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INFLAMMATION/IMMUNITY/MEDIATORS
1Molecular Biology Institute, 2Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles; and 3La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, San Diego, California
Submitted 5 March 2008 ; accepted in final form 7 July 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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i2–/– T cells into immune-deficient mice. Disease activity in G
i2–/– T cell recipients was evaluated by CD4+ T intestinal lymphocyte abundance, cytokine production levels, and large intestine histology. B cells deficient in B7.1/B7.2, CD40, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II (Abb), or native B cell antigen receptor (MD4) were competent for colitis protection. However, transporter-1-deficient B cells failed to protect, indicating a requirement for peptide MHC I presentation to CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T cells deficient in native T cell receptor repertoire (OT-1) or cytolysis (perforin–/–) also were nonprotective. These finding reveal an integrated role for antigen-specific perforin-dependent CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity in colitis immunoregulatory and its efficient induction by a subset of mesenteric B lymphocytes.
CD8-positive T lymphocytes; B lymphocytes; immunoregulation; inflammatory bowel disease; cytolysis
Previous work has uncovered a role for B cells in suppressing colitis associated with TCR-
–/– mice (46), through IL-10 and CD1d-dependent processes (47, 60). Similarly, in models with TH1 or TH17 colitis (CD4+CD45RBhi or G
i2–/– T cells), B cells conferred protection (67) and also were shown to require IL-10 sufficiency (66). The exact cellular target of B cells in these regulatory responses to colitis remains uncertain. In TCR-
–/– mice, B cell protection was independent of B cell major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II, suggesting the absence of cognate interaction with CD4+ T cells. In CD4+ CD45RBhi and G
i2–/– T cell settings, B cell protection required the presence of CD8+ T cells. These findings point to a protective mechanism in colitis distinct from regulatory CD4+ T cells, possibly involving recruitment of regulatory CD8+ T cells. Human studies have identified regulatory CD8+ T cells induced by intestinal epithelial cells and MHC 1b molecules, and defects in this interaction are a feature of some patients with IBD (1, 9, 52).
In the present study, we used genetic methods to examine the requirements for B cell immunoregulation in the G
i2–/– T cell colitis. The results revealed that B cells function primarily as class I antigen presentation cells, to induce antigen-specific CD8+ regulatory T cells that act via a cytotoxic mechanism. These observations highlight a novel cytotoxic regulatory function of CD8+ T cells in the attenuation of a murine model of TH1/TH17 colitis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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-chain (
c–/–)/Rag-2 double knockout (DKO) mice were obtained from Taconic (Hudson, NY). G
i2–/– (56) mice (B6/129Sv background) were bred at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Department of Laboratory and Animal Medicine. OT-1 (30) transgenic mice on C57BL/6 RAG–/– background were a gift from Dr. Carrie Miceli (UCLA), and C57BL/6 CD1d–/– (58) mice were a gift from Dr. Mitchell Kronenberg (La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology).
Mice were housed in specific pathogen-free conditions with sterilized cages, bedding, rodent chow (egg-free), and water. All RAG–/– recipients and B cell donors were age-matched females 6–12 wk old. G
i2–/– T cells donors were either male or female and were at least 6 wk old when colitis was observed and cells harvested for transfer. All procedures involving animals were performed under approved protocols of the UCLA Animal Research Committee.
Cell isolation. Spleen cells were isolated by tissue grinding between two frosted slides, filtering, and erythrocyte lysis. To isolate small and large intestine superficial villous lymphocytes, Peyer's patches were removed from intestinal tissues and the intestines tubes were washed and cut into 1-cm segments and then incubated with 1 mM dithiothreitol (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in DMEM at 37°C for 40 min shaking at 220 rpm. Lymphocytes were enriched by use of a discontinuous 40%:70% Percoll gradient (MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH).
Flow cytometry.
Isolated cells (1 x 106) were stained with antibodies against cell surface markers for 30 min and then washed and fixed in 200 µl PBS containing 2% paraformaldehyde. Intracellular cytokine staining was performed on cells stimulated with BD Biosciences Activation cocktail for 4–5 h according to the manufacturer's instruction. Lymphocytes were stained with anti-mouse CD4, CD8
, CD3, etc. before the treatment with BD Biosciences Cytofix/Cytoperm reagent (BD Biosciences, San Diego, CA). Intracellular cytokine staining for several cytokines including IFN-
, TNF-
, IL-17, IL-2, etc. was performed after fixation and permeabilization. Isotype and species matched control antibodies were used to assess nonspecific binding. Data acquisition was performed at the UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Flow Cytometry Core Facility by use of BD FACSCalibur, and analysis was carried out via CellQuest (BD) or FCS Express 3 software (DeNovo Software, London, Ontario, Canada). Serum cytokines were measured in triplicate according to instructions for BD Bioscience's Mouse Inflammation Cytometric Bead Array Kit.
