| Literature DB >> 30035131 |
Daria Vdovenko1, Urs Eriksson1,2.
Abstract
Myocarditis is an important cause of heart failure in young patients. Autoreactive, most often, infection-triggered CD4+ T cells were confirmed to be critical for myocarditis induction. Due to a defect in clonal deletion of heart-reactive CD4+ T cells in the thymus of mice and humans, significant numbers of heart-specific autoreactive CD4+ T cells circulate in the blood. Normally, regulatory T cells maintain peripheral tolerance and prevent spontaneous myocarditis development. In the presence of tissue damage and innate immune activation, however, activated self-antigen-loaded dendritic cells promote CD4+ effector T cell expansion and myocarditis. So far, a direct pathogenic role has been described for both activated Th17 and Th1 effector CD4+ T cell subsets, though Th1 effector T cell-derived interferon-gamma was shown to limit myocarditis severity and prevent transition to inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy. Interestingly, recent observations point out that various CD4+ T cell subsets demonstrate high plasticity in maintaining immune homeostasis and modulating disease phenotypes in myocarditis. These subsets include Th1 and Th17 effector cells and regulatory T cells, despite the fact that there are still sparse and controversial data on the specific role of FOXP3-expressing Treg in myocarditis. Understanding the specific roles of these T cell populations at different stages of the disease progression might provide a key for the development of successful therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30035131 PMCID: PMC6032977 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4396351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Role of CD4+ T cells in myocarditis. Break of central tolerance: CD4+ T cells undergo maturation and selection in the thymus. Due to a defect in negative selection, α-MyHC-specific CD4+ T cells do not undergo anergy or apoptosis and are released to the periphery. Break of peripheral tolerance: Inflammation results in activation of α-MyHC-loaded DCs which upregulate MHC II-peptide complexes as well as costimulatory molecules on the surface and migrate to the draining lymph nodes, where they interact with circulating T cells. Activated through the TCR meeting cognate peptide and upon costimulation with CD28, naive heart-specific T cells differentiate to effector T cells entering the heart.