| Literature DB >> 30406499 |
Jakub Ruszkowski1, Katarzyna A Lisowska2, Małgorzata Pindel2, Zbigniew Heleniak3, Alicja Dębska-Ślizień3, Jacek M Witkowski2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN), the most frequent cause of primary glomerulonephritis worldwide, is an autoimmune disease with complex pathogenesis. In this review, we focus on T cells and summarize knowledge about their involvement in pathophysiology and treatment of IgANEntities:
Keywords: Glomerulonephritis; IgA nephropathy; T lymphocytes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30406499 PMCID: PMC6394565 DOI: 10.1007/s10157-018-1665-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Nephrol ISSN: 1342-1751 Impact factor: 2.801
Changes in T cell subpopulations and serum cytokine concentrations in the peripheral blood of patients with IgA nephropathy
| T cell subpopulation | Alterations compared with | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy control | Other CKD as a control | ||
| Th1 | |||
| % in PBL | ↓/N | n.d. | [ |
| IFN-γ | ↓/↑ | n.d. | [ |
| IL-2 | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| Th2 | |||
| % in PBL | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| IL-4 | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| IL-5 | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| IL-6 | ↑ | n.d | [ |
| Th17 | |||
| % in PBL | ↑ | ↑ | [ |
| IL-17A | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| Th22 | |||
| % in PBL | ↑ | ↑ | [ |
| IL-22 | ↑ | ↑ | [ |
| Tfh | |||
| % in PBL | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| IL-21 | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
| Tc | |||
| % in PBL | N | n.d | [ |
| Treg | |||
| Treg % in PBL | ↓ | n.d | [ |
| Activated Treg % in PBL | ↓ | n.d. | [ |
| Resting Treg % in PBL | N | n.d. | [ |
| iTreg % in PBL | ↓ | n.d. | [ |
| nTreg % in PBL | N | n.d. | [ |
| IL-10 | ↓/↑ | n.d. | [ |
| TGF-β1 | ↑/N/↓ | n.d. | [ |
| γδ T cells | |||
| % in PBL | ↑ | n.d. | [ |
Disagreement in literature was shown using slash
CKD chronic kidney disease, PBL peripheral blood lymphocytes, ↑ increased versus control, ↓ decreased versus control, N unchanged versus control
Fig. 1Involvement of T cells and their cytokines in posttranslational modification of IgA1 hinge region. The process starts with addition of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) to serine or threonine located in hinge region. Physiologically the process is continued by active C1GALT1, which adds galactose to GalNAc. Addition of sialic acid by ST6GALNAC2 prevents further galactosylation of GalNAc. In IgAN, IL-4 (Th2-type interleukin), IL-17 (Th17-type interleukin) and TGF-β are associated with decreased expression of C1GALT1 and its chaperon (C1GALT1C1). Additionally, IL-6 increases expression of ST6GALNAC2 and decreases expression of C1GALT1. All mentioned cytokines stimulate production of Gd-IgA1. Violet arrays—epigenetic mode of action; black arrays—unknown mode of action
Fig. 2Involvement of T cells and their interleukins in the pathogenesis of IgAN. a Mucosal infection can stimulate the immune system to produce various cytokines, which beside participation in immune response against infection, may participate in the IgAN pathophysiology. IL-21 (Tfh-type interleukin) enhances IgA1 production and might participate in stimulation of anti-Gd-IgA1 production. IL-4 (Th2-type interleukin) and TGF-β enhance both IgA1 production and IgA1 glycosylation alteration. Both numerically and functionally deficient iTreg population cannot effectively suppress the defective immune response leading to formation of immune complexes. All these processes lead to the formation of circulating immune complexes. b Deposition of circulating immune complexes in glomeruli results in many pathological processes—such as T cells infiltration—that initiate and exacerbate the glomerulonephritis. Additionally, infection might result in hematuria through stimulation of transendothelial migration of cytotoxic effector cells (Tc and γδ T cells) from circulation to glomeruli. Solid and dashed lines represent confirmed and hypothetical links, respectively
Correlations between immunological and clinical features among IgAN patients
| Clinical feature | Immunological feature | Coefficient of determination ( | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Severity of 24-h proteinuria | Tonsillar Th1/Th2 ratio | 0.6162 | [ |
| miR-155 level in PBMC | 0.5270 | [ | |
| Serum IL-21 | 0.4755 | [ | |
| Frequency of activated Tregs | 0.3364 | [ | |
| Serum IL-17A | 0.1225 | [ | |
| Severity of 24-h albuminuria | sIL-2Ra level | 0.0576 | [ |
| Estimated GFR | Frequency of activated Treg | 0.4624 | [ |
| Tfh cells | 0.2824 | [ |
The power of clinical severity determination is represented by coefficient of determination (r2)
Proposed T-cell-dependent targets of biological therapeutics
| Target | Mechanism of action | Drug |
|---|---|---|
| IL-4 | Neutralization of IL-4 | Pascolizumab |
| IL-4R/IL-13R | Antagonism of IL‑4/IL-13 receptor | Dupilumab, Pitakinra |
| IL-5 | Neutralization of IL-5 | Mepolizumab |
| IL-6 | Neutralization of IL-6 | Sirukumab |
| IL-6R | Antagonism of IL‑6 receptor | Tocilizumab |
| IL-12, IL-23 | Inhibition of Th1 and Th17 differentiation through p40 inhibition | Ustekinumab |
| IL-17A | Neutralization of IL-17A | Secukinumab |
| IL-21 | Neutralization of IL-21 | NNC0114-0006 |
| IL-22 | Neutralization of IL-22 | Fezakinumab |
| TGF-β | Neutralization of TGF-β | Fresolimumab |
| TGF-βR | Antagonism of TGF-β receptor | Galunisertib |