CD4 T helper (Th) cell differentiation defined by in vitro cytokine-directed culture systems leaves major gaps in our knowledge of the mechanisms driving divergent Th differentiation. This is evident from our analysis of the response of mouse ovalbumin-specific CD4 T cells to different forms of ovalbumin that induce markedly distinct responses in vivo. We show that live attenuated ovalbumin-expressing Salmonella (SalOVA) induce Th1-associated T-bet and IFN-gamma. Conversely, alum-precipitated ovalbumin (alumOVA) induces the Th2-associated GATA-3 and IL-4. The early diversity occurring within these CD4 T cells isolated 3 days after immunization was assessed using real-time RT-PCR microfluidic cards designed with 384 selected genes. The technique was validated both at the population and single cell levels at different stages of the responses, showing beta2-microglobulin to be a more stably expressed reference mRNA than either beta-actin or 18S RNA. SalOVA was then shown selectively to induce the OVA-specific CD4 T cells to produce many chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines, contrasting with alumOVA-induced cells that only produced a few Th2-associated cytokines. Several cytokines and features associated with follicular helper functions were induced in the OVA-specific CD4 T cells by both antigens. Finally, IL-17RB is strongly associated with OVA-specific CD4 T cells responding to alumOVA, suggesting that alum may promote Th2 immune response through a role for the IL-25/IL-17RB pathway.
Molecular differences between the divergent responses of ovalbumin-specific CD4 T cells to alum-precipitated ovalbumin compared to ovalbumin expressed by Salmonella
알루미늄 침전된 오발부민에 대한 오발부민 특이 CD4 T 세포의 다양한 반응 간의 분자적 차이와 살모넬라에 의해 발현된 오발부민 간의 차이.
[Category] 살모넬라증,
[Article Type] journal-article
[Source] pubmed
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