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Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Biomedicine and Göteborg University Vaccine Research Institute, Sahlgrenska Academy at Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden
| Abstract |
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in serum. This could be abolished by coadministering cholera toxin or by treatment with anti-TGF-
mAb. CD25+ Treg, but also CD25CD4+ T cells from OVA/CTB-treated BALB/c or DO11.10 mice efficiently suppressed effector T cell proliferation and IL-2 production in vitro. Following adoptive transfer, both T cell populations also suppressed OVA-specific T cell and delayed-type hypersensitivity responses in vivo. Foxp3 was strongly expressed by CD25+ Treg from OVA/CTB-treated mice, and treatment also markedly expanded CD25+Foxp3+ Treg. Furthermore, in Rag1/ mice that had adoptively received highly purified Foxp3CD25CD4+ OT-II T cells OVA/CTB feeding efficiently induced CD25+ Treg cells, which expressed Foxp3 more strongly than naturally developing Treg and also had stronger ability to suppress effector OT-II T cell proliferation. A remaining CD25 T cell population, which also became suppressive in response to OVA/CTB treatment, did not express Foxp3. Our results demonstrate that oral tolerance induced by CTB-conjugated Ag is associated with increase in TGF-
and in both the frequency and suppressive capacity of Foxp3+ and CTLA-4+ CD25+ Treg together with the generation of both Foxp3+ and Foxp3CD25 CD4+ Treg. | Introduction |
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that can suppress the systemic response to the same Ag. Two regulatory T cells (Treg)3 that contribute to oral tolerance, Tr1 cells, which secrete IL-10 (4), and Th3 cells, which secrete TGF-
(1), have been described. CD25+CD4+ Treg (5) have been found in Peyers patches (PP) and mesenteric (LN) lymph node (MLN) within a short time after oral administration of high-dose OVA (6, 7, 8). The CD25+ Treg population has a crucial role in maintaining immune tolerance to self-Ag, and mice depleted in Treg cells or humans lacking Treg develop severe autoimmune disease (9, 10, 11). CD25+ Treg can produce either IL-10 or TGF-
or both (8, 11) and also express CTLA-4 (12). Although Treg is anergic in vitro, it can be expanded in an Ag-specific manner in vivo after immunization (13). Importantly, these cells may also confer suppressor activity on CD4+ T cells by inducing the expression of the Foxp3 gene, which appears to be critical for the generation and suppressive function of CD25+ Treg cells (14, 15, 16).
Despite many attractive features of oral tolerance induction as a means of potential Ag-specific immunotherapy in autoimmune and allergic disorders, it appears clear that to achieve this goal there is a need for development of Ag formulations and administration regimens with improved tolerance-inducing potency (1, 2). In earlier studies, we and others have shown (17) that even microgram amounts of relevant Ag conjugated to the nontoxic protein of cholera toxin (CT) B subunit (CTB) can induce oral tolerance with unique efficacy and in an Ag-specific manner, in experimental models, suppress development of autoimmune diseases (18, 19, 20, 21). Oral tolerance induction by CTB-conjugated Ag is associated with enhanced IL-10 and TGF-
1 mRNA expression and cytokine production by Treg (19, 22). However, the extent to which the superior oral tolerance induced by Ag conjugated to CTB is associated with mucosal induction of Ag-specific Treg or Foxp3 expression is largely unknown.
Therefore, in this study, in which we used OVA as a model Ag, we investigated the development and suppressive activity of Ag-specific CD25+ and CD25 Treg in response to orally administered OVA/CTB conjugate or OVA alone. We found that OVA/CTB treatment was much more efficient than OVA alone in inducing Ag-specific CD25+; however, we also found that CD25 regulatory CD4+ T cells can strongly suppress effector T cell responses to Ag in vitro and in vivo. Both the CD25+ and the CD25 suppressor T cell populations induced by OVA/CTB feeding expressed the Foxp3 gene, although to a different extent, and oral OVA/CTB treatment efficiently generated Foxp3+CD25+ Treg cells from Foxp3CD25CD4+ T cells independent of natural CD25+ Treg cells.
| Materials and Methods |
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For the experiments we used four strains of 6- to 8-wk-old female mice: 1) BALB/c (B & K Universal); 2) DO11.10 OVA TCR transgenic (Tg) mice on BALB/c background (The Jackson Laboratory), a clone with nearly 50% of the CD4+ T cells expressing a TCR specific for the peptide323339 fragment of OVA; 3) OVA TCR Tg OT-II mice with the same TCR specificity as DO11.10, but on the C57BL/6 background (a gift from Dr. M. J. Wick, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden); and 4) Rag1/ mice (The Jackson Laboratory). The mice were kept in ventilated cages under specific pathogen-free conditions at the Department of Experimental Biomedicine, Göteborg University, Sweden. The Göteborg University Ethical Committee for Animal Experimentation approved these studies.
