1. Patients with radiation enteritis present regulatory T cell impairment associated with CTLA-4
- Author
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Yuehua Ding, Wei Zhao, Zongchang Song, Aixia Fu, Genhua Yu, Yan Hou, Jingjing Ouyang, Shuqi Huang, Jingping Xia, Xufeng Gong, Lei Fei, Ning Wang, Zhengzhou Gu, and Haili Hu
- Subjects
Regulatory T cell ,Immunology ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Severity of Illness Index ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Enteritis ,Radiation Enteritis ,medicine ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,CTLA-4 Antigen ,Radiation Injuries ,Cervical cancer ,biology ,business.industry ,Cancer ,hemic and immune systems ,medicine.disease ,Healthy Volunteers ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Perforin ,CTLA-4 ,Case-Control Studies ,biology.protein ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Radiation enteritis is one of the most common side effects of ionizing radiation in patients with pelvic cancers. Increasing amounts of evidence indicate that pro-inflammatory responses significantly contribute to the development of radiation enteritis. In this study, we investigated the association between T regulatory (Treg) cells and the risk of developing radiation enteritis in cervical cancer patients. The following observations were made. First, the frequencies of CD25hiFoxp3+ Treg cells were significantly lower in patients with radiation enteritis than in both healthy subjects and cervical cancer patients without radiation enteritis. Also, patients with the more severe grade 3 enteritis presented significantly lower Treg levels than patients with the more common grade 1 enteritis. Second, the expression of several molecules associated with Treg function, including CTLA-4, IL-10, TGF-β, and perforin, was significantly lower in patients with radiation enteritis than in healthy subjects. In patients without radiation enteritis, however, only CTLA-4, but not other Treg-associated suppressive molecules, was reduced in Treg cells. Third, Treg cells can markedly suppress CD8 T cell proliferation, but in patients with radiation enteritis, this function of Treg cells was significantly impaired, in a manner that was associated with lower CTLA-4 expression. Overall, these data suggest that the frequency and function of Treg cells is negatively associated with the risk of developing enteritis following radiation. In clinical practice, the characteristics of Treg cells may be considered to evaluate the risk of developing enteritis if the cancer patient is receiving ionizing radiation.
- Published
- 2020
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