| Literature DB >> 21295337 |
Marc Pellegrini1, Thomas Calzascia, Jesse G Toe, Simon P Preston, Amy E Lin, Alisha R Elford, Arda Shahinian, Philipp A Lang, Karl S Lang, Michel Morre, Brigitte Assouline, Katharina Lahl, Tim Sparwasser, Thomas F Tedder, Ji-Hye Paik, Ronald A DePinho, Sameh Basta, Pamela S Ohashi, Tak W Mak.
Abstract
Understanding the factors that impede immune responses to persistent viruses is essential in designing therapies for HIV infection. Mice infected with LCMV clone-13 have persistent high-level viremia and a dysfunctional immune response. Interleukin-7, a cytokine that is critical for immune development and homeostasis, was used here to promote immunity toward clone-13, enabling elucidation of the inhibitory pathways underlying impaired antiviral immune response. Mechanistically, IL-7 downregulated a critical repressor of cytokine signaling, Socs3, resulting in amplified cytokine production, increased T cell effector function and numbers, and viral clearance. IL-7 enhanced thymic output to expand the naive T cell pool, including T cells that were not LCMV specific. Additionally, IL-7 promoted production of cytoprotective IL-22 that abrogated liver pathology. The IL-7-mediated effects were dependent on endogenous IL-6. These attributes of IL-7 have profound implications for its use as a therapeutic in the treatment of chronic viral diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21295337 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2011.01.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582