Antigens
OVA protein (grade VII) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich, and OVA peptide323339 (ISQAVHAAHAEINEAGR) was obtained from TAG Copenhagen. CT was purchased from List Biological Laboratories. Highly purified recombinant CTB was provided by SBL Vaccines.
Conjugation of OVA to CTB
OVA protein was chemically coupled to CTB using N-succininmidyl (3-(2-pyridyl)-dithio)propionate (Pierce) as a bifunctional coupling reagent as described (17). Coupled OVA/CTB was purified and quantified by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) gel filtration (Superdex 200 16/60 column; Pharmacia Biotech) using the Biologic Workstation FPLC system (Bio-Rad)). After use, the lots of purified conjugate were analyzed by GM1-ELISA using biotinylated anti-CTB mAbs and were shown to have retained GM1-binding activity (22). They were also shown to have similar, strong capacity to induce OVA-specific T cell proliferation when tested on DO11.10 splenocytes. In these assays, they were not significantly inhibited by preincubation and coculture with polymyxin (10 µg/ml; Sigma-Aldrich) but were completely inhibited by preincubation and coculture with GM1-ganglioside (10 nmol/ml).
Induction of oral tolerance and immunization
BALB/c mice, DO11.10 OVA TCR Tg mice, BALB/c mice adoptively transferred with 1.5 x 107 DO11.10 CD4+ T cells, Rag1/ mice adoptively transferred with CD25, or CD25+CD4+ T cells from OT-II TCR Tg mice were given intragastrically (i.g.) either 20 mg of OVA, 200 µg of OVA/CTB conjugate, 200 µg of OVA/CTB mixed with 4 µg of CT, or only PBS up to three times at 2-day intervals. In some experiments, mice were also immunized once s.c. in a footpad with 50 or 100 µg of OVA emulsified 1/1 in CFA containing 100 µg of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra (Difco). At indicated days after i.g. treatment or s.c. immunization, the mice were sacrificed, and PP, draining LN (DLN; axillary, inguinal, MLN, or popliteal), and spleen were harvested for further in vitro studies.
Cell purification and sorting by FACS
Spleens and LN were pressed through nylon nets, and single-cell suspensions were prepared. Purified CD4+ T cells were isolated by negative selection using MACS microbeads labeled with various mAbs (Miltenyi Biotec) according to the manufacturers suggested protocol. To separate CD25+CD4+ T cells and CD25CD4+ T cells, the isolated CD4+ T cells were further incubated with PE-conjugated anti-CD25 (10 µl/107 cells) at 4°C for 10 min, whereafter anti-PE coated microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec) were added and incubated another 15 min at 4°C. Magnetic separation was performed with a positive selection column according to the manufacturers suggested protocol. CD25CD4+ Tg T cells purified from LN or spleen from DO11.10 or OT-II mice were used as OVA Tg T effector cells (Teff). In some experiments, CD25+CD4+ T cells and CD25CD4+ T cells were further purified by flow cytometry on a FACStar cell sorter (BD Biosciences).
CFSE labeling of T cells
CD4+ T cells purified from DO11.10 mice were labeled at 3 x 107 cells/ml with 5 µM CFSE (Molecular Probes) in PBS for 5 min followed by incubation with 5% FCS-PBS (5 mM EDTA) for 10 min at 37°C. After two washes, 5 x 106 of the labeled cells in 200 µl of PBS were injected i.v. into the tail vein of recipient mice.
T cell proliferation and cytokine assays
Spleen cells or the draining popliteal or inguinal LN cells were collected at indicated days after immunization. Cells were isolated and RBC were removed by lysis and then cultured. For proliferation of splenic and LN cells, 2.5 x 105 or 5 x 105 cells/well (in 200 µl) were cultured for 3 days in 96-well plates with or without 110 µg/ml OVA. [3H]Thymidine was added (1 µCi/well) for the last 16 h of culture. To test the regulatory function of isolated CD4+ T cells or separated CD25+CD4+ or CD25CD4+ T cells from mice with different treatments, these cells were cocultured in different numbers with 1 x 105 DO11.10 Teff cells together with 5 x 103 of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DC) prepared as described in Ref.23 and with 1 µg/ml OVA323339 peptide. These tests were performed using 96-well round-bottom plates (Nunc) for 3 days with [3H]thymidine added during the last 16 h. IL-2 production by cultured cells were assayed in 2-day culture supernatants using the cytokine cytometric bead array method (BD Biosciences). TGF-
in serum was measured by ELISA according to the manufacturers instructions (Duo Set kit; R&D Systems).
