News and Research
Immune System
Scientists Discover How To Grow Cells That Suppress Immune
Responses
1-23-2003
St. Louis, Researchers at Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis have discovered how to grow a little-understood
type of human immune cell. The cells, known as T-regulatory
cells type 1 (Tr1), are thought to turn off unnecessary
immune reactions and to block the action of immune cells
that otherwise would attack the body and cause dangerous
inflammation. The findings are reported in the Jan. 23 issue
of the journal Nature.
“T-regulator
cells have become an important area of immunology,”
says John P. Atkinson, M.D., the Samuel B. Grant Professor
of Medicine and professor of molecular microbiology, who
led the study. “But no one has known how to grow them
in the laboratory. These findings will let that promising
research move forward.”
Research
using laboratory-grown Tr1 cells could lead to new treatments
for autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis
and for organ rejection following transplantation, and could
provide a better understanding of measles, meningitis and
other infectious diseases.
“We
now can take a blood sample from someone’s arm, culture
selected cells from that sample and a few days later have
a nice population of T-regulatory cells,” says first
author Claudia Kemper, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in Atkinson’s
laboratory. “To be able to manipulate the activity
of Tr1 cells for future therapeutic use relies heavily on
knowing the factors required for their differentiation and
function.”
In
1985, Atkinson’s team discovered a protein known as
CD46 on cell surfaces. Usually this protein protects cells
from being destroyed by a component of the immune system
known as complement.
In this study, Kemper and her colleagues found that
stimulating CD46 and a second cell-surface molecule known as T-cell
receptor caused certain kinds of immune cells called T lymphocytes
to grow, divide and give off a substance known as interleukin-10 (IL-10).
The team established the finding by growing Tr1 cells
in culture dishes for several days, drawing off some of the fluid
bathing the cells and adding that fluid to other dishes containing
activated, proliferating infection-fighting T cells. The fluid, which
contained IL-10 produced by the Tr1 cells, shut down the growth and
activity of the T cells.
“That was a very good day,” says Kemper.
“IL-10 is the classic substance that suppresses the action and
proliferation of other immune cells.”
The investigators next want to study how CD46 triggers
production of IL-10 and to better define the population of cells that
give rise to Tr1 cells. They also want to explore how viruses, including
those that cause measles, meningitis and herpes, interact with CD46.
“It’s tempting to think that these pathogens
dock with CD46 because it causes some cells to produce IL-10, which
would suppress the action of nearby immune cells and help the pathogen
survive,” says Kemper. “We can investigate such questions
because we can now grow these cells in the laboratory.”
Kemper C, Chan AC, Green JM, Brett KA, Murphy KM,
Atkinson JP. Activation of human CD4+ cells with CD3 and CD46 induces
a T-regulatory cell 1 phenotype. Nature, Jan. 23, 2003.
Funding from the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases supported this research.
The full-time and volunteer faculty of Washington
University School of Medicine are the physicians and surgeons of Barnes-Jewish
and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one
of the leading medical research, teaching and patient-care institutions
in the nation. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC
HealthCare.
This
article has been adapted from a news release issued by Washington
University School Of Medicine, www.medinfo.wustl.edu.
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