Regulatory T cells effectively downregulate the autoimmune anti-MPO response and ameliorate anti-MPO induced glomerulonephritis in mice.
Peiqi HuHong XiaoSandra ElmoreChristian Agosto-BurgosYichun HuSusan L HoganDominic J CiavattaRonald J FalkJ Charles JennetteMeghan E FreePublished in: Journal of autoimmunity (2024)
Regulation of autoreactive cells is key for both prevention and amelioration of autoimmune disease. A better understanding of the key cell population(s) responsible for downregulation of autoreactive cells would provide necessary foundational insight for cellular-based therapies in autoimmune disease. Utilizing a mouse model of anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO) glomerulonephritis, we sought to understand which immune cells contribute to downregulation of the anti-MPO autoimmune response. MPO-/- mice were immunized with whole MPO to induce an anti-MPO response. Anti-MPO splenocytes were then transferred into recipient mice (Rag2-/- mice or WT mice). Anti-MPO titers were followed over time. After anti-MPO splenocyte transfer, WT mice are able to downregulate the anti-MPO response while anti-MPO titers persist in Rag2-/- recipients. Reconstitution with WT splenocytes into Rag2-/- recipients prior to anti-MPO splenocyte transfer enabled mice to downregulate the anti-MPO immune response. Therefore, wildtype splenocytes contain a cellular population that is capable of downregulating the autoimmune response. Through splenocyte transfer, antibody depletion experiments, and purified cell population transfers, we confirmed that the regulatory T cell (Treg) population is responsible for the downregulation of the anti-MPO autoimmune response. Further investigation revealed that functional Tregs from WT mice are capable of downregulating anti-MPO antibody production and ameliorate anti-MPO induced glomerulonephritis. These data underscore the importance of functional Tregs for control of autoimmune responses and prevention of end-organ damage due to autoimmunity.
Keyphrases
- multiple sclerosis
- regulatory t cells
- high fat diet induced
- mouse model
- type diabetes
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- drug induced
- transcription factor
- insulin resistance
- high glucose
- machine learning
- toll like receptor
- endothelial cells
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- cell death
- bone marrow
- kidney transplantation