IL-33 contributes to sepsis-induced long-Term immunosuppression by expanding the regulatory T cell population

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Abstract

Patients who survive sepsis can develop long-Term immune dysfunction, with expansion of the regulatory T (Treg) cell population. However, how Treg cells proliferate in these patients is not clear. Here we show that IL-33 has a major function in the induction of this immunosuppression. Mice deficient in ST2 (IL-33R) develop attenuated immunosuppression in cases that survive sepsis, whereas treatment of naive wild-Type mice with IL-33 induces immunosuppression. IL-33, released during tissue injury in sepsis, activates type 2 innate lymphoid cells, which promote polarization of M2 macrophages, thereby enhancing expansion of the Treg cell population via IL-10. Moreover, sepsis-surviving patients have more Treg cells, IL-33 and IL-10 in their peripheral blood. Our study suggests that targeting IL-33 may be an effective treatment for sepsis-induced immunosuppression.

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Nascimento, D. C., Melo, P. H., Piñeros, A. R., Ferreira, R. G., Colón, D. F., Donate, P. B., … Alves-Filho, J. C. (2017). IL-33 contributes to sepsis-induced long-Term immunosuppression by expanding the regulatory T cell population. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14919

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