| Literature DB >> 34009399 |
Julien Catherine1,2, Florence Roufosse3,4.
Abstract
Eosinophilic disorders encompass a large spectrum of heterogeneous diseases sharing the presence of elevated numbers of eosinophils in blood and/or tissues. Among these disorders, the role of eosinophils can vary widely, ranging from a modest participation in the disease process to the predominant perpetrator of tissue damage. In many cases, eosinophilic expansion is polyclonal, driven by enhanced production of interleukin-5, mainly by type 2 helper cells (Th2 cells) with a possible contribution of type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s). Among the key steps implicated in the establishment of type 2 immune responses, leukocyte recruitment toward inflamed tissues is particularly relevant. Herein, the contribution of the chemo-attractant molecule thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC/CCL17) to type 2 immunity will be reviewed. The clinical relevance of this chemokine and its target, C-C chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4), will be illustrated in the setting of various eosinophilic disorders. Special emphasis will be put on the potential diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic implications related to activation of the TARC/CCL17-CCR4 axis.Entities:
Keywords: C-C chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4); CCL17; Eosinophilic disorders; Eosinophils; Hypereosinophilic syndromes; Thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34009399 PMCID: PMC8132044 DOI: 10.1007/s00281-021-00857-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Immunopathol ISSN: 1863-2297 Impact factor: 9.623
Sources and mechanisms of TARC/CCL17 synthesis
| Cellular sources of TARC/CCL17 | Species | Inducer(s) | Inhibitors(s) | Potential intracellular pathways involved | Ref(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monocytes | Human | IL-4, IL-3, GM-CSF | IFN-γ, IL-10 | JAK1/JAK3, STAT6, JMJD3, IRF4 | [ |
| Monocyte-derived DCs | Human | IL-4, GM-CSF | No effect of IFN-γ | [ | |
| Macrophages | Mouse | IL-4, GM-CSF | IFN-γ | [ | |
| M2 macrophages | Human | IL-4, IL-13, RANK engagement | Pan-PI3K inhibitor, no effect of glucocorticoids | PI3K | [ |
| Myeloid DCs | Human, CD11c+ DCs | TSLP, TSLP + RANK or CD40 engagement | / | / | [ |
| Mouse, CD11c+ DCs | TSLP | / | / | [ | |
| IL-33 | / | ERK1/2, JNK, p38 MAPK, | [ | ||
| IL-4, IL-13 | / | STAT6 | [ | ||
| Langerhans cells (skin) | Mouse | TNF-α, IL-4, IL-13 | IFN-γ, GM-CSF | / | [ |
| Monocyte-derived LCs | Human, AD patients | S. aureus extract (PGN) | Histamine H4 receptor antagonist | p38 MAPK | [ |
| Eosinophils | Human, allergic volunteers | IL-4, IL-4+TNFα | / | STAT6, NFκB, MEK, JNK | [ |
| CD3+ T cells | Human, HC | IL-4 | / | STAT6 | [ |
| CD4+CD45RA+ T cells | Human, AA patients | PBMC stimulation with Der f allergen OR with anti-CD3 + CD28 Abs | Anti-CD80 + CD86 Abs | / | [ |
| Keratinocytes | Human | TNF-α + IFN-γb | IL-4, IL-13, TGF-β, Casuarinin, Spinasterol Glc, Allopurinol, Roxithromycin | p38 MAPK, Raf1, JAK2, STAT1, NFκB | [ |
| HDM extract, IL-22 | / | STAT3, ERK, AKT | [ | ||
| Human, Mouse | GITR engagement | / | NFκB | [ | |
| Bronchial epithelial cells | Human | TNF-α + IFN-γ +/- IL-1αb TNF-α + IL-4 + IFN-γb IL-4 alone: weak or no effect | Glucocorticoids, Long-acting β-2 adrenergic agonist | NFκB | [ |
Der p alone IL-4 + TGF-β Der p + IL-4 + TGF-β (highest response) IL-4 alone: no effect | / | ADAM-dependent EGFR phosphorylation, p38 MAPK, ERK1/2, NFκB | [ | ||
| TLR3 ligand poly(I:C)c | / | / | [ | ||
| TWEAK + TGF-β1 during EMT | / | / | [ | ||
| Alveolar epithelial cells | Human | TNF-α or IL-1α alone TNF-α or IL-1α or IFN-γ + IL-4 or IL-13b RSV + IL-4 or IL-13b IL-4/IL-13 alone: no effect | Glucocorticoids | NFκB, STAT6 | [ |
| Nasal epithelial cells | Human, allergic volunteers and HC | TNF-α + IL-4 or IL-13 | / | / | [ |
| Airway smooth muscle cells | Human | IL-4 or IL-13 + TNF-α IL-4/IL-13 alone: no effect | β-adrenergic agonist (isoproterenol), no effect of glucocorticoids | / | [ |
| Dermal endothelial cells | Human | IL-4 or IL-13 + TNF-αIL-4/IL-13 alone: no effect | No effect of glucocorticoids | p38 MAPK, NFκB | [ |
