Suppression of autoimmune inflammation of the central nervous system by interleukin 10 secreted by interleukin 27-stimulated T cells
- PMID: 17994023
- DOI: 10.1038/ni1540
Suppression of autoimmune inflammation of the central nervous system by interleukin 10 secreted by interleukin 27-stimulated T cells
Erratum in
- Nat Immunol. 2008 Jan;9(1):105
Abstract
Excessive inflammation occurs during infection and autoimmunity in mice lacking the alpha-subunit of the interleukin 27 (IL-27) receptor. The molecular mechanisms underlying this increased inflammation are incompletely understood. Here we report that IL-27 upregulated IL-10 in effector T cells that produced interferon-gamma and expressed the transcription factor T-bet but did not express the transcription factor Foxp3. These IFN-gamma+T-bet+Foxp3- cells resembled effector T cells that have been identified as the main source of host-protective IL-10 during inflammation. IL-27-induced production of IL-10 was associated with less secretion of IL-17, and exogenous IL-27 reduced the severity of adoptively transferred experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by a mechanism dependent on IL-10. Our data show that IL-27-induced production of IL-10 by effector T cells contributes to the immunomodulatory function of IL-27.
Comment in
-
IL-10 or not IL-10: that is the question.Nat Immunol. 2007 Dec;8(12):1281-3. doi: 10.1038/ni1207-1281. Nat Immunol. 2007. PMID: 18026076 No abstract available.
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