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  2. WSX-1 signalling inhibits CD4⁺ T cell migration to the liver during malaria infection by repressing chemokine-independent pathways

WSX-1 signalling inhibits CD4⁺ T cell migration to the liver during malaria infection by repressing chemokine-independent pathways

  • PLoS One. 2013 Nov 7;8(11):e78486. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078486.
Ana Villegas-Mendez 1 Emily Gwyer Findlay J Brian de Souza Lisa-Marie Grady Christiaan J Saris Thomas E Lane Eleanor M Riley Kevin N Couper
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Immunology and Infection, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom ; Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.
Abstract

IL-27 is an important and non-redundant regulator of effector T cell accumulation in non-lymphoid tissues during Infection. Using malaria as a model systemic pro-inflammatory Infection, we demonstrate that the aberrant accumulation of CD4⁺ T cells in the liver of infected IL27R(-/-) (WSX-1(-/-)) mice is a result of differences in cellular recruitment, rather than changes in T cell proliferation or cell death. We show that IL-27 both inhibits the migratory capacity of infection-derived CD4⁺ T cells towards infection-derived liver cells, but also suppresses the production of soluble liver-derived mediator(s) that direct CD4⁺ T cell movement towards the inflamed tissue. Although CCL4 and CCL5 expression was higher in livers of infected WSX-1(-/-) mice than infected WT mice, and hepatic CD4⁺ T cells from WSX-1(-/-) mice expressed higher levels of CCR5 than cells from WT mice, migration of CD4⁺ T cells to the liver of WSX-1(-/-) mice during Infection was not controlled by chemokine (R) signalling. However, anti-IL-12p40 treatment reduced migration of CD4⁺ T cells towards infection-derived liver cells, primarily by abrogating the hepatotropic migratory capacity of T cells, rather than diminishing soluble tissue-derived migratory signals. These results indicate that IL-27R signalling restricts CD4⁺ T cell accumulation within the liver during Infection primarily by suppressing T cell chemotaxis, which may be linked to its capacity to repress Th1 differentiation, as well as by inhibiting the production of soluble, tissue-derived chemotaxins.

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