Mucosal Immunology
Fernando Alvarez, PhD
post-doctoral fellow
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Lydia Labrie, PhD Candidate
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Jorg Fritz, PhD
Associate Professor
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Elizabeth Fixman, PhD
Associate Professor
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Ciriaco Piccirillo, PhD
Principal Investigator
Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of hospitalization in infants and is associated with asthma development. While the way neonatal infections induce long-term immune alterations remain ill-defined, there is evidence regulatory T (TREG) cells fail in preventing pulmonary TH2 responses. Since IL-33 is an alarmin involved in the exacerbation of TH2 responses, we hypothesized that neonatal RSV infections impair the long-term suppressive function of IL-33-responding (ST2+) TREG while contributing to TH2-induced pathology.
Using an RSV A2 murine model of infection, we uncovered that, contrary to conventional TH2 cells, ST2+ TREG fail to accumulate in the lungs at the time of neonate infection but expand robustly and express GATA3 and IL-13 upon re-infection in adult BALB/c mice. Through a Foxp3-specific ST2 conditional knock-out mouse sensitized to house dust mite, we observed that ST2+ TREG are required for controlling exacerbated TH2 cell responses in mice naturally resistant to type 2 immunity. Indeed, while IL-33 potentiated the expression of the IL4Rα, IL-4, in turn, drove the production of IL-10 by TREG. However, increasing amounts of IL-4 also contributed to dysregulate the suppressive capacity of TREG cells in vitro and drive a TH2-like conversion of TREG (IL-13+, IL-5+, GATA3+) in a STAT6-dependent manner, suggesting that tight control of IL-4 signaling is required for ST2+ TREG to suppress T cells.
These initial studies suggest RSV induced IL-33 sensitizes local TREG to TH2 produced IL-4 that ultimately dysregulate their suppressive capacity. This work provides a novel target for the development of asthma therapies.