Mechanisms regulating dysfunctional T cell responses in large vessel vasculitis Pubblico

Piggott, Kisha Deslee (2010)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/6h440s637?locale=it
Published

Abstract

Giant cell arteritis (GCA), the most common vasculitis in the Western world, is an inflammatory vasculopathy that preferentially targets the aorta and its extracranial branches. Immune-mediated tissue injury of arteries supplying the head, neck and upper extremities leads to severe and life-threatening complications such as blindness, stroke, and aortic aneurysm. Vasculitic lesions are transmural granulomatous infiltrates composed of CD4 T cells and highly activated macrophages. Immune-mediated damage of the vessel wall results in intimal hyperplasia, luminal occlusion and tissue ischemia. The immune response in the vessel wall is initiated by a tissue-resident population of vascular dendritic cells (vDC). CD4 T cells are key regulators of this response and differentiate into vasculitic T cells after being instructed by vascular DC. Pathogenic T-cell responses are guided and shaped by the unique environment of the blood vessel wall, but the distinctive pathways driving DC-T cell interactions are yet to be fully elucidated. An exploration of unique accessory receptor-ligand pairs assigned a critical role to the Notch-Notch ligand pathway in the initiation and sustenance of large vessel vasculitis. Notch signaling components are elevated in peripheral blood of GCA patients and in tissue biopsies of affected temporal arteries. Notch signaling inhibition resulted in repressed cellular responses, decreasing CD4 T cell activation markers and T-cell proliferation. Both IL-17-producing and IFN-γ-producing T cells are expanded in GCA patients, suggesting that disease-relevant T cells originate from two distinct functional lineages. The in vivo relevance of Notch-dependent T cell responses in vascular inflammation was tested in a humanized mouse model in which human arteries are engrafted into immuno-deficient mice and human T cells are adoptively transferred. Blocking of the Notch pathway through the γ-secretase inhibitor N-[N-(3,5-difluorophenacetyl)-l-alanyl]-S-phenylglycine t-butyl ester (DAPT) led to a significant decrease in T-cell recruitment and formation of vascular wall infiltrates. Disruption of Notch signaling inhibited in situ T-cell activation, differentially downregulating IFN-γ and IL-17 production. T cells secreting the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-17 appeared more dependent on Notch signaling than those releasing IFN-γ. In essence, disrupting Notch activation has profound immunosuppressive effects, indicating that Notch pathway modulation may provide novel therapeutic opportunities for large vessel vasculitis

Table of Contents



Table of Contents

2
Chapter One/Introduction
5 Figure 1.1. Innate and adaptive immune responses lead to vascular damage in
GCA
9 Figure 1.2. Vascular DC shape the arrangement and composition of T cell
responses in the arterial wall
17 Figure 1.3. Co-signaling overview
22 Figure 1.4. Notch signaling pathway
32 Figure 1.5. Immune cells and vessel wall cells collaborate in mediating vascular
damage in GCA
35 Table 1. The spectrum of cells and mechanisms involved in vessel wall damage
in large vessel vasculitis

38 Chapter Two/ TLR-mediated induction of negative regulatory ligands on
dendritic cells

50 Figure 2.1. TLR3 stimulation reduces the ability of DC to induce T-cell
proliferation
53 Figure 2.2. TLR3 and TLR4 ligands are equally competent at inducing DC
maturation and cytokine production
56 Figure 2.3. Induction of T-cell unresponsiveness by poly(I:C)-treated DC is not
dependent on soluble factors
59 Figure 2.4. Poly(I:C) stimulation preferentially induces the co-inhibitory ligand
PD-L1
62 Figure 2.5. TLR4 stimulation cannot revert the TLR3-mediated induction of the
inhibitory ligand PD-L1
65 Figure 2.6. Blockade of PD-L1 restores CD4 T-cell proliferation
69 Figure 2.7. TLR3-stimulated DC enhance SHP-2 phosphorylation in CD4 T
cells downstream of PD-1/PD-L1 interaction

78 Chapter Three/ Blocking the Notch Pathway Inhibits Vascular Inflammation
in Large Vessel Vasculitis

92 Figure 3.1. Activated Notch1 is abundant in GCA arteries
96 Figure 3.2. Expression of Notch1 receptor and the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-
17 and IFN-γ by peripheral T cells in GCA
98 Figure 3.3. T cell activation enhances Notch1 surface expression
101 Figure 3.4. Notch blockade dampens T cell responses
105 Figure 3.5. γ-secretase treatment suppresses vessel wall inflammation
109 Figure 3.6. Soluble Jagged1 ligand inhibits T cell activation and abrogates vessel
wall inflammation
113 Figure 3.7. Notch inhibition attenuates ongoing T cell inflammatory responses in
the vessel wall




119
Chapter Four/ Notch signaling preferentially regulates the IL-17 pathway
128
Figure 4.1. IL-17 and IFN-γ production by CD4 T cells are differentially affected
by Notch inhibition
132 Figure 4.2. Notch signaling regulates CD4 T cells committed to the Th17 pathway
136 Figure 4.3. Dendritic cell function is unaffected by γ-secretase inhibition
139 Figure 4.4. Notch1 co-signaling enhances activation of the STAT3 pathway

145 Chapter Five/Summary

156
References

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