Guest guest Posted October 11, 2005 Report Share Posted October 11, 2005 Newly discovered IL-17-producing T cells play key role in inflammatory and autoimmune diseases  October 10, 2005  Janis  Seattle, WA and Houston, TX - A newly discovered type of CD4+ T cell, dubbed the inflammatory T helper cell (THi), is the source of interleukin-17 (IL-17), regulates tissue inflammation, and might be a good target for treatment of inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and lupus, according to a breakthrough paper published online October 2, 2005 in Nature Immunology [1]. " We suspected that IL-17 is a player in autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, but we didn't understand where IL-17 came from before this finding. Now we have discovered the source of IL-17 and also have solidly demonstrated that these are the crucial cells that regulate tissue inflammation in autoimmune disease and asthma. These findings suggest that shutting down the activity of these THi cells might stop chronic inflammatory diseases from developing in the first place, " said the study's lead investigator, Dr Chen Dong (University of Texas MD Cancer Center, Houston). THi is a previously unknown type of T helper cell IL-17 emerged in 2000 as the " missing link " between the large numbers of T cells in arthritic joints and destruction of cartilage and bone. This had been a matter of some confusion, since typical T-cell- derived cytokines are not present in high concentrations in rheumatoid joints. IL-17 is there, however, and correlates with C- reactive protein (CRP) levels. The exact T cell that produces IL-17 was difficult to pin down, however, since neither TH1 nor TH2 cells are associated with the cytokine. This was a matter of some urgency, since IL-17 is now thought to be at or near the top of the cytokine cascade, which is especially important in early RA. Dong and colleagues, including Drs Heon Park and Zhaoxia Li (both at the University of Washington, Seattle) and Dr Xuexian O Yang (MD Cancer Center) used a combination of cell-culture studies and mouse studies to identify THi cells as the source of IL-17. First they " educated " naïve T helper cells to become IL-17-producing cells. This showed that the THi cells do not need the cytokines and transcription factors needed for TH1 or TH2 differentiation but do need the costimulatory molecules CD28 and ICOS. These studies also showed that IL-17 production is downregulated by interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interferon-. The researchers next showed that an anti-IL-17 antibody could prevent the development of an inflammatory disease. Anti-IL-17 both prevented development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (AEA, a model for multiple sclerosis) if given before disease induction in mice and reversed the progression of EAE in mice with established disease. " We don't know why these dangerous helper T cells are activated in patients, but we now know how they function, and that should take us a long way to understanding and treating these and other inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, " Dong says. Dong tells rheumawire that treatment might be done " by [making] antibodies to the cytokine or its receptor, by inhibiting IL-17- mediated signaling, or by blocking upstream signals that turn on IL-17. " These possibilities have already attracted the interest of biotechnology companies, including Immunex, Genentech, and Human Genome Sciences, all of which have lively IL-17 research programs and pending patent applications. " This is now an wide-open field to study and understand how these cells are generated in immune diseases and how we can prevent this process, " Dong says. Park H, Li Z, Yang XO, et al. A distinct lineage of CD4 T cells regulates tissue inflammation by producing interleukin 17. Nat Immunol 2005; DOI:10.1038/ni1261. Available at: . 16200068 http://www.jointandbone.org/viewArticle.do?primaryKey=574247 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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