| Literature DB >> 23983771 |
Sheng Chen1, Haijian Wu, Damon Klebe, Yuan Hong, Jianmin Zhang, Jiping Tang.
Abstract
Stroke is a common, debilitating trauma that has an incompletely elucidated pathophysiology and lacks an effective therapy. FoxP3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress a variety of normal physiological and pathological immune responses via several pathways, such as inhibitory cytokine secretion, direct cytolysis induction, and antigen-presenting cell functional modulation. FoxP3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) Tregs are involved in a variety of central nervous system diseases and injuries, including axonal injury, neurodegenerative diseases, and stroke. Specifically, FoxP3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) Tregs exert neuroprotective effects in acute experimental stroke models. These beneficial effects, however, are difficult to elucidate. In this review, we summarized evidence of FoxP3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) Tregs as potentially important immunomodulators in stroke pathogenesis and highlight further investigations for possible immunotherapeutic strategies by modulating the quantity and/or functional effects of FoxP3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) Tregs in stroke patients.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23983771 PMCID: PMC3747621 DOI: 10.1155/2013/689827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Figure 1FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs in the pathogenesis of stroke. Both natural and induced FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs migrate into the brain parenchyma after stroke. The functional roles of FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs in modulation of neuroinflammation after stroke, including (1) secreting anti-inflammatory cytokines to decrease proinflammatory cytokines in periphery and brain, such as transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) and interleukin-10 (IL-10); (2) reducing Matrix metallopeptidase 9 (MMM-9) to prevent blood-brain barrier disruption; (3) suppressing effector T cell both in periphery and brain; (4) inhibiting the activation of microglia. FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs suppress the detrimental inflammatory responses after stroke.
Main findings of FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs in the pathogenesis of stroke.
| Species | Model | Main findings | Authors |
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| C57BL/6J mice | Transient MCAO (90 minutes) | Splenic atrophy; an increased percentage of FoxP3+CD4+ Tregs in blood and spleen | Offner et al. (2006) [ |
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| C57/BL6 mice | Transient MCAO (60 minutes) | Accumulation of FoxP3+ lymphocytes in the ischemic hemisphere; a high percentage of FoxP3+CD4+ and FoxP3+CD8+ lymphocytes in splenic T-lymphocytes | Gelderblom et al. (2009) [ |
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| C57BL/6 mice; Rag1−/− mice; IL-10 knockout mice | Transient MCAO (30 minutes or 90 minutes) | Neuroprotective effects of FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs: inhibit inflammatory brain damage, restrain secondary infarct expansion, and attenuate functional neurological deficit; IL-10 signal pathway is essential for their immunomodulatory effect | Liesz et al. (2009) [ |
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| 46 consecutive acute stroke patients | Clinical study | Increased apoptosis and a decline of FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs poststroke; decreased FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs did not show a correlation with the development of infection or stroke outcome | Urra et al. (2009) [ |
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| 67 subjects (25 of them with acute ischemic stroke) | Clinical study | Increased number of CD25+CD4+ Tregs in the peripheral blood | Yan et al. (2009) [ |
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| CB-17 mice; SCID mice | Permanent MCAO | Deleption of CD25+ T cells suppressed generation of neural stem/progenitor cells and impaired functional recovery | Saino et al. (2010) [ |
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| C57BL/6 mice; 22 patients with acute ischemic stroke | Transient MCAO (90 minutes); an | The suppressive effect of Tregs in the mouse and humans is unaltered poststroke and reduced efficacy of circulating costimulatory cells after MCAO | Hug et al. (2011) [ |
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| FoxP3DTR mice | Transient MCAO (60 minutes) | FoxP3+CD4+ Tregs depletion did not affect stroke infarct volume | Ren et al. (2011) [ |
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| 700 subjects | Clinical study | No correlation between low levels of circulating FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs and an increased risk for the development of stroke | Wigren et al. (2012) [ |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | Transient MCAO (120 minutes) | Adoptively transferred CD25+CD4+ Tregs ameliorated neuroinflammation, reduced brain infarct, and improved both short- and long-term neurological functions after cerebral ischemia; CD25+CD4+ Tregs reduce brain infarct size via BBB protection involving inhibition of neutrophil-derived MMP-9 production | Li et al. (2013) [ |
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| DEREG mice; C57BL/6 wild-type mice; Rag1−/− mice | Transient MCAO (30 minutes or 60 minutes) | FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs strongly promoted acute ischemic stroke in mice by inducing dysfunction of the cerebral microvasculature; established immunoregulatory effects of FoxP3+CD4+ Tregs had no functional relevance | Kleinschnitz et al. (2013) [ |
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| FoxP3EGFP reporter mice; RAG1−/− mice; C57BL/6J mice | Transient MCAO (30 minutes) | A strong accumulation and proliferation of FoxP3+CD25+CD4+ Tregs in the ischemic hemisphere in late phase (peaked around days 14 and up to days 30); delayed depletion of CD25+ Tregs does not worsen long-term outcome | Stubbe et al. (2013) [ |
MCAO: middle cerebral artery occlusion; MMP-9: Matrix metallopeptidase 9; BBB: blood-brain barrier; Tregs: regulatory T-cells.