Immune responses in healthy and allergic individuals are characterized by a fine balance between allergen-specific T regulatory 1 and T helper 2 cells

M Akdis, J Verhagen, A Taylor, F Karamloo… - The Journal of …, 2004 - rupress.org
M Akdis, J Verhagen, A Taylor, F Karamloo, C Karagiannidis, R Crameri, S Thunberg
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2004rupress.org
The mechanisms by which immune responses to nonpathogenic environmental antigens
lead to either allergy or nonharmful immunity are unknown. Single allergen-specific T cells
constitute a very small fraction of the whole CD4+ T cell repertoire and can be isolated from
the peripheral blood of humans according to their cytokine profile. Freshly purified interferon-
γ–, interleukin (IL)-4–, and IL-10–producing allergen-specific CD4+ T cells display
characteristics of T helper cell (Th) 1-, Th2-, and T regulatory (Tr) 1–like cells, respectively …
The mechanisms by which immune responses to nonpathogenic environmental antigens lead to either allergy or nonharmful immunity are unknown. Single allergen-specific T cells constitute a very small fraction of the whole CD4+ T cell repertoire and can be isolated from the peripheral blood of humans according to their cytokine profile. Freshly purified interferon-γ–, interleukin (IL)-4–, and IL-10–producing allergen-specific CD4+ T cells display characteristics of T helper cell (Th)1-, Th2-, and T regulatory (Tr)1–like cells, respectively. Tr1 cells consistently represent the dominant subset specific for common environmental allergens in healthy individuals; in contrast, there is a high frequency of allergen-specific IL-4–secreting T cells in allergic individuals. Tr1 cells use multiple suppressive mechanisms, IL-10 and TGF-β as secreted cytokines, and cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 and programmed death 1 as surface molecules. Healthy and allergic individuals exhibit all three allergen-specific subsets in different proportions, indicating that a change in the dominant subset may lead to allergy development or recovery. Accordingly, blocking the suppressor activity of Tr1 cells or increasing Th2 cell frequency enhances allergen-specific Th2 cell activation ex vivo. These results indicate that the balance between allergen-specific Tr1 cells and Th2 cells may be decisive in the development of allergy.
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