intriguing. This inducible sensitivity of the regulatory T cell subset to apoptosis during immune responses may also be relevant to the general mechanisms controlling autoreactive T cells. Apoptosis of part of the regulatory population at some point of the immune response may be required to limit their control on the CD25-CD4+ T cell subset. Indeed, control of CD25-CD4+ clonal deletion by the CD25+CD4+ subpopulation has previously been shown in vivo (49). In mice infected at birth by MMTV (SW), depletion of CD25+CD4+ T cells by anti-CD25 Ab from birth onwards leads to more rapid and extensive death of vSAG-specific CD25-CD4+ T cells. This suggests that CD25+CD4+ T cells may hinder CD25-CD4+ T cell death in vivo. Deletion of autoreactive T cells might be able to proceed more rapidly when the number of CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells is limited.
These results suggest that the sensitivity of both CD25+CD4+ and CD25-CD4+ T cells to Fas-dependent apoptosis can be modified during the course of an immune response, with the probable aim of maintaining an equilibrium between regulatory and effector T cells.
The mechanism by which CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells become sensitive to apoptosis is not clear. CD25-CD4+ T cell IL-2 production did not explain the change in CD25+CD4+ T cell sensitivity to Fas-mediated apoptosis in coculture at a ratio of one CD25+ cell to 10 CD25- cells, as CD25-CD4+ T cells from IL-2 KO mice had the same effect. Interestingly, CD25+CD4+ T cells correct the Fas-dependent cell death defect described in IL-2 KO mice (28, 32). The CD25+CD4+ T cell subset, which requires IL-2 to expand, is lacking in IL-2 KO mice (12). Thus, the abnormal AICD in these mice may be linked not only to the absence of IL-2 but also to the absence of IL-2-dependent CD25+CD4+ T cells. Interestingly, Wolf et al. (50) have shown that both the CD25+CD4+ and the CD25-CD4+ subsets control T cell activation and accumulation in IL-2-deficient mice when transferred in vivo. They suggested that the CD25+ subset might act on the initial activation step, whereas the CD25- subset might act on the clonal contraction step mediated by AICD. Our results confirm that the two subsets interact to control AICD and reveal the existence of an additional, IL-2-independent mechanism.
Thus, CD25+CD4+ T cell resistance to Fas-dependent apoptosis induced by vSAG in vivo (11, 12) and to polyclonal activation in vitro can be modulated by environmental factors. Experimental interaction of regulatory CD25+CD4+ T cells and effector CD25-CD4+ T cells in vitro showed that sensitivity to Fas-dependent apoptosis depends on the ratio of these two populations during activation. During induction of tolerance to vSAG in vivo, the number of vSAG-specific CD25+CD4+ T cells remains identical to that in naive mice (12). This suggests that the modulation of sensitivity to apoptosis in vivo favors the persistence of the regulatory CD25+CD4+ T cell subset. Given the important role of CD25+CD4+ T cells in the control of immune responses, their resistance to apoptosis in vivo is of major interest.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Martine Papiernik, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 345, Institut Necker, 156 rue de Vaugirard, 75730 Paris Cedex 15, France. E-mail address: papiernik{at}necker.fr ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: vSAG, viral superantigen; SAG, superantigen; MMTV, mouse mammary tumor virus; AICD, activation-induced cell death; KO, knockout. ![]()
Received for publication January 16, 2002. Accepted for publication May 9, 2002.
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F. Venet, C.-S. Chung, G. Monneret, X. Huang, B. Horner, M. Garber, and A. Ayala Regulatory T cell populations in sepsis and trauma J. Leukoc. Biol., March 1, 2008; 83(3): 523 - 535. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. R. J. Taylor, D. R. Alexander, J. C. Cooper, C. F. Higgins, and J. I. Elliott Regulatory T Cells Are Resistant to Apoptosis via TCR but Not P2X7 J. Immunol., March 15, 2007; 178(6): 3474 - 3482. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Liu, D. R. Breiter, G. Zheng, and A. Chen Enhanced Antitumor Responses Elicited by Combinatorial Protein Transfer of Chemotactic and Costimulatory Molecules J. Immunol., March 1, 2007; 178(5): 3301 - 3306. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Chen, S. Liu, D. Park, Y. Kang, and G. Zheng Depleting Intratumoral CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Cells via FasL Protein Transfer Enhances the Therapeutic Efficacy of Adoptive T Cell Transfer Cancer Res., February 1, 2007; 67(3): 1291 - 1298. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. O. Kilinc, K. S. Aulakh, R. E. Nair, S. A. Jones, P. Alard, M. M. Kosiewicz, and N. K. Egilmez Reversing Tumor Immune Suppression with Intratumoral IL-12: Activation of Tumor-Associated T Effector/Memory Cells, Induction of T Suppressor Apoptosis, and Infiltration of CD8+ T Effectors J. Immunol., November 15, 2006; 177(10): 6962 - 6973. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. M. Miller, K. Lundberg, V. Ozenci, A. H. Banham, M. Hellstrom, L. Egevad, and P. Pisa CD4+CD25high T Cells Are Enriched in the Tumor and Peripheral Blood of Prostate Cancer Patients J. Immunol., November 15, 2006; 177(10): 7398 - 7405. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. Venet, A. Pachot, A.-L. Debard, J. Bohe, J. Bienvenu, A. Lepape, W. S. Powell, and G. Monneret Human CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Lymphocytes Inhibit Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Monocyte Survival through a Fas/Fas Ligand-Dependent Mechanism J. Immunol., November 1, 2006; 177(9): 6540 - 6547. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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