| Literature DB >> 15380036 |
Jane H Buckner1, Steven F Ziegler.
Abstract
The immune system has evolved a variety of mechanisms to achieve and maintain tolerance both centrally and in the periphery. Central tolerance is achieved through negative selection of autoreactive T cells, while peripheral tolerance is achieved primarily via three mechanisms: activation-induced cell death, anergy, and the induction of regulatory T cells. Three forms of these regulatory T cells have been described: those that function via the production of the cytokine IL-10 (T regulatory 1 cells), transforming growth factor beta (Th3 cells), and a population of T cells that suppresses proliferation via a cell-contact-dependent mechanism (CD4+CD25+ TR cells). The present review focuses on the third form of peripheral tolerance - the induction of regulatory T cells. The review will address the induction of the three types of regulatory T cells, the mechanisms by which they suppress T-cell responses in the periphery, the role they play in immune homeostasis, and the potential these cells have as therapeutic agents in immune-mediated disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15380036 PMCID: PMC546291 DOI: 10.1186/ar1226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Cytokine expression profiles of the three classes of regulatory T cells
| Cytokine expressed | Th3 cells | T regulatory 1 cells | CD4+CD25+ TR cells |
| Interferon gamma | +/- | + | - |
| IL-4 | +/- | - | - |
| Transforming growth factor beta | +++ | ++ | +/- |
| IL-10 |
The production of cytokine is indicated as absent (-) or present (+) with relative quantities of cytokine indicated by +/- < + < ++ < +++.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the fate of CD4 T cells at a localized site of inflammation. Naïve or memory CD4+CD25- T cells are recruited to the site, then become activated upon exposure to antigen and co-stimulation. These cells proliferate and become CD4 T effectors. Activation also induces a subset of CD4+CD25- T cells to upregulate CD25 and FoxP3 and acquire CD25+CD4+ (TR) cell function. These cells may result from activation at the initiation of the response or, more probably, as the response matures. As antigen and IL-2 is depleted, effector T cells undergo activation induced cell death, TR cells lead to the induction of T regulator 1 (Tr1) cells and Th3 cells, which feed back to inhibit inflammation, and the TR cells inhibit proliferation of antigen-specific and bystander T cells. This results in a small number of CD4+ T cells surviving, which persist as memory T cells.