FACS analyses
Freshly isolated splenic or LN cells were incubated with FITC-,or PE-, or allophycocyanin-labeled mAbs to mouse CD4, CD8
, CD25, CD62L, CD69, or KJ126 (BD Biosciences). For analysis of intracellular CTLA-4 and Foxp3, stained CD25+CD4+ or CD25CD4+ T cells were fixed and permeabilized with Cytofix/Cytoperm solution (BD Pharmingen) according to the manufacturers suggested protocol and then incubated with PE- or allophycocyanin-conjugated anti-CTLA-4 (BD Biosciences) or anti-Foxp3 FLK-16 (Nordic BioSite) (0.51 µg/106 cells) at 4°C for 30 min in the dark. Cells were then washed and analyzed by flow cytometry (FACSCalibur; BD Biosciences), which was also used to assess cell division in CFSE-labeled cells.
Adoptive transfer of cells, delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) testing, and in vivo depletion of TGF-
Total CD4+ T cells or CD25+CD4+ or CD25CD4+ T cells from i.g. OVA/CTB-treated or PBS-treated BALB/c mice or OVA TCR Tg mice were injected i.v. into BALB/c mice (4 x 105 cells/mouse). One day after transfer, the mice were immunized s.c. in the right footpad with 100 µg of OVA in 50 µl of CFA containing 100 µg of M. tuberculosis. Seven days after this immunization, mice received a s.c. challenge injection of 20 µg of OVA in PBS in the left footpad. Left footpad thickness was measured before and 24 h after OVA challenge in a blinded fashion using a caliper meter (Mitutoyo).
In separate experiments, purified CD25+CD4+ and CD25CD4+ T cells from OT-II mice were injected i.v. into Rag1/ mice who were then treated i.g. with different regimens before receiving a s.c. immunization with OVA in CFA. One or 3 wk later, spleen CD25+ and CD25CD4+ T cells were purified by FACS cell sorting and used for Foxp3 gene expression studies.
In some experiments, we first adoptively transferred CD25CD4+ OVA Tg DO11.10 T cells to normal BALB/c mice. Then, starting 4 days later, we gave groups of mice three i.v. injections every second day with either anti-mouse TGF-
mAb (1D11.16.8) or sham treatment (normal mouse serum IgG). One day after each injection, mice in the different treatment groups were given either OVA/CTB conjugate (200 µg/dose) or PBS i.g. The anti-mouse TGF-
mAb was purified from a hybridoma supernatant by affinity chromatography and shown to give a single peak in FPLC and to contain <0.1 EU/mg of endotoxin.
Analysis of Foxp3 expression
In addition to the intracellular staining of Foxp3 protein (scurfin) as described above, Foxp3 gene expression was also studied by RT-PCR and real-time PCR methods.
RT-PCR.
RNA was purified by the total RNA extraction kit for mammalian RNA (Sigma-Aldrich), and DNase was treated by the DNase I Amp grade kit (Invitrogen Life Technologies) to remove residual genomic DNA. cDNA was synthesized by using an oligo(dT) primer and the Sensiscript RT-PCR Kit (Qiagen) as described by the manufacturer. Primers for mouse hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (Hprt), designed by primer3 software (
http://frodo.wi.mit.edu/cgi-bin/primer3/primer3_www.cgi
) and the Foxp3 primers described by Jason et al. (24) were from MGW-Biotech. Semiquantitative RT-PCR was performed using standard PCR conditions (1.5 mM MgCl2 and annealing at 55°C) and forward and reverse primers (Foxp3, 5'-ggcccttctccaggacaga-3' and 5'-gctgatcatggctgggttgt-3'; Hprt, 5'-atcagtcaacgggggacata-3' and 5'-agaggtccttttcaccagca-3'). The reactions were amplified for 37 cycles and analyzed on 2% agarose gels stained with ethidium bromide.
Real-time PCR. Real-time quantitative PCR was performed on an ABI Prism 7500 thermal cycler (PerkinElmer) using SYBR Green master mix (Applied Biosystems) and the Foxp3 and Hprt primers, both at a final concentration of 200 nM. The specificity of the PCR was confirmed by the appearance of a single peak in the analysis of the dissociation curve, showing the predictable melting temperature of the primer pairs. No amplification was seen in the nontemplate control. A standard curve was generated from serial dilutions of purified primer product of Hprt and Foxp3. Normalized values for Foxp3 mRNA expression were calculated as the relative quantity of Foxp3 divided by the relative quantity of Hprt extrapolated from the standard curve calculated by the ABI Prism 7500 software (Applied Biosystems).
