First Author | Waters B | Year | 2009 |
Journal | Blood | Volume | 113 |
Issue | 1 | Pages | 193-203 |
PubMed ID | 18815284 | Mgi Jnum | J:144256 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3830560 | Doi | 10.1182/blood-2008-04-151597 |
Citation | Waters B, et al. (2009) Anti-CD3 prevents factor VIII inhibitor development in hemophilia A mice by a regulatory CD4+CD25+-dependent mechanism and by shifting cytokine production to favor a Th1 response. Blood 113(1):193-203 |
abstractText | Non-Fc-receptor binding anti-CD3 Ab therapy, in the setting of several different autoimmune disorders, can induce antigen-specific and long-lasting immunologic tolerance. Because factor VIII (FVIII) inhibitor formation is the most serious treatment-related complication for hemophilia A patients, we tested the efficacy of anti-CD3 to prevent FVIII inhibitor formation in hemophilia A BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. A short course of low-dose anti-CD3 significantly increased expression of CD25 and the proportion of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells in the spleen and potently prevented the production of inhibitory and non-neutralizing anti-FVIII antibodies in both strains of mouse. Depleting the CD4+CD25+ cells during anti-CD3 therapy completely ablated tolerance to FVIII. Further phenotypic characterization of regulatory cells in tolerant mice showed a consistently higher number of CD4+GITR+ and CD4+FoxP3+ cells in both strains of mice. In addition, in tolerant C57BL/6 mice we observed an increase in CD4+CD25+ CTLA-4+ and CD4+CD25+mTGF-beta1+ cells. Finally, in vitro cytokine profiling demonstrated that splenocytes from tolerant BALB/c and C57BL/6 were polarized toward a Th1-immune response. Taken together, these findings indicate that anti-CD3 induces tolerance to FVIII and that the mechanism(s) regulating this response almost certainly occurs through the generation of several distinct regulatory T-cell lineages and by influencing cytokine production and profile. |