IL-10 signaling prevents gluten-dependent intraepithelial CD4 + cytotoxic T lymphocyte infiltration and epithelial damage in the small intestine

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Abstract

Breach of tolerance to gluten leads to the chronic small intestinal enteropathy celiac disease. A key event in celiac disease development is gluten-dependent infiltration of activated cytotoxic intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs), which cytolyze epithelial cells causing crypt hyperplasia and villous atrophy. The mechanisms leading to gluten-dependent small intestinal IEL infiltration and activation remain elusive. We have demonstrated that under homeostatic conditions in mice, gluten drives the differentiation of anti-inflammatory T cells producing large amounts of the immunosuppressive cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10). Here we addressed whether this dominant IL-10 axis prevents gluten-dependent infiltration of activated cytotoxic IEL and subsequent small intestinal enteropathy. We demonstrate that IL-10 regulation prevents gluten-induced cytotoxic inflammatory IEL infiltration. In particular, IL-10 suppresses gluten-induced accumulation of a specialized population of cytotoxic CD4 + CD8αα + IEL (CD4 + CTL) expressing Tbx21, Ifng, and Il21, and a disparate non-cytolytic CD4 + CD8α − IEL population expressing Il17a, Il21, and Il10. Concomitantly, IL-10 suppresses gluten-dependent small intestinal epithelial hyperproliferation and upregulation of stress-induced molecules on epithelial cells. Remarkably, frequencies of granzyme B + CD4 + CD8α + IEL are increased in pediatric celiac disease patient biopsies. These findings demonstrate that IL-10 is pivotal to prevent gluten-induced small intestinal inflammation and epithelial damage, and imply that CD4 + CTL are potential new players into these processes.

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Costes, L. M. M., Lindenbergh-Kortleve, D. J., van Berkel, L. A., Veenbergen, S., Raatgeep, H. R. C., Simons-Oosterhuis, Y., … Samsom, J. N. (2019). IL-10 signaling prevents gluten-dependent intraepithelial CD4 + cytotoxic T lymphocyte infiltration and epithelial damage in the small intestine. Mucosal Immunology, 12(2), 479–490. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41385-018-0118-0

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