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Publication : Pathogen-specific Treg cells expand early during mycobacterium tuberculosis infection but are later eliminated in response to Interleukin-12.

First Author  Shafiani S Year  2013
Journal  Immunity Volume  38
Issue  6 Pages  1261-70
PubMed ID  23791647 Mgi Jnum  J:207578
Mgi Id  MGI:5559135 Doi  10.1016/j.immuni.2013.06.003
Citation  Shafiani S, et al. (2013) Pathogen-specific Treg cells expand early during mycobacterium tuberculosis infection but are later eliminated in response to Interleukin-12. Immunity 38(6):1261-70
abstractText  Thymically derived Foxp3(+) regulatory T (Treg) cells have a propensity to recognize self-peptide:MHC complexes, but their ability to respond to epitope-defined foreign antigens during infectious challenge has not been demonstrated. Here we show that pulmonary infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), but not Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), induced robust lymph node expansion of a highly activated population of pathogen-specific Treg cells from the pre-existing pool of thymically derived Treg cells. These antigen-specific Treg cells peaked in numbers 3 weeks after infection but subsequently underwent selective elimination driven, in part, by interleukin-12-induced intrinsic expression of the Th1-cell-promoting transcription factor T-bet. Thus, the initial Mtb-induced inflammatory response promotes pathogen-specific Treg cell proliferation, but these cells are actively culled later, probably to prevent suppression during later stages of infection. These findings have important implications for the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis and other chronic diseases in which antigen-specific Treg cells restrict immunity.
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