| Dermal fibroblasts | Human | IL-4 or IL-13 + TNF-α (enhanced by IFN-γ) IL-4/IL-13 alone: no effect | No effect of glucocorticoids | / | [ |
Abs antibodies, AD atopic dermatitis, ADAM a disintegrin and metalloproteinase, CD40L CD40 ligand, DC dendritic cells, Der f/p dermatophagoides farinae/pteronyssinus, dsRNA double-stranded ribonucleic acid, EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor, EMT epitheliomesenchymal transition, ERK extracellular signal regulated kinase, GITR(L) glucocorticoid-induced TNFR-related protein (ligand), GM-CSF granulocyte monocyte colony stimulating factor, HC healthy controls, HDM house dust mite, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, IRF interferon regulatory factor, JMJD Jumonji C domain-containing proteins, JNK Janus kinase, LC Langerhans cell, LPS lipopolysaccharide, MAPK mitogen-activated protein kinases, MEK mitogen-activated protein/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase, NFKB nuclear factor-kappa B, PGN peptidoglycans, PI3K phosphoinositide 3-kinase, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell, RANK(L) receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B (ligand), RSV respiratory syncytial virus, STAT signal transducers and activators of transcription, TGF transforming growth factor, TLR toll-like receptor, TNF tumor necrosis factor, TSLP thymic stromal lymphopoietin, TWEAK tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-like weak inducer of apoptosis
aIn this study, macrophages demonstrated a partial M2 phenotype
bA synergistic effect appears when cells are co-stimulated with these agents
cA synthetic analog of viral dsRNA
Fig. 1Identified molecular mechanisms underlying TARC/CCL17 synthesis in selected cell types. Mechanisms involved in induction of TARC/CCL17 synthesis are shown schematically for a human keratinocyte cell lines (HaCaT) and b human monocytes and murine bone marrow–derived macrophages. In HaCaT cells, TNF-α and IFN-γ induce JAK2, p38 MAPK, and Raf-1 activation by phosphorylation after ligation to their dedicated receptors [168, 170]. Subsequently, activated p38 MAPK phosphorylates STAT1 and NFκB, inducing their activation and translocation into the nucleus to trigger TARC/CCL17 synthesis [169]. b In human monocytes and murine macrophages, IL-4 and IL-13-induced phosphorylation and homodimerization of STAT6 (following engagement of both types of IL-4 receptors) triggers TARC/CCL17 expression directly by binding the TARC gene promoter [53, 206]. In addition, activated STAT6 increases transcription of IRF4 and JMJD3, and the latter induces the demethylation of repressive H3K27me3 in the IRF4 promoter region, resulting in enhanced expression of the transcription factor IRF4 that binds directly to the TARC/CCL17 promoter (*the latter mechanism is demonstrated after IL-4 but not IL-13-induction of STAT6) [53]. A similar pathway is involved in GM-CSF-induced TARC/CCL17 transcription, probably through STAT5 activation [52]. Engagement of the type 1 IL-4Rα/common-γ chain heterodimeric receptor by IL-4 also recruits IRS2, inducing its phosphorylation and activation. In turn, IRS2 phosphorylates/activates the PI3K/AKT pathway, ultimately leading to TARC/CCL17 transcription [206]. SOCS1 expression is also induced by IL-4 in healthy human monocytes and has been shown to interact directly with IRS2 and downregulate its activity, through ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation [206]. This figure was created with BioRender.com. IFN interferon, IL interleukin, IRF interferon regulatory factor, IRS insulin receptor substrate, JAK Janus kinase, JMJD3 Jumonji domain-containing protein D3, MAPK mitogen-activated protein kinases, NFκB nuclear factor-kappa B, PI3K phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, STAT signal transducer and activator of transcription, SOCS suppressor of cytokine signaling protein, TNF tumor necrosis factor, TYK tyrosine kinase
Human cells and tissues with demonstrated CCR4 expression
| Cells expressing CCR4 in humans | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Type 2 helper cells (Th2) | [ |
| CLA+ T cells | [ |
| Type 2 polarized CD8+ T cells (Tc2) | [ |
| Regulatory T cells (Tregs) | [ |
| T helper 17 cells (Th17) | [ |
