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Address correspondence to Malin Karlsson, Laboratory for Immunohistochemistry and Immunopathology, Institute of Pathology, Rikshospitalet, N-0027 Oslo, Norway. Phone: 47-23071489; Fax: 47-23071511; email: malin.karlsson{at}labmed.uio.no
| Abstract |
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Key Words: human oral tolerance regulatory T cells food allergy cytokines
| Introduction |
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Decreased robustness of mucosally induced tolerance in "westernized" populations is suggested by the recent striking rise of atopic diseases (4), and some 58% of children up to 3 yr of age now develop food allergy. This disorder is associated with serious health consequences and may unfