Abstract
Background: Studies show that proallergic TH2 cells decrease after successful allergen-specific immunotherapy (AIT). It is likely that iatrogenic administration of allergens drives these cells to exhaustion due to chronic T-cell receptor stimulation. This study aimed to investigate the exhaustion of T cells in connection with allergen exposure during AIT in mice and two independent patient cohorts. Methods: OVA-sensitized C57BL/6J mice were challenged and treated with OVA, and the development of exhaustion in local and systemic TH2 cells was analyzed. In patients, the expression of exhaustion-associated surface markers on TH2 cells was evaluated using flow cytometry in a cross-sectional grass pollen allergy cohort with and without AIT. The treatment effect was further studied in PBMC collected from a prospective long-term AIT cohort. Results: The exhaustion-associated surface markers CTLA-4 and PD-1 were significantly upregulated on TH2 cells upon OVA aerosol exposure in OVA-allergic compared to non-allergic mice. CTLA-4 and PD-1 decreased after AIT, in particular on the surface of local lung TH2 cells. Similarly, CTLA-4 and PD-1 expression was enhanced on TH2 cells from patients with allergic rhinitis with an even stronger effect in those with concomitant asthma. Using an unbiased Louvain clustering analysis, we discovered a late-differentiated TH2 population expressing both markers that decreased during up-dosing but persisted long term during the maintenance phase. Conclusions: This study shows that allergen exposure promotes CTLA-4 and PD-1 expression on TH2 cells and that the dynamic change in frequencies of exhausted TH2 cells exhibits a differential pattern during the up-dosing versus the maintenance phases of AIT.
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Wang, S. H., Zissler, U. M., Buettner, M., Heine, S., Heldner, A., Kotz, S., … Jakwerth, C. A. (2021). An exhausted phenotype of TH2 cells is primed by allergen exposure, but not reinforced by allergen-specific immunotherapy. Allergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 76(9), 2827–2839. https://doi.org/10.1111/all.14896
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