| T helper 22 cells (Th22) | [ |
| Type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) | [ |
| Airway eosinophils (AA patients) | [ |
| Airway mast cells (AA patients) | [ |
| Plasmacytoid DCs (AA patients) | [ |
| Conventional DCs (AA patients) | [ |
| Airway epithelial cells (BEAS-2B, A549 cell lines) | [ |
Eosinophilic disorders with enhanced TARC/CCL17 production
| Disorder | Site/magnitudea of sTARC/CCL17 increase | Principal cellular source of TARC/CCL17 | Correlation(s) of sTARC with other biomarkers/clinical featuresb | Potential clinical implications | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atopic dermatitis | Skin Serum Median 1733 pg/mL (IQR 696–4742) | Epidermal keratinocytes Dermal fibroblasts Endothelial cells Langerhans cells CD1a+ DCs | (+) Score AD index (SCORAD) (+) Six sign AD (SASSAD) (+) Blood eosinophils (+) Serum soluble E-selectin (+) Serum sCD25 | Assessment and monitoring of disease severity Prediction (in most cases) of severe disease course at diagnosis | [ |
| DRESS | Skin Serum Mean 31,259 pg/ml (SEM ±6374) | CD11c+ DCs | (+) Blood eosinophils (+) Serum sCD25 (+) Skin lesions severity | Differentiation with other drug-induced skin reactions (SJS, maculopapular erythema) Association btw higher sTARC/CCL17 and HHV-6 reactivation | [ |
| Bullous pemphigoid | Skin Serum Mean 1151 pg/mL (range, 91–3981) | Epidermal keratinocytes | (+) Blood eosinophils (+) BP Disease Area Index score (+) Urticaria/erythema scores | Disease activity monitoring (earlier elevation than anti-BP180 autoantibodies) | [ |
| Senile erythroderma | Serum Median 6872 pg/ml (IQR: 4303–25,683) (idiopathic group) | Not assessed | (+) Serum IgE | sTARC/IgE ratio higher in chronic idiopathic erythroderma than in AD in elderly > differential diagnosis | [ |
| Allergic asthma | Bronchial epithelium BALF Sputum Serum Mean 271 pg/mL (range 50–1000 pg/mL) | Bronchial epithelial cells M2 macrophages CD11C+ DCs CD4+CD45RA+ T cells Eosinophils | (+) serum MDC & serum eotaxin (+) Serum IgE (inconstant finding) (-) PEFR in children with exacerbated AA | Potential therapeutic target through inhibition of Th2 cells and potentially ILC2 accumulation in airways Combination of sTARC, sCCL26, FeNO and AEC identifies type 2-high asthmatic populationc (PPV 100%, NPV 87%) | [ |
| EGPA | Sinus Serum Mean 1122 pg/mL (SEM ±422.7) | Not assessed (perivascular inflammatory infiltrate) | (+) Serum IgE (+) Blood eosinophils | Correlates with disease severity but does not predict relapse | [ |
ABPA (associated with CF) | Serum Median 589 pg/mL (IQR 465–673) | Not assessed | (+) A. (+) Recombinant A. (–) FEV1 | Differentiation btw ABPA and aspergillus sensitization or colonization in CF Earlier detection of disease onset compared with total IgE kinetics | [ |
| Acute eosinophilic pneumonia | BALF Serum Median 17,907 pg/mL (range 15,533–32,731) | Alveolar DCs Macrophages | (+) TARC/CCL17 in BALF (+) TARC/CCL17 in BALF and CCR4+ CD4 T cells in BALF No correlation with AEC | Highly sensitive and specific for AEP among patients with ALI or ARDS | [ |
| Mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome | Skin Serum Mean 2889 pg/mL (SEM 725.5) (MF, all stages included) | Keratinocytes (MF) | (+) LDH (MF) (+) Serum IgE (MF) (+) Serum sCD25 (MF) (+) MDC (MF) | Assessment of disease progression in MF Targeted treatment: Mogamulizumab, approved for relapsed/refractory MF or SS (improves PFS compared to vorinostat) | [ |
| Adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma | Skin Serum – | Not assessed | – | High (> 285 pg/mL) sTARC/CCL17 associated with unfavorable prognosis Targeted treatment: Mogamulizumab approved for use as add-on to intensive chemotherapy (improves PFS and OS) | [ |
| L-HES | Skin, Serum Median10,855 pg/mL (range 3466–422,787) | DCs ( | No correlation with blood CD3-CD4+ T cell count | Markedly elevated sTARC/CCL17 suggestive of L-HES among patients with F/P- HES sTARC > 3000 pg/ml: 100% sensitivity and 75% specificity (p<0.0001) for CD3-CD4+ L-HES among patients with F/P- HES Predictive of OCS-responsiveness, and suboptimal biological response to mepolizumab | [ |
