Journal of Translational Medicine (Apr 2020)

Simultaneous quantification of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets during interferon-β therapy of multiple sclerosis patients

  • Marco Chiarini,
  • Ruggero Capra,
  • Federico Serana,
  • Diego Bertoli,
  • Alessandra Sottini,
  • Viviana Giustini,
  • Cristina Scarpazza,
  • Marco Rovaris,
  • Valentina Torri Clerici,
  • Diana Ferraro,
  • Simonetta Galgani,
  • Claudio Solaro,
  • Marta Zaffira Conti,
  • Andrea Visconti,
  • Luisa Imberti,
  • SURROGATE Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-020-02329-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background The mechanisms underlying the therapeutic activity of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis are still not completely understood. In the present study, we evaluated the short and long-term effects of interferon-β treatment on different subsets of regulatory T cells in relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis patients biologically responsive to treatment because of mixovirus resistance protein A inducibility. Methods In this prospective longitudinal study, subsets of natural regulatory T cells (naïve, central memory and effector memory) and inducible regulatory T cells (Tr1), as well as in vitro-induced regulatory T cells (Tr1-like cells), were simultaneously quantified by flow cytometry in samples prepared from 148 therapy-naïve multiple sclerosis patients obtained before and after 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of interferon-β-1a treatment. mRNA for interleukin-10 and Tr1-related genes (CD18, CD49b, and CD46, together with Cyt-1 and Cyt-2 CD46-associated isoforms) were quantified in Tr1-like cells. Results Despite profound inter-individual variations in the modulation of all regulatory T-cell subsets, the percentage of natural regulatory T cells increased after 6, 12, and 24 months of interferon-β treatment. This increase was characterized by the expansion of central and effector memory regulatory T-cell subsets. The percentage of Tr1 significantly enhanced at 12 months of therapy and continued to be high at the subsequent evaluation points. Patients experiencing relapses displayed a higher percentage of naïve regulatory T cells and a lower percentage of central memory regulatory T cells and of Tr1 before starting interferon-β therapy. In addition, an increase over time of central memory and of Tr1 was observed only in patients with stable disease. However, in vitro-induced Tr1-like cells, prepared from patients treated for 24 months, produced less amount of interleukin-10 mRNA compared with pre-treatment Tr1-like cells. Conclusion Interferon-β induces the expansion of T regulatory subsets endowed with a high suppressive activity, especially in clinically stable patients. The overall concurrent modulation of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets might explain the therapeutic effects of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis patients.

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