IL-10
is a multipurpose cytokine. The research suggest IL-10 dampens immune
response. Many cell types including T cells, B cells or macrophages
produce IL-10. IL-10 receptor is made of two subunits, alpha and
beta. Alpha subunit is specific for IL-10 and beta subunit is shared
with other cytokines, for example IL-22. Since many cell types
produce and sense IL-10, it is not immediately clear how redundant is
IL-10 system. The animal model mostly used to test the role of IL-10
is an equivalent of human inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). These
studies showed that IL-10 played critical role in “educating”
immune system to tolerate the presence of gut microbiota. IL-10KO
mice develop spontaneous IBD. However, germ-free IL-10KO mice has no
IBD.
Recently,
two back to back studies published in Immunity try to explain
mechanistically how exactly IL-10 prevents IBD.
First
study came from Steffen Jung's lab (1). In my opinion, this particular
paper is very simple and it is unlikely it would have been accepted
for publication in Immunity by itself. I will highlight only the most
relevant data from this study.
First,
the authors showed that in the absence of IL-10 gut resident
macrophages, identified as CX3CR1-GFP positive cells, adopt
pro-inflammatory phenotype. This is expected.
Next,
the authors generated gut macrophage-specific IL-10 or IL-10Ralpha
deficient mice by crossing CX3CR1-cre mice to IL-10 fl/fl
or IL-10Ralpha fl/fl mice.
Interestingly,
CX3CR1-cre IL-10 fl/fl mice
develop normally and did not show any sign of IBD. This suggested
that gut macrophage-derived IL-10 is dispensable for protection
against IBD. This is a new finding.
However,
CX3CR1-cre IL-10Ralpha
fl/fl mice developed
IBD, similar to total IL-10KO mice. This suggested that sensing of
IL-10 by gut macrophage was essential for protection against IBD.
This is a new and unexpected finding.
The
most obvious weakness of this paper is the direct use of KO mice
without adoptive transfer experiments. Since CX3CR1 can be expressed
by other cell types (Dendritic cells, T cells), CX3CR1-cre
IL-10Ralpha fl/fl mice
phenotype could have been affected by function of non-macrophage
population.
Luckily,
second paper (2) from Scott Snapper's Lab provided necessary data to
fill the holes in the story. It contains enormous amount of data. I
will highlight the most important findings.
The
authors showed that IL-10Rbeta KO mice develop IBD. However, RAG2 KO
/ IL-10Rbeta KO mice lacking T and B cells are healthy. This suggests
that presence of adaptive immune system is required for IBD
development in IL-10Rbeta KO mice.
Next,
the authors showed that adoptive transfer of wild-type (WT) total T
cells into RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta KO mice drives IBD. This suggests
that IL-10 signaling defect in non-T cells (innate system, other
tissues) system drives IBD.
Next,
to further narrow down IL-10 signaling defect that drives IBD, the
authors generated bone-marrow (BM) chimeric mice by reconstituting
lethally irradiated RAG2 KO or RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta KO mice with RAG2
KO or RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta KO BM. Upon transfer of total WT T cells,
only mice with hematopoietic cells derived from RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta
KO BM developed IBD. This definitely showed IL-10 signaling defect in
innate immune system drives IBD.
The
authors also conducted several in vitro experiments and showed that
transfer of WT BM-derived macrophages generated in M2 polarizing
condition could prevent IBD development in RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta KO
recipient mice following T cells transfer, whereas transfer of
IL-10Rbeta KO BM-derived macrophages failed to do the same.
Next,
the authors showed that adoptive transfer of total WT CD4 T cells
into RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta mice leads to fewer Foxp3-positive T cell
generation in lamina propria (LP) compared to RAG2 KO recipient mice.
One
unusual result was the evidence that exogenous supplementation with
IL-10 following transfer of WT CD4 T cells failed to prevent IBD
development in RAG2 KO / IL-10Rbeta recipient mice.
In
summary, we can imagine the following scenario how IL-10 prevents
IBD: first, gut microbiota is internalized by gut dendritic cells or
gut macrophages and presented to T cells (either to naive T cells or
thymus derived Foxp3+ T cells). Second, this process generates local
pool of regulatory T cells that secrete IL-10 and conditions local
innate system or specifically macrophages to adopt anti-inflammatory
phenotype. In absence of this feedback, however, macrophages acquire
pro-inflammatory phenotype, overrides regulatory T cell effect and
drives IBD through generation of colitogenic effector T cells. Of
course, the question how initial T cells “know” to secrete IL-10
to condition gut macrophages is unclear.
David
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