Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2018)

Increased Interleukin-23 in Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis Disease Induces Autophagy Suppression and Reactive Oxygen Species Accumulation

  • Tingting Zheng,
  • Tingting Zheng,
  • Chengcheng Xu,
  • Chaoming Mao,
  • Chaoming Mao,
  • Xiao Mou,
  • Fei Wu,
  • Xuefeng Wang,
  • Ling Bu,
  • Yuepeng Zhou,
  • Xuan Luo,
  • Qingyan Lu,
  • Hongli Liu,
  • Guoyue Yuan,
  • Shengjun Wang,
  • Deyu Chen,
  • Yichuan Xiao,
  • Yichuan Xiao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.00096
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) represents the most common organ-specific autoimmune disease. Inflammatory factors and reactive oxygen species (ROS) play detrimental roles during the pathogenesis of HT. In this study, we found that thyroid follicular cells (TFCs) from HT patients expressed an elevated level of interleukin-23 (IL-23), which contributed to autophagy suppression and ROS accumulation. Additionally, IL-23-induced autophagy suppression and ROS accumulation in human TFCs was attributed to AKT/mTOR/NF-κB signaling pathway activation. Inhibition of either IL-23 by a specific neutralization antibody, or mTOR by rapamycin, or NF-κB by IKK-16, significantly reversed the autophagy suppression and ROS accumulation. These results demonstrate a key role for IL-23 in HT pathogenesis and provide a potential therapeutic strategy against IL-23 or its signaling pathway in HT.

Keywords