G
i2–/– T cell cotransfer.
Unless otherwise indicated, each experimental trial analyzed at least three groups of four RAG 1–/– recipients: G
i2–/– splenic T cell only (disease control), G
i2–/– T cell + MLN wild-type (WT) B cells (no disease control), and G
i2–/– splenic T cell + knockout mesenteric lymph node (MLN) B cells (experimental group). T and B cells were isolated by magnetic bead separation for murine CD3 and CD19, respectively. For experiments involving segregation of T cells, CD8
and CD4 microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec, Auburn, CA) were used and the cells were mixed at the ratio observed by flow in the G
i2–/– donor mouse. In each trial, all 12 mice received an equal number of T and B cells ranging from 1 to 2 x 106 cells per mouse in sterile saline. T cells were injected intraperitoneally, and B cells were administered intravenously to age-matched recipients (6–12 wk old). Mice were observed for 4–10 wk for symptoms of disease (weight loss, diarrhea, hunched posture) and were euthanized for experiments at 20% weight loss or observation of progressed symptoms.
Histology examination. Intestinal tissues were collected and cut into 4-µm sections and processed for hematoxylin and eosin staining. Histological slides were evaluated in a blind fashion by the experienced pathologist for the severity of mucosal inflammation. Histological scoring for mucosal inflammation used an established scale of inflammatory and epithelial parameters (3).
Statistics.
Determination of significance of differences between two groups was performed on combined experimental data for each molecule, using a two-sided Student's t-test with a 95% confidence interval (GraphPad Prism; graphpad.com). Significance was defined as P
0.05.
| RESULTS |
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i2–/– cells were transferred into RAG–/– recipients, together with either WT B cells (positive control), B cells lacking both B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86), or CD40. Recipients of only G
i2–/– T cells served as the disease control group. When the disease control group developed clinical disease (1–2 mo after transfer), the other experimental groups were examined for intestinal T cell levels, proinflammatory cytokine production, and intestinal histology.
Flow cytometry of intestinal lymphocytes revealed expansion of large intestine CD4+ T cells and correspondingly low levels of the normal resident CD8+ cells in disease control mice (Fig. 1A, left). As expected, intestinal CD4+ T cells were reduced in mice cotransferred with WT B cells (Fig. 1A, right). However, CD19+ cells cotransferred from CD40–/– or B7–/– mice were equally effective in suppressing pathogenic CD4+ T cell expansion (Fig. 1A, middle; Table 1). Proinflammatory cytokine levels (IFN-
, IL-6, and TNF-
, etc.) in serum were elevated in mice receiving T cells only but reduced levels in mice receiving WT or CD40–/– B cells (Fig. 1B). Histological examination demonstrated severe inflammation in the large intestine of G
i2–/– T cells only recipients but not in these cotransferred with either CD40–/– or WT MLN B cells (Fig. 1C). Histological scores from mice receiving either WT, CD40–/–, or B7.1/B7.2–/– B cells were statistically lower than T cell controls (P
0.05) (Fig. 1D, Table 2). These findings indicate that B cell immunoregulation did not require expression of costimulatory molecules (CD80 and CD86, or CD40) that are typically required for B cell interaction with CD4+ T cells.
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Role of antigen presentation.
Since BCR-mediated signals were not required to maintain protective function, we further delineated the role of antigen presentation as a B cell trait in colitis protection. On the one hand, we wondered whether B cell antigen presentation to CD4+ T cells might redirect their fate away from TH1 or TH17 differentiation or promote CD4+ regulatory T cell (Treg) formation. On the other hand, B cell antigen presentation to natural killer (NK) T (NKT) or CD8+ T cells might confer colitis protection, since both cell types selectively expanded in the context of B cell protection (67). To address these questions, B cells from mice deficient in different MHC genes (CD1–/–, TAP1–/–, ABB–/–) mice were cotransferred with G
i2–/– T cells and compared with WT B cells for immunoregulatory activity as described in the previous section.
Surprisingly, B cells deficient in MHC II or CD1 retained protective function, measured by levels of intestinal CD4+ T cells (Table 1), production of proinflammatory cytokines (Fig. 2A, and data not shown), and large intestine histology (Table 2). These findings strongly refute the possibility that B cells play a role through the consequences of their direct antigen presentation to either CD4+ T cells or CD1-restricted NKT cells. In additional analysis, levels of regulatory CD4+ T cells (CD4+CD25+Foxp3+) in colitic mice were the same or reduced in mice cotransferred with MLN B cells (data not shown).
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These results suggested that MHC I-mediated antigen presentation was an important protective traits on B cells. To further exclude the possible effects of cytolytic NK cells and other cell types in our cotransfer model, we performed G
i2–/– T cells and TAP-1–/– MLN B cells cotransfer into recipient common
-chain (
c–/–)/Rag-2–/– DKO mice. These recipients lack T cells, B cells, and NK cells as well as other immune cells because of the absence of functional receptors for cytokines including IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, and IL-15 (12). As shown in Fig. 2C, TAP-1–/– MLN B cells failed to protect colitogenic T cell induced mucosal inflammation in common
-chain and Rag-2 double knockout mice. Histological scoring results indicated significant difference between TAP-1–/– and WT MLN B cells in colitis protection (Fig. 2D). Taken together, these findings implicate peptide-restricted MHC I antigen presentation as a critical trait required for B cell colitis protection.
Role of TCR specificity and cytolytic competence of CD8+ T cells in colitis protection. The preceding findings indicated that conventional CD8+ T cells were a direct target of B cells in colitis protection. We therefore turned to the CD8+ T cell compartment to evaluate traits required for their role in immunoregulation. With regard to TCR specificity, peptide/MHC I B cell antigen presentation implied that protective regulation involved selection by B cells of CD8+ T cells through their native, cognate TCR. Accordingly, we tested CD8+ T cells from OT-1 mice, which are genetically constrained to a TCR for the irrelevant ovalbumin xenoantigen (Fig. 3). As expected, WT (B6) CD8+ T cells reduced histological inflammation (Fig. 3A), infiltrating CD4+ T cells (Fig. 3B), and proinflammatory CD4+ T cells (Fig. 3C) compared with the disease control (mice without donor B cells). However, OT-1 CD8+ T cells failed to induce colitis protection by these three criteria. These findings indicate that a native cognate TCR repertoire is indeed required for protective competence of CD8+ T cells.
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Compared with WT (B6) CD8+ T cells, Prf1–/– CD8+ T cells were indeed deficient in reducing large intestine histological inflammation (Fig. 3A), CD4+ T cell infiltration (Fig. 3B), and levels of proinflammatory CD4+ T cells (Fig. 3C). Thus cytolytic competence is a key trait of CD8+ T cells in colitis protection. However, it leaves open the possibility that other functional traits of these cells may also contribute to their regulatory function (see DISCUSSION).
Expression of G
i2 itself is important for the functional capabilities of both B (16, 26, 51) and T cells (33, 68), in part because of the critical role of G
i2 in trafficking mediated by certain chemokine receptors (15, 26). We previously reported that G
i2–/– CD8+ T cells confer colitis protection in the presence of WT but not G
i2–/– B cells (67). Extending this finding, CD8+ T cells from G
i2–/– mice failed to protect in the absence of B cells, WT (B6) CD8+ T cells were protective even in the absence of B cells (Fig. 3). This suggests that WT (but not G
i2–/–) B cells constitutively induce protective CD8+ T cell in normal mice and that the lack of induction can be rapidly restored when WT B cells are provided in the cotransfer setting.
| DISCUSSION |
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i2–/– mice, suggest that efficient induction of regulatory CD8+ T cells requires direct B cell antigen presentation and may be an ongoing role of B cells in the immunocompetent host. The regulatory competence of B cells deficient in costimulatory molecules was surprising. CD40 ligation by CD154 (CD40L) of activated T cells is important for programming many aspects of T-B interactions, particularly regarding B cell activation and differentiation (54). Secretory immunoglobulin, whose formation is largely CD40 dependent, is an important factor in controlling enteric microbiota and the immunological impact of their products (39, 42, 72) and has been implicated in B cell regulation of immune colitis (45). In the present study, MD4 B cells, which are deficient in native cognate antibody formation, were also competent for colitis protection. These two findings demonstrate that native antibody production is not an important factor in the role of B cells in this experimental system.
CD80 and CD86 are particularly important for costimulation of CD4+ T cells, a role that is important for naive CD4+ or CD8+ T cells but may be less predominant for activation of regulatory CD4+ T cells and memory or effector CD4+ or CD8+ T cells (17, 28). Accordingly, it would appear that B cell protection did not involve interaction with naive T cells but rather preserves the interaction with memory CD4+ or CD8+ T, whose activation may be facilitated by other costimulatory molecules. The preservation of B cell protection in the absence of costimulatory molecules and MHC II, and the lack of a numerical increase in CD4+ Tregs during B cell protection, made it unlikely that their role involved induction of this regulatory population (4).
