Frontiers in Immunology (Aug 2022)

PD-1+ CD4 T cell immune response is mediated by HIF-1α/NFATc1 pathway after P. yoelii infection

  • Haixia Wei,
  • Haixia Wei,
  • Anqi Xie,
  • Jiajie Li,
  • Chao Fang,
  • Lin Liu,
  • Junmin Xing,
  • Feihu Shi,
  • Feng Mo,
  • Dianhui Chen,
  • Dianhui Chen,
  • Hongyan Xie,
  • Quan Yang,
  • Xingfei Pan,
  • Xiaoping Tang,
  • Jun Huang,
  • Jun Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.942862
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The morbidity and mortality of malaria are still high. Programmed cell death-1(PD-1) is an important co-inhibitory factor and CD8 T cells with PD-1 were reported to be exhausted cells. It remains unknown what the role of CD4 T cells expressing PD-1 is and what the upstream regulating molecules of PD-1 in CD4 T cells are. The C57BL/6 mice were injected with Plasmodium yoelii (P. yoelii) in this study. Expressions of PD-1, activation markers, and cytokines were tested. The differentially expressed genes between PD-1+/- CD4 T cells were detected by microarray sequencing. Western blot, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), siRNA, hypoxia inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) inducer and inhibitor were used to explore PD-1’s upstream molecules, respectively. The proportions of PD-1+ CD4 T cells increased post P. yoelii infection. PD-1+ CD4 T cells expressed more activated surface markers and could produce more cytokines. Nuclear factor of activated T cells 1 (NFATc1) was found to be a key transcription factor to induce PD-1 expression after infection. Both the inducer and the inhibitor of HIF-1α could change the expressions of NFATc1 and PD-1 in vivo and in vitro, respectively. Taken together, P. yoelii infection induced NFATc1 expression by HIF-1α. The highly expressed NFATc1 entered the nucleus and initiated PD-1 expression. PD-1+ CD4 T cells appeared to be more activated and could secrete more cytokines to regulate the host’s immune responses against malaria.

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