| Literature DB >> 27956529 |
Andrew Marple1,2, Wenhui Wu1,2, Suhagi Shah1,2, Yanlin Zhao1,2, Peicheng Du3, William C Gause1,2, George S Yap4,2.
Abstract
Concurrent helminth infection potently inhibits T cell immunity; however, whether helminthes prevent T cell priming or skew clonal recruitment and effector differentiation is not known. Using coinfection with two natural mouse pathogens, Heligmosomoides polygyrus and Toxoplasma gondii, to investigate the negative impact of helminthes on the CD8 T cell response, we demonstrate helminth-induced suppression of IL-12-dependent differentiation of killer-like receptor G1+ effector CD8 T cells and IFN-γ production. Nevertheless, reversal of helminth suppression of the innate IL-12 response of CD8α+ dendritic cells, which occurred in STAT6-deficient mice, was not sufficient to normalize CD8 T cell differentiation. Instead, a combined deficiency in IL-4 and IL-10 was required to reverse the negative effects of helminth coinfection on the CD8 T cell response. Monoclonal T. gondii-specific CD8 T cells adoptively transferred into coinfected mice recapitulated the spectrum of helminth-induced effects on the polyclonal CD8 T response, indicating the lack of requirement for clonal skewing.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27956529 PMCID: PMC5225035 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422