Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2019)

Chronic Immune Activation in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and the Autoimmune PTPN22 Trp620 Risk Allele Drive the Expansion of FOXP3+ Regulatory T Cells and PD-1 Expression

  • Ricardo C. Ferreira,
  • Xaquin Castro Dopico,
  • João J. Oliveira,
  • Daniel B. Rainbow,
  • Jennie H. Yang,
  • Dominik Trzupek,
  • Sarah A. Todd,
  • Mhairi McNeill,
  • Maristella Steri,
  • Valeria Orrù,
  • Edoardo Fiorillo,
  • Daniel J. M. Crouch,
  • Marcin L. Pekalski,
  • Francesco Cucca,
  • Francesco Cucca,
  • Tim I. Tree,
  • Tim J. Vyse,
  • Linda S. Wicker,
  • John A. Todd

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.02606
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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In systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), perturbed immunoregulation underpins a pathogenic imbalance between regulatory and effector CD4+ T-cell activity. However, to date, the characterization of the CD4+ regulatory T cell (Treg) compartment in SLE has yielded conflicting results. Here we show that patients have an increased frequency of CD4+FOXP3+ cells in circulation owing to a specific expansion of thymically-derived FOXP3+HELIOS+ Tregs with a demethylated FOXP3 Treg-specific demethylated region. We found that the Treg expansion was strongly associated with markers of recent immune activation, including PD-1, plasma concentrations of IL-2 and the type I interferon biomarker soluble SIGLEC-1. Since the expression of the negative T-cell signaling molecule PTPN22 is increased and a marker of poor prognosis in SLE, we tested the influence of its missense risk allele Trp620 (rs2476601C>T) on Treg frequency. Trp620 was reproducibly associated with increased frequencies of thymically-derived Tregs in blood, and increased PD-1 expression on both Tregs and effector T cells (Teffs). Our results support the hypothesis that FOXP3+ Tregs are increased in SLE patients as a consequence of a compensatory mechanism in an attempt to regulate pathogenic autoreactive Teff activity. We suggest that restoration of IL-2-mediated homeostatic regulation of FOXP3+ Tregs by IL-2 administration could prevent disease flares rather than treating at the height of a disease flare. Moreover, stimulation of PD-1 with specific agonists, perhaps in combination with low-dose IL-2, could be an effective therapeutic strategy in autoimmune disease and in other immune disorders.

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