IL-7 receptor blockade reverses autoimmune diabetes by promoting inhibition of effector/memory T cells

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Abstract

To protect the organism against autoimmunity, self-reactive effector/memory T cells (TE/M) are controlled by cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic regulatory mechanisms. However, how some TE/M cells escape regulation and cause autoimmune disease is currently not understood. Here we show that blocking IL-7 receptor-α (IL-7Rα) with monoclonal antibodies in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice prevented autoimmune diabetes and, importantly, reversed disease in new-onset diabetic mice. Surprisingly, IL-7-deprived diabetogenic TE/M cells remained present in the treated animals but showed increased expression of the inhibitory receptor Programmed Death 1 (PD-1) and reduced IFN-γ production. Conversely, IL-7 suppressed PD-1 expression on activated T cells in vitro. Adoptive transfer experiments revealed that TE/M cells from anti-IL-7Rα-treated mice had lost their pathogenic potential, indicating that absence of IL-7 signals induces cell-intrinsic tolerance. In addition to this mechanism, IL-7Rα blockade altered the balance of regulatory T cells and TE/M cells, hence promoting cell-extrinsic regulation and further increasing the threshold for diabetogenic T-cell activation. Our data demonstrate that IL-7 contributes to the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes by enabling TE/M cells to remain in a functionally competent state and suggest IL-7Rα blockade as a therapy for established T-cell-dependent autoimmune diseases.

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Penaranda, C., Kuswanto, W., Hofmann, J., Kenefeck, R., Narendran, P., Walker, L. S. K., … Dooms, H. (2012). IL-7 receptor blockade reverses autoimmune diabetes by promoting inhibition of effector/memory T cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(31), 12668–12673. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1203692109

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