Statistical analysis
Results are expressed as mean ± SD. When not specified otherwise, we used the Student t test for determining statistical differences between experimental and control groups. Values of p < 0.05 or p < 0.01 are referred to as significant or highly significant, respectively.
| Results |
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In preliminary work, we found that i.g. administration to BALB/c (or C57BL/6) mice of a low-dose OVA/CTB conjugate, given either as a single 200-µg dose or as three 200-µg doses every second day, efficiently induced regulatory CD4+ T cells in MLN and spleen that could completely suppress OVA-specific proliferation of OVA TCR Tg DO11.10 or C57BL/6 OT-II T cells in coculture. These regimens of OVA/CTB also efficiently prevented the immunogenic effect of a s.c. OVA/CFA immunization 1 day after the i.g. treatment as manifested in a practically complete suppression of spleen or DLN T cells to OVA or OVA323339 peptide 7 or 21 days after immunization (Fig. 1 and data not shown). In contrast, i.g. administration of the same dose of OVA, whether alone or mixed with 100 µg of CTB, did not induce cells with any detectable regulatory activity in coculture with Tg T cells (data not shown), whereas cells with such suppressive activity could be found after three i.g. doses of a 100-fold higher amount of OVA (20 mg/feeding).
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Titration experiments using unfractionated pooled MLN and splenic CD4+ T cells from the different mouse treatment groups confirmed the findings with the isolated CD25+ and CD25 cells. The CD4+ cells from the OVA/CTB-fed mice were suppressive even when added to the Teff cells in a ratio between 1:8 and 1:16; in contrast, the CD4+ cells from OVA-treated mice only worked in a 1:1 ratio, and the PBS-treated CD4+ cells did not work at all even when tested in a 4:1 ratio with Teff cells (data not shown).
Corresponding experiments in DO11.10 Tg mice confirmed the findings in normal BALB/c mice. Thus, three i.g. doses of OVA/CTB conjugate induced CD4+CD25+ T cells in MLN, which strongly suppressed Teff cells in coculture (Fig. 4). Titration experiments also confirmed that the induced CD25+CD4+ suppressor T cells from OVA/CTB-fed Tg mice (Fig. 4A) were far more potent in their suppressive capacity than CD25+CD4+ T cells (natural Treg) from PBS-treated Tg mice (Fig. 4C). Although the latter cells lost their suppressive effect when diluted to a Treg:Teff cell ratio of 1:3, Treg from the OVA/CTB-fed mice significantly suppressed Teff cells, even when used at a ratio of 1:81. Coadministration of CT with the OVA/CTB conjugate resulted in a loss of detectable suppressive activity of the CD4+CD25+ MLN T cells (Fig. 3B).
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Furthermore, in these mice, coadministration of CT together with OVA/CTB practically completely abrogated the oral tolerance induction (Fig. 4A, last panel). In a separate experiment, we examined whether CT could break already established tolerance induced by prior i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB. To this end, we gave groups of BALB/c mice that had adoptively received DO11.10 Tg T cells, three i.g. doses of either 200 µg of OVA/CTB or PBS every second day, and 1 day after the last treatment we gave to half of the these mice 50 µg of OVA in CFA or 50 µg of OVA together with 2 µg of CT. One week later, we examined the spleen T cell proliferative response to stimulation with 1 µg/ml OVA323339 peptide. The results showed that while in the OVA/CFA-challenged group the feeding with OVA/CTB suppressed proliferation by 88 ± 11%, it only gave 45 ± 6% suppression in the OVA/CT-challenged mice (data not shown).
Intragastric administration of OVA/CTB conjugate increases the frequency of CD25+ and CTLA-4+CD4+ T cells in PPs, MLNs, and spleen
Our next goal was to determine whether a tolerizing i.g. administration regimen of OVA/CTB conjugate would enhance suppressive activity and expand the number of CD25+CD4+ T cells in different organs. We, therefore, again gave three i.g. doses of OVA/CTB, OVA alone, PBS, or OVA/CTB plus CT to groups of DO11.10 OVA TCR Tg mice as described in Fig. 2. Three days after the last treatment, PP, MLN, and spleen cells were collected, and we examined the frequency of total and OVA323339 peptide-specific (KJ126+) CD25+CD4+ T cells by flow cytometry. As shown in Table I, there was a consistent and significant, albeit quantitatively modest, increase in both total and KJ126+ CD25+CD4+ T cells in PP in mice treated with OVA/CTB compared with PBS-treated control mice. Mice fed a high dose of OVA had a much smaller increase in CD25+CD4+ T cells (Table I). CD25+CD4+ cells in MLN and spleen were also significantly increased in response to oral OVA/CTB treatment, although to a lesser extent than in PP. Coadministration of CT with the OVA/CTB conjugate abrogated the increase in both total and KJ126+ CD25+CD4+ cells in PP, MLN, and spleen (Table I).
