JCI Insight (Nov 2021)

Early IL-10 promotes vasculature-associated CD4+ T cells unable to control Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection

  • Catarina M. Ferreira,
  • Ana Margarida Barbosa,
  • Palmira Barreira-Silva,
  • Ricardo Silvestre,
  • Cristina Cunha,
  • Agostinho Carvalho,
  • Fernando Rodrigues,
  • Margarida Correia-Neves,
  • António G. Castro,
  • Egídio Torrado

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 21

Abstract

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Cytokine-producing CD4+ T cells play a crucial role in the control of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection; however, there is a delayed appearance of effector T cells in the lungs following aerosol infection. The immunomodulatory cytokine IL-10 antagonizes control of M. tuberculosis infection through mechanisms associated with reduced CD4+ T cell responses. Here, we show that IL-10 overexpression only before the onset of the T cell response impaired control of M. tuberculosis growth; during chronic infection, IL-10 overexpression reduced the CD4+ T cell response without affecting the outcome of infection. IL-10 overexpression early during infection did not, we found, significantly impair the kinetics of CD4+ T cell priming and effector differentiation. However, CD4+ T cells primed and differentiated in an IL-10–enriched environment displayed reduced expression of CXCR3 and, because they did not migrate into the lung parenchyma, their ability to control infection was limited. Importantly, these CD4+ T cells maintained their vasculature phenotype and were unable to control infection, even after adoptive transfer into low IL-10 settings. Together our data support a model wherein, during M. tuberculosis infection, IL-10 acts intrinsically on T cells, impairing their parenchymal migratory capacity and ability to engage with infected phagocytic cells, thereby impeding control of infection.

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