Tryptophan hydroxylase-1 regulates immune tolerance and inflammation

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Abstract

Nutrient deprivation based on the loss of essential amino acids by catabolic enzymes in the microenvironment is a critical means to control inflammatory responses and immune tolerance. Here we report the novel finding that Tph-1 (tryptophan hydroxylase-1), a synthase which catalyses the conversion of tryptophan to serotonin and exhausts tryptophan, is a potent regulator of immunity. In models of skin allograft tolerance, tumor growth, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, Tph-1 deficiency breaks allograft tolerance, induces tumor remission, and intensifies neuroinflammation, respectively. All of these effects of Tph-1 deficiency are independent of its downstream product serotonin. Because mast cells (MCs) appear to be the major source of Tph-1 and restoration of Tph-1 in the MC compartment in vivo compensates for the defect, these experiments introduce a fundamentally new mechanism of MC-mediated immune suppression that broadly impacts multiple arms of immunity. © 2012 Nowak et al.

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APA

Nowak, E. C., de Vries, V. C., Wasiuk, A., Ahonen, C., Bennett, K. A., Le Mercier, I., … Noelle, R. J. (2012). Tryptophan hydroxylase-1 regulates immune tolerance and inflammation. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 209(11), 2127–2135. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20120408

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