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Expression of Foxp3 gene and protein is increased in CD25+CD4+ T cells from mice treated with OVA/CTB conjugate
Expression of Foxp3 is a key marker for identification of functional Treg cells in the CD4+CD25+ T cell population (14, 15, 16). By using the RT-PCR assay, we found that the Foxp3 gene was strongly expressed in purified CD25+CD4+ T cells from pooled MLNs and spleen from mice treated i.g. with OVA/CTB, OVA, PBS, or OVA/CTB plus CT (Fig. 5A). More surprisingly, Foxp3 was also expressed in highly purified CD25CD4+ T cells from the OVA/CTB-fed mice, although to a much lesser extent than in the CD25+ cells (Fig. 5A). In contrast, no Foxp3 expression was seen in the CD25 cells from mice fed with either the conjugate mixed with CT, with high-dose OVA, or with PBS alone (Fig. 5A). Quantitative analyses by real-time PCR confirmed these findings (Fig. 5B) and showed that Foxp3 expression in CD25+CD4+ T cells from OVA/CTB-treated mice was more than twice that of cells from PBS-treated mice and also higher than in cells from OVA-only treated mice. A very small increase in Foxp3 expression in CD25CD4+ T cells after the OVA/CTB feeding was also confirmed (Fig. 5B). The addition of CT to the OVA/CTB treatment completely abrogated the increase in Foxp3 activity and, in fact, led to even lesser activity than in the PBS-fed controls (Fig. 5B). The increase in expression of Foxp3 was further confirmed by intracellular staining of Foxp3 protein in KJ126+ CD4+ cells using FACS analyses (Fig. 5C).
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We tested whether i.g. administration of OVA/CTB could induce cell division in adoptively transferred CFSE-labeled CD4+ DO11.10 T cells in wild-type BALB/c mice. The results, illustrated in Fig. 6, show that 3 days after a single 200-µg OVA/CTB feeding CD25+CD4+ T cells in MLN had undergone intense cell division, in sharp contrast to MLN cells from PBS-treated mice (Fig. 6A). Consistent with this, it was further found that the OVA/CTB treatment also induced the expansion of Foxp3+ cells (Fig. 6B).
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We isolated total CD4+ T cells and separated the CD25+ and CD25 CD4+ T cells from pooled MLN and spleen MNC of OVA/CTB-treated BALB/c mice 3 days after the three-dose i.g. treatment regimen described above and transferred 4 x 105 of either type of cell i.v. into naive BALB/c mice. One day later, the latter mice were s.c. sensitized in their right rear footpad with OVA/CFA; 7 days later, half were challenged by a s.c. injection of OVA in the left rear footpad, and the DTH response in vivo was measured as the extent of footpad swelling. We collected pooled MLN and spleen T cells from the other half of the mice and examined them for proliferation in response to OVA stimulation in vitro. As shown in Fig. 7A, there was significant suppression of DTH in mice that received either purified CD25CD4+ T cells (>99% pure) or purified CD25+CD4+ T cells (>85% pure) from i.g. OVA/CTB-treated mice compared with the DTH response in control animals that received no cells or corresponding cells from PBS-treated mice. Furthermore, proliferative responses (Fig. 7B) by MLN and spleen T cells in response to OVA stimulation were also significantly reduced.
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Intragastric administration of OVA/CTB conjugate efficiently generates OVA-specific CD25+ Treg expressing Foxp3 from CD25CD4+ T cells, which is associated with increased TGF-
production
Next, we tested to see whether suppressive T cells can be generated from natural CD25CD4+ T cells after i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB. To this end, we isolated both CD25 (>99% purity by FACS testing as shown in Fig. 8A) and CD25+CD4+ T cells from naive OVA TCR Tg OT-II mice and adoptively transferred the CD25 cells or a mixture of CD25 and CD25+ cells (5:1 ratio) into Rag1/ mice. We then gave three doses of OVA/CTB conjugate (200 µg/dose) or PBS i.g. every second day, and then 1 day after the last administration, an immunization s.c. with OVA/CFA. Seven or 21 days after immunization, mice were sacrificed, and DLN, MLN, and spleen cells were collected, and MNCs were prepared and used for T cell proliferation tests and/or for FACS analyses of the frequency of total and Ag-specific CD25+CD4+ T cells. As shown in Table II, 7 days after the s.c. immunization, splenic T cell proliferation was completely suppressed in Rag1/ mice that had received mixed CD25/CD25+CD4+ T cells and been fed with OVA/CTB compared with corresponding PBS-treated mice. Strikingly, however, the T cell proliferation was also markedly suppressed in Rag1/ mice that had received highly purified CD25CD4+ OVA Tg T cells and then been treated i.g. with OVA/CTB before immunization (Table II). DLN T cell proliferation showed a similar pattern (Table II). Furthermore, the proliferation of OT-II CD25CD4+ Teff cells stimulated with OVA323339 peptide was also markedly suppressed when these cells were cocultured with splenic T cells obtained from Rag1/ mice that had received purified CD25CD4+ OVA Tg T cells and then i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB whether followed by immunization with OVA/CFA or no immunization (data not shown).