In studies of colitis regulation by B cells in the TCR-
–/– mouse, genetic experiments also indicated that B cells did not directly interact with CD4+ T cells (MHC II independent) but involved CD1 and costimulatory molecules (CD86 and CD40) (47, 48). The costimulatory findings in part may have reflected experimental design with blocking antibodies, which also would have blocked interactions directly required by colitogenic CD4+ T cells. The requirement for CD1 was genetically confirmed to be B cell autonomous. This difference from the present study may have been related to the TCR-
–/– system itself, which involves novel effector and regulatory TCR-
–β+ T cells (61) and CD4+ NKT cells (21) that may be skewed to CD1-dependent immunoregulation observed in other settings of colitis and inflammatory diseases augmented by B cells (13, 20, 23, 45, 47, 59).
In the present system, the exclusive B cell phenotype associated with colitis protection was competence for peptide-MHC1 antigen presentation: dependence on B cell-autonomous expression of TAP (this study) and β2-microglobulin (66). Prior studies of B cell immunoregulation have described a requirement for MHC Ia (4) and certain MHC Ib molecules (38, 50, 62), the latter also implicated in other tissue-selective immunological functions (27). Among these, MR1-dependent invariant T cells are notable because they are highly localized to the intestine, and have strict enteric microbial and B cell requirements. However, this particular T cell population is not likely to be involved in the present findings, since it appears to recognize nonpeptide lipoglycans (27, 38).
B cells and other APCs are competent for direct MHC I cross-presentation of exogenous or endogenous antigens to CD8+ T cells (14, 32, 55, 64). The present study suggests that B cells also present sampled or dendritic cell (DC)-transferred antigen (69), probably gathered from donor microflora, to cotransferred to CD8+ T cells. An important issue will be to determine the pertinent MHC I isoforms and the structure and source of antigenic molecules presented by B cells to regulatory CD8+ T cells (e.g., enteric microbiota) or products of cells in response to metabolic or inflammatory stress (64).
The effectiveness of B cells in eliciting CD8+ T cell immunoregulation is unexpected. If B cells are simply serving as APCs, why are native APCs in RAG–/– recipients unable to fulfill this antigen presentation requirement? Dendritic cells in RAG–/– recipients, although not deficient in homing, are reduced in numbers, are less potent in allogeneic T cell stimulation, and express lower MHC and costimulatory molecule levels than WT mice (57). In the present experimental system, the large number of transferred B cells may become predominant for APC function over the impaired resident RAG–/– DC compartment.
This preferential APC role by B cells is also observed in murine
-herpesvirus latency, in which efficient generation of antiviral CD8+ T cells involves a BCR-independent process requiring presentation of virally encoded antigen (43). Similarly, antibody and BCR-independent function of B cells is also required for efficient CD8+ T cell clearance of persistent (but not acute) lymphocyte choriomenigitis virus infection, although this appears to also involve their role in anti-viral CD4+ T cell generation (31). As in the present study, the striking efficiency of B cells in the generation of CD8+ T cells, above and beyond other resident antigen-presenting populations, was noted, but its mechanistic basis was uncertain.
Expression of G
i2 itself is important in the functional capabilities of B cells (16, 26, 51), owing in part to the critical role of G
i2 in trafficking mediated by certain chemokine receptors (15, 26). G
i2–/– B cells are deficient in the capacity to elicit colitis protection by CD8+ T cells (67). Confirming and extending this finding, the present study demonstrates that immunoregulation by CD8+ T cells from G
i2–/– mice required the addition of WT B cells, whereas WT (B6) CD8+ T cells were protective even in the absence of B cells. Others have demonstrated similar immunoregulatory competence of CD8+ T cells in WT mice (44). This suggests that WT (but not G
i2–/–) B cells constitutively induce protective CD8+ T cells in normal mice and that the lack of induction can be rapidly restored when WT B cells are provided in the cotransfer setting. Thus the G
i2–/– context provides a unique opportunity to uncover and delineate the mechanisms required for differentiation of immunoregulatory CD8+ T cells.
The central finding of this study is the robust immunoregulation of colitis conferred by CD8+ T cells, a function dependent on their expression of a native cognate TCR repertoire and their cytolytic competence. CD8+ T cell immunoregulation has a notable history (11), mediated through cytokine-mediated suppression (64) or direct cytolysis of B cells (50), T cells (35), or APCs (5, 25, 41, 71). Regulatory CD8+ T cells are inducible by selected APCs in models of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (19, 40) and pulmonary interstitial fibrosis (73). In human IBD, regulatory CD8+ T cells dependent on MHC 1b interaction with epithelial cells have been identified (1, 52), and defects in this interaction are a feature of patients with IBD (9, 52). As in CD4+ Treg biology, the specific antigen or antigen-bearing cellular target of CD8+ T cell immunoregulation is incompletely defined. Clarification of these targets, and the relative role of regulatory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells at different stages of an immune response, will be critical to understand immunoregulatory pathogenesis and its therapeutic manipulation.
| GRANTS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
* M. McPherson and B. Wei contributed equally to this work. ![]()
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