Data from: Regulatory CD4+CD25+ T cells dampen inflammatory disease in murine mycoplasma pneumonia and promote IL-17 AND IFN-? responses
Mycoplasmas cause respiratory diseases characterized by persistent infection and chronic airway inflammation. Mycoplasma lung disease is immunopathologic, with CD4+ Th cells determining both disease severity and resistance to infection. Th2 cell responses promote immunopathology, while Th1 cells con...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mycoplasmas cause respiratory diseases characterized by persistent
infection and chronic airway inflammation. Mycoplasma lung disease is
immunopathologic, with CD4+ Th cells determining both disease severity and
resistance to infection. Th2 cell responses promote immunopathology, while
Th1 cells confer resistance to infection. However, regulatory CD4+ T cells
may also have a role in the pathogenesis of mycoplasma respiratory
diseases. We hypothesized Treg cells control the severity of the
inflammatory lesions and may also promote persistence of infection. To
examine this, BALB/c mice were depleted of CD25+ cells, and had increased
disease severity due to Mycoplasma pulmonis infection. Increases in
mycoplasma antibody responses and lymphocyte infiltration into lungs also
occurred after CD25+ cell depletion. CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells promoted
IFN-? and IL-17 mycoplasma-specific CD4+ T cell responses in vitro and in
vivo, while dampening IL-13+ Th responses. Neither IL-10 and TGF-?
expression was detected in CD4+CD25+ T cells from lymph nodes. Thus, a
regulatory T cell population plays an important role in controlling
damaging immune responses in mycoplasma respiratory disease but does not
contribute to persistence of infection. It appears that a regulatory T
cell population preferentially dampens Th2 cell-mediated inflammatory
responses to mycoplasma through a mechanism independent of IL-10 or TGF-?
characteristic of "classic" Treg cells. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.h82r4 |