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Immune regulation: Linking integrins, TGFbeta and autoimmunity

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Loss of alphaVbeta8 integrin in dendritic cells (DCs) results in severe inflammatory bowel disease and autoimmunity in mice, indicating an important role for alphaVbeta8 in the prevention of immune dysfunction.

Transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta), partly through its induction of regulatory T cells, has a crucial role in maintaining immune homeostasis. However, TGFbeta must be activated to exert its regulatory effects, and the exact mechanisms involved in its activation and function in vivo are controversial. Now, Travis and colleagues show that the loss of TGFbeta-activating alphaVbeta8-integrin in dendritic cells (DCs) results in severe inflammatory bowel disease and autoimmunity in mice, indicating an important role for alphaVbeta8-integrin in the prevention of immune dysfunction.

Previous studies have shown that the complete loss of beta8-integrin (encoded by Itgb8) expression in mice is lethal, so the authors generated mice with a conditional deletion of Itgb8 in leukocytes. By 10 months of age, all surviving mice developed severe colitis and had high levels of circulating autoantibodies. These mice also had higher numbers of peripheral activated or memory T cells that expressed interleukin-4 and interferon-gamma, and increased serum IgE, IgA and IgG1 levels compared with control mice. The phenotype of these mice is almost identical to the phenotype of mice that lack key elements of the TGFbeta signalling pathway, indicating that alphaVbeta8-integrin has an important role in activating TGFbeta in vivo.

To identify the exact subset of leukocytes involved, mice were generated that specifically lacked beta8-integrin expression in T cells or in DCs. Mice with a conditional loss of beta8-integrin expression in T cells were phenotypically indistinguishable from control mice, whereas mice with a conditional loss of beta8-integrin expression in DCs were identical to mice that lacked beta8-integrin expression in all leukocytes. Further in vitro analysis showed that although the lack of beta8-integrin expression did not affect the maturation of DCs, the ability of these DCs to convert CD4+ T cells into regulatory T cells — as determined by their expression of forkhead box P3 (FOXP3)— was greatly reduced. However, the addition of active TGFbeta to in vitro co-cultures restored the induction of regulatory T cells by beta8-integrin-deficient DCs. Interestingly, the percentage of FOXP3+ regulatory T cells in the spleens of mice with beta8-integrin-deficient DCs was the same as that in control mice. However, there was a 50% reduction in the percentage of regulatory T cells in colonic lamina propria of these deficient mice relative to control mice.

Taken together, the data indicate an important role for alphaVbeta8-integrin-mediated TGFbeta activation and the subsequent induction of regulatory T cells in the maintenance of immune homeostasis in the colon, disruption of which results in autoimmunity and inflammatory bowel disease.


Olive Leavy

References

  1. Travis, M. A. et al. Loss of integrin alphaVbeta8 on dendritic cells causes autoimmunity and colitis in mice. Nature 449, 361–365 (2007)Article | PubMed |

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