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Impairment of regulatory T cells in patients with neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis.

Authors :
Pang, Yin
Du, Xiaoya
Xu, Xueli
Wang, Mengjie
Li, Zhichang
Source :
International Immunopharmacology. Oct2018, Vol. 63, p19-25. 7p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Abstract Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a life-threatening condition that can occur in about 7% of pre-term infants, and approximately 20% to 30% of the cases will end in death. An overactive immune response is thought to be a primary instigator of many symptoms during NEC. Hence, we hypothesized that NEC patients might present impairment in regulatory T (Treg) cells that limited their capacity to contain the excessive inflammation-induced damage. To investigate this, peripheral blood mononuclear cells were collected from NEC and non-NEC infants with matching age and weight. Treg cells, identified as CD3+CD4+CD25+/hiFoxp3+ T cells, were present at significantly lower frequency in NEC infants than in non-NEC infants. We also observed that the frequency of IL‑17+ CD4+ T cells was significantly higher in NEC infants, while the frequencies of IL‑10+ and TGF‑β+ CD4+ T cells were significantly lower in NEC infants. The CD4+CD25+/hi Treg cells from NEC infants were capable of suppressing CD4+CD25− T conventional cell proliferation, but with significantly reduced potency than the CD4+CD25+/hi Treg cells from non-NEC infants. In addition, the CD4+CD25+/hi Treg cells from non-NEC infants, but not those from NEC infants, were capable of suppressing IL‑17 expression. Furthermore, the CD4+CD25+/hi Treg cells from NEC infants displayed reduced expression of CTLA‑4, LAG‑3, and Helios, compared to those from non-NEC infants. Overall, these results demonstrated that Treg cells from NEC infants displayed a multitude of functional impairments, and suggested that Treg cells might serve as a treatment target in NEC. Highlights • Frequency of Tregs was significantly lower in NEC infants than in non-NEC infants. • IL‑17+ CD4+ T cells were higher while TGF-β+ CD4+ T cells were lower in NEC infants. • Tregs from NEC were less capable to suppressing CD4+CD25− Tconv proliferation. • Tregs from NEC infants were incapable of suppressing IL‑17 expression. • Tregs from NEC infants displayed reduced expression of CTLA‑4, LAG‑3, and Helios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15675769
Volume :
63
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Immunopharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
131545283
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intimp.2018.07.029