AA allergic asthma, ABPA allergic broncho-pulmonary aspergillosis, AD atopic dermatitis, AEC absolute eosinophil count, AEP acute eosinophilic pneumonia, ALI acute lung injury, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, BALF bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, btw between, CCL26 CC chemokine 6, CCR4 CC chemokine receptor 4, CF cystic fibrosis, DC dendritic cell, DRESS drug reaction eosinophilia and systemic symptoms, EGPA eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis, FeNO fractional exhaled nitric oxide, FEV forced expiratory volume in one second, F/P Fip 1-like 1 (FIP1L1)/platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRA) fusion gene, HES hypereosinophilic syndrome, HHV-6 human herpes virus 6, IgE ILC2s, type 2 innate lymphoid cells, immunoglobulin E, IQR interquartile range, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, L-HES lymphoid variant HES, MDC macrophage-derived chemokine, MF mycosis fungoides, OCS oral corticosteroid therapy, OS overall survival, PEFR peak expiratory flow rate, PFS progression free survival, Refs references, SEM standard error of the mean, SJS Steven-Johnson syndrome, SS Sezary syndrome, (s)TARC (serum)thymus and activation-regulated chemokine, Th2 cells type 2 helper T cells, sCD25 serum soluble IL-2Ralpha
asTARC in healthy controls: median 243 pg/ml (range 34-973from 143); mean: 220,6 pg/mL (± SEM 27.9 pg/ml)[115]
b(+): positive correlation, (−) negative correlation
cType 2-high status was defined as the mucosal expression of CCL26 gene, periostin gene and a multigene IL-13 in vitro signature
Clinical trials evaluating anti-CCR4 agents in healthy subjects, non-malignant and malignant disorders
| NCT number | Subjects/disease | Agent/drug class | Phase | Status | Results’ summarya |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-malignant disorders | |||||
| NCT01371812 | HC | GSK2239633/small molecule | Phase I | Terminated | Low CCR4 blockade with the highest dose, not considered to be sufficiently effective for further development [ |
| NCT01514981 | AA | AMG 761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase I | Terminated | Prematurely terminated, frequent cutaneous side effects (not severe) (8 events in 18 subjects) |
| NCT04271514 | AD and HC | RPT193/small molecule | Phase I | Recruiting | – |
| Malignant disorders | |||||
| NCT00888927 | Previously treated CTCL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase I/II | Terminated | No dose-limiting toxicity was observed. Among 38 evaluable patients, ORR was 36.8% [ |
| NCT01728805 | Relapsed or refractory CTCL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase III | Terminated | Higher PFS in KW-0761 vs vorinostat group (median 7.7 months [95% CI 5.7–10.3] vs 3.1 months [2.9–4.1] respectively) [ |
| NCT00355472 | Relapsed ATLL or PTCL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase I | Terminated | No dose-limiting toxicity was observed. |
| NCT01192984 | Relapsed or refractory peripheral T/NK-cell Lymphoma | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase II | Terminated | ORR was 35% (95% CI, 20% to 53%), median PFS was 3.0 months (95% CI, 1.6 to 4.9 months) [ |
| NCT01611142 | Relapsed or refractory PTCL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase II | Terminated | ORR was 11.4% (95% CI: 3.2–26.7%), disease control (SD or better) rate was 45.7% [ |
| NCT00920790 | Relapsed ATLL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase II | Terminated | ORR was 50% (95% CI, 30–70%), median PFS was 5.2 months and median OS 13.7 months [ |
| NCT01626664 | Relapsed or refractory ATLL | KW-0761/MoAb (mogamulizumab) | Phase II | Terminated | ORR was 14.9% in the KW-0761 group vs 0% with IC regimen [ |
| NCT03602157 | Relapsed or refractory CD30+ Hodgkin Lymphoma and Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma | CAR-T Cells Expressing CD30, CAR and CCR4 | Phase I | Recruiting | – |
AA allergic asthma, AD atopic dermatitis, ATLL adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma, CAR chimeric antigen receptor, CTCL cutaneous T cell lymphoma, HC healthy controls, IC investigator choice, MoAb monoclonal antibody, ORR overall response rate, PTCL peripheral T cell lymphoma, SD stable disease
aIf no citation indicated, data were collected from clinicaltrials.gov