Aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation ameliorates experimental colitis by modulating the tolerogenic dendritic and regulatory T cell formation

芳烃受体活化通过调节耐受性树突状细胞和调节性 T 细胞形成改善实验性结肠炎

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作者:Xiufang Cui #, Ziping Ye #, Di Wang, Yan Yang, ChunHua Jiao, Jingjing Ma, Nana Tang, Hongjie Zhang

Background

Intestinal immune dysfunction is involved in the onset of Crohn's disease (CD). Dendritic cells (DCs), antigen-presenting cells, play a key role in the maintenance of intestinal immune homeostasis. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-dependent transcription factor widely expressed in various immune cells, including DCs. Although AhR plays an important role in immune tolerance, its role in the DCs is unclear. The

Conclusions

Activation of AhR in the DCs could induce tolDCs, and the transplantation of tolDCs may help in relieving intestinal inflammation and maintaining the Th17/Treg differentiation balance. Thus, our data suggest that AhR may be a potential therapeutic target for CD.

Results

AhR activation in the DCs resulted in a lower expression of surface markers such as CD80, CD83, CD86, and pro-inflammatory cytokine production, and higher anti-inflammatory production (IL-1β, IL-23, and IL-12) compared to the control DCs. The surface dendrites in DCs were significantly reduced following AhR activation by 6-formylindolo [3,2-b]carbazole (FICZ). Such DCs with FICZ-mediated activation of AhR, namely tolDCs, promoted Treg cell differentiation. Adoptive transfer of tolDCs to a TNBS-induced colitis mouse model significantly alleviated the severity of inflammation by improving the colon length and decreasing the disease activity index (DAI) and histopathological score. Moreover, the transferred tolDCs decreased the frequency of Th17 cells and increased the frequency of Treg cells in the spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLNs) in murine colitis models. Conclusions: Activation of AhR in the DCs could induce tolDCs, and the transplantation of tolDCs may help in relieving intestinal inflammation and maintaining the Th17/Treg differentiation balance. Thus, our data suggest that AhR may be a potential therapeutic target for CD.

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