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Corresponding T cell proliferation and CD25 FACS staining analyses of MNC collected 21 days after immunization showed results similar to those described for the 7-day MNC (data not shown).
To test whether the CD25+ and/or the CD25 T cells generated from the adoptively transferred CD25CD4+ T cells by oral treatment with OVA/CTB expressed the Foxp3 gene, the spleen cells were stained with anti-CD4-FITC and anti-CD25-PE and further sorted into CD25+ and CD25CD4+ T cells by a FACS sorter before examination for Foxp3 expression by RT-PCR. In the OVA Tg naive mice that provided donor cells, Foxp3, as expected, was only expressed in the CD25+ population and not in the CD25 T cells. Of interest, the purified CD25+ population isolated from mice that had been recipients of Foxp3CD25 T cells and treated with OVA/CTB strongly expressed Foxp3 (Fig. 8B) and also strongly suppressed the proliferation of CD25CD4+ Teff (Fig. 8C). In contrast, the CD25+ population isolated from mice given CD25 cells and treated with PBS, did not express Foxp3 gene and were also much less suppressive (Fig. 8C); however, when the latter type of cells were examined 3 wk after immunization, they too expressed detectable Foxp3 (data not shown). The CD25 T cells, in contrast, did not express any Foxp3 whether isolated from the OVA/CTB- or PBS-treated groups even though the CD25 cells from the OVA/CTB-treated group, although being slightly less effective than the CD25+ cells, efficiently suppressed OT-II Teff Ag-specific proliferation when tested in coculture (Fig. 8C).
Finally, we sought to examine whether TGF-
levels in serum are increased and whether TGF-
is important in the generation of Treg in response to i.g. administration of OVA/CTB conjugate. Therefore, we adoptively transferred CD25CD4+ OVA Tg DO11.10 T cells to normal BALB/c mice. Then, starting 4 days later, we gave groups of mice three i.v. injections every second day of either anti-mouse TGF-
mAb or as sham treatment normal mouse serum IgG. One day after each injection, different treatment groups also received either OVA/CTB conjugate (200 µg/dose) or PBS i.g. Three days after the last i.g. treatment, serum and MLN cells were collected for determination of TGF-
1 levels in serum by ELISA, frequency of CD25+CD4+ T cells among total and KJ126+ lymphocytes in MLN by flow cytometry, and the MLN T cell proliferative response to OVA323339 peptide. As shown in Table III, the treatment with anti-TGF-
mAb decreased the levels of TGF-
1 in serum by
80% compared with the levels in mice sham-treated with normal mouse IgG. In the PBS-fed group, the treatment with anti-TGF-
was also associated with a small but significant (p < 0.05) increase in CD25+CD4+ Ag-specific (KJ126+) T cells in MLN (group 2 vs group 4). Of note, in the control IgG-treated mice, the oral administration of OVA/CTB conjugate not only led to a 90% increase in the frequency of CD25+ T cells among KJ126+ T cells in MLN, but also to a marked increase in serum TGF-
1 levels and evidence of functional suppression reflected in an almost complete suppression of MLN cell proliferation to OVA323339 peptide (groups 3 vs 4). In sharp contrast, in the mice depleted of TGF-
by specific Ab, the i.g. administration of OVA/CTB conjugate did not result in any increased frequency of CD25+ T cells in MLN, even though the OVA/CTB conjugate feeding of these mice was associated with a significant, although in absolute quantities small, increase in serum TGF-
1 (groups 1 vs 2) (Table III). The anti-TGF-
treatment also largely abrogated the ability of i.g. OVA/CTB treatment to induce functional suppression of the MLN cell proliferative response (p > 0.20 for difference to PBS-treated mice, group 1 vs group 2), even though there was a tendency to a small reduction in the response. We conclude that depletion of TGF-
by specific Ab treatment appears to completely abrogate the induced development of OVA-specific CD25+CD4+ T cells in response to oral administration of OVA/CTB conjugate associated with a loss in suppression of Ag-specific T cell reactivity.
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| Discussion |
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by specific Ab treatment completely inhibits the generation of CD25+CD4+ Treg cells in response to i.g. administration of OVA/CTB. In both OVA Tg and normal BALB/c mice, OVA/CTB-induced CD25+ cells efficiently suppressed OVA-specific CD25 Teff cell proliferative responses in vitro as well as DTH response in vivo. Consistent with recent reports showing that food Ag could induce mucosal CD25+ Treg cells (6, 7, 8, 25), these CD25+ cells in PPs or MLNs were significantly increased after i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB, and studies with adoptively transferred CFSE-labeled CD4+ T cells confirmed the expansion of CD25+CD4+ Treg. However, although the increase in Treg cell number was relatively modest, at most 2- or 3-fold, the suppressive activity of these cells on Ag-specific Teff proliferation in coculture experiments in contrast increased >20-fold as determined in cell titration studies. Our results indicate that tolerance induced by OVA/CTB is not only associated with an increase in the number of CD25+ Treg cells, but also and mainly with increased suppressive activity and Foxp3 activation on a per cell basis.
TGF-
plays an important role in the induction and suppressive action of natural Treg (11, 14, 26), and also in the generation of Ag-induced peripheral Treg cells (7, 13, 27), but it is not known whether TGF-
is required for oral tolerance generation of mucosal Treg cells. In our study, oral tolerance induction by i.g. administration of OVA/CTB led to a markedly elevated level of TGF-
1 in serum associated with an increase in MLN Treg cells. Conversely, in vivo depletion of TGF-
by specific mAb treatment completely suppressed the generation of CD25+ Treg cells in response to the i.g. OVA/CTB treatment and effectively removed most, if not all, of the ability of i.g. OVA/CTB treatment to induce functional suppression of T cell responses. It is notable that mucosal Ag/CTB treatment not only increases TGF-
production, as shown in this study and in previous reports (19, 22), but also almost completely suppresses proinflammatory IL-6 production (21). In light of the recent finding by Bettelli et al. (27) that TGF-
in the absence of IL-6 strongly promotes Treg generation but when combined with IL-6 instead, induces IL-17-producing, so-called Th17 effector T cells, the combined increase in TGF-
and decrease in IL-6 is put forward as an important explanation for the remarkably efficient oral tolerance induction and Treg generation by Ag/CTB treatment.
Of importance, and consistent with a recent report by Hauet-Broere et al. (25), we found that in addition to the strong induction of CD25+CD4+ Treg, i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB conjugate also induced CD25CD4+ T cells that displayed suppressive function both in vitro and in vivo after adoptive transfer of these highly purified cells in recipients immunized s.c. with OVA/CFA. It is notable that the latter cell population also expressed the Foxp3 gene, although to a much lesser extent than the CD25+ cells, and that these cells, at least in part, may therefore be under differentiation toward increased expression of Foxp3 as well as expression of the IL-2
receptor (CD25). In support of this kind of differentiation pathway, Zelenay et al. (28) recently reported that Foxp3+CD25CD4 T cells constitute a reservoir of committed regulatory cells that regain CD25 expression upon homeostatic expansion. Of note, CTLA-4, which plays an essential role in the function of CD25+ T cells in controlling inflammation (12), was found to be increased not only on OVA/CTB-induced CD25+ but to a lesser extent also on OVA/CTB-induced CD25 T cells that had been sorted by FACS to rule out any contamination by CD25+ T cells.
Naturally occurring CD25+CD4+ Treg play crucial roles in the maintenance of immunological self-tolerance and negative control of various immune responses (9, 10). A recent study (29) also demonstrated a strong impairment in oral tolerance in naive mice depleted in vivo of natural CD25+CD4+ cells by Ab treatment. This raised a question as to whether tolerance induction by i.g. OVA/CTB would be critically dependent on natural CD25+CD4+ cells. To address this question, we adoptively transferred highly purified CD25 OT-II T cells and, for comparison, a mixture of CD25+ and CD25 OT-II T cells to Rag1/ mice and then tested the induction of oral tolerance after i.g. treatment of the recipient mice with OVA/CTB conjugate. We found that this treatment strongly suppressed both splenic and DLN T cell proliferation to subsequent systemic immunization with OVA/CFA in both groups. When the CD4+ T cell populations of the treated mice were further examined, it was evident that in Rag1/ mice that had received only the highly purified CD25 population, the i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB had induced a significant generation of CD25+ T cells in MLN, spleen, and DLN similar to that seen in OVA/CTB-treated recipients of CD25+/CD25 cells and significantly above the levels in PBS-treated controls. Furthermore, highly purified (cell sorted) OVA/CTB-induced CD25+ T cells isolated at the end of the experiment from mice that initially received CD25 cells strongly expressed Foxp3 in contrast to the CD25+ population from corresponding PBS-treated mice. However, when the cells were isolated and examined at 3 wk rather than 7 days after treatment, the CD25+ cells from the PBS-treated animals also had detectable expressed Foxp3. Our results indicate that mucosal treatment with OVA/CTB independent of natural CD25+ Treg cells can promote Ag-induced generation of at least two populations of Treg from CD25 precursors: one comprising strongly suppressive Foxp3+CD25+ Treg, and one comprising CD25CD4+ T cells that have acquired regulatory-suppressive function without activation of the Foxp3 gene system.
The efficient generation and functional activation of CD25+ Treg by i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB conjugate is probably largely explained by the effects of the conjugate on gut mucosal APC. Previous studies have shown that conjugation of Ag to CTB, a molecule that binds with high affinity to the GM1 ganglioside receptors present on most cells (30), greatly facilitates Ag uptake and MHC class II-restricted Ag presentation by CD11c+ DC as well as other types of APC, such as B cells and macrophages (23). One possibility is that mucosally administered Ag/CTB conjugate preferentially binds to and is taken up by tolerogenic subsets of mucosal DC or other APC. Consistent with this, we found that the increase in frequency of CD25+CD4+ T cells in PP and MLN correlated closely with an increase of CD11c+CD8
+B220+ DC between 2 h and 2 days after i.g. treatment with OVA/CTB (our unpublished data). This agrees fully with the recent findings by Anjuere et al. (31) of a selective increase in this DC subset in MLN following CTB feeding, and the ability of this DC population from CTB-fed mice to support the differentiation of CD4+ Ag-specific Treg producing TGF-
and IL-10.
CT is a powerful mucosal adjuvant for most coadministered protein Ags including OVA and stimulates strongly enhanced Th1, Th2, and CTL responses (2, 32). Oral administration of CT can in parallel with its adjuvant action prevent induction of oral tolerance to a coadministered Ag (17, 18, 19, 33), although CT has also been reported (34) to promote the induction of Treg (Tr1 cells) in vitro. In this study, we found that coadministration of even very small amounts of CT together with the OVA/CTB conjugate effectively prevented the induction of CD25+CD4+ suppressor T cells. Furthermore, CT also inhibited the normal suppressive function and Foxp3 gene expression of the mucosal CD25+ Treg cells in the OVA/CTB-treated mice in comparison with PBS-fed mice. However, in line with the previously reported inability of CT to abrogate already established oral tolerance (35), our findings showed only a relatively small effect of CT given after, rather than together, with a tolerizing OVA/CTB feeding regimen.
The mechanism(s) by which CT exerts these effects remains to be defined. One obvious mechanism could be that CT inhibits the generation or function of a normally predominant tolerogenic mucosal APC population. In support of this, Anjuere et al. (36) found that oral administration of CT to mice results in a marked increase in PP and MLN of CD11c+CD8int DC with potent immunological APC capacity together with inhibition of the normal development of tolerogenic CD11c+CD8
+B220+ (plasmacytoid) DC in response to CTB administration. We have also seen that i.g. coadministration of CT with OVA/CTB strongly decreases the frequency of tolerogenic CD11c+CD8+B220+ DC compared with both OVA/CTB-fed mice and unfed controls (our unpublished data). Of note, CT, different from CTB, is a potent inducer for production of both IL-1
and IL-6 by both DC and other APC (32); these cytokines have recently been reported to activate Foxp3 effector/memory T cells and attenuate Foxp3+CD4+CD25+ Treg cell function (27, 37). In addition, CT down-regulates expression of TGF-
(19) as well as IL-2 and IL-2R/CD25 (38). Such effects may also be important, because TGF-
and IL-2 are essential for maintenance of CD25+ Treg cells in vivo (11, 14, 26, 27, 39).
In conclusion, our findings show that the exceptionally efficient induction of peripheral tolerance by orally administered Ag coupled to CTB is associated with increases in both the frequency and suppressive activity of Ag-specific CD25+CD4+ Treg cells that express Foxp3 as well as CTLA-4 proteins, and also leads to the additional generation of both Foxp3+ and Foxp3CD25CD4+ Treg. The predominant induction and activation of CD25+ Treg cells by oral Ag/CTB conjugate treatment is associated with increased induction of TGF-
1. Coadministration of CT with normally tolerizing Ag/CTB treatment regimens completely blocks the induction of oral tolerance and Tregs, probably largely through the differential effects of CT compared with CTB on APC that can then translate opposing effects on Treg and Teff cells.
Note.
While this manuscript was undergoing the revision process, another study from this laboratory also described the induction of tolerance associated with but not critically dependent on CD25+ cell expansion after oral administration of an influenza virus hemagglutinin-derived peptide/CTB gene fusion protein (40).
| Acknowledgments |
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1 This work was supported by Swedish Science Council Medicine Project (K2000-06X-03382), by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation through its support of the Göteborg University Vaccine Research Institute, and by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research through the Mucosal Immunology and Vaccine Center at Göteborg University, and a LUA/ALF Project Grant from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital. ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Jia-Bin Sun, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Biomedicine, Göteborg University, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden. E-mail address: jia-bin.sun{at}microbio.gu.se ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: Treg, regulatory T cell; PP, Peyers patch; LN, lymph node; MLN, mesenteric LN; CT, cholera toxin; CTB, CT B subunit; i.g., intragastric; DLN, draining LN; DC, dendritic cell; Tg, transgenic; Teff, Tg T effector cell; DTH, delayed-type hypersensitivity; FPLC, fast protein liquid chromatography; Hprt, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase; MNC, mononuclear cell; int, intermediate. ![]()
Received for publication December 5, 2005. Accepted for publication September 13, 2006.
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