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Publication : The temporal and spatial dynamics of Foxp3+ Treg cell-mediated suppression during contact hypersensitivity responses in a murine model.

First Author  Lehtimäki S Year  2012
Journal  J Invest Dermatol Volume  132
Issue  12 Pages  2744-51
PubMed ID  22739792 Mgi Jnum  J:191693
Mgi Id  MGI:5462320 Doi  10.1038/jid.2012.212
Citation  Lehtimaki S, et al. (2012) The temporal and spatial dynamics of Foxp3+ Treg cell-mediated suppression during contact hypersensitivity responses in a murine model. J Invest Dermatol 132(12):2744-51
abstractText  Regulatory T (Treg) cells suppress contact hypersensitivity (CHS) responses, but the dynamics, mode, and site of their action is not well characterized. We studied forkhead box P3+ (Foxp3+) Treg cells during the CHS response in conditional Foxp3 knockout depletion of regulatory T cell (DEREG) mice, where Foxp3+ cells can be transiently deleted by diphtheria toxin. The mice were sensitized and challenged with oxazolone, and Foxp3+ cells were depleted either during sensitization or elicitation. Treg cell depletion before sensitization led to significantly exacerbated and prolonged CHS responses. In contrast, depleting Treg cells during elicitation had no effect on the 24-hour response, but the response was significantly prolonged. In wild-type mice, the gradual resolution of the CHS response was accompanied by a similarly gradual accumulation of Foxp3+ Treg cells relative to T effector cells in the skin. This effect was not as marked in the Treg cell-depleted mice, suggesting that the skin is an important site of Treg cell activities during the resolution phase. Together, our results show that endogenous Foxp3+ Treg cell function is important during the sensitization and resolution phases, but their depletion just before elicitation does not have an effect on the CHS response during the first 24 hours after elicitation.
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