Notch4 signaling limits regulatory T-cell-mediated tissue repair and promotes severe lung inflammation in viral infections

Notch4信号通路限制调节性T细胞介导的组织修复,并促进病毒感染引起的严重肺部炎症。

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作者:Hani Harb,Mehdi Benamar,Peggy S Lai,Paola Contini,Jason W Griffith,Elena Crestani,Klaus Schmitz-Abe,Qian Chen,Jason Fong,Luca Marri,Gilberto Filaci,Genny Del Zotto,Novalia Pishesha,Stephen Kolifrath,Achille Broggi,Sreya Ghosh,Metin Yusuf Gelmez,Fatma Betul Oktelik,Esin Aktas Cetin,Ayca Kiykim,Murat Kose,Ziwei Wang,Ye Cui,Xu G Yu,Jonathan Z Li,Lorenzo Berra,Emmanuel Stephen-Victor,Louis-Marie Charbonnier,Ivan Zanoni,Hidde Ploegh,Gunnur Deniz,Raffaele De Palma,Talal A Chatila

Abstract

A cardinal feature of COVID-19 is lung inflammation and respiratory failure. In a prospective multi-country cohort of COVID-19 patients, we found that increased Notch4 expression on circulating regulatory T (Treg) cells was associated with disease severity, predicted mortality, and declined upon recovery. Deletion of Notch4 in Treg cells or therapy with anti-Notch4 antibodies in conventional and humanized mice normalized the dysregulated innate immunity and rescued disease morbidity and mortality induced by a synthetic analog of viral RNA or by influenza H1N1 virus. Mechanistically, Notch4 suppressed the induction by interleukin-18 of amphiregulin, a cytokine necessary for tissue repair. Protection by Notch4 inhibition was recapitulated by therapy with Amphiregulin and, reciprocally, abrogated by its antagonism. Amphiregulin declined in COVID-19 subjects as a function of disease severity and Notch4 expression. Thus, Notch4 expression on Treg cells dynamically restrains amphiregulin-dependent tissue repair to promote severe lung inflammation, with therapeutic implications for COVID-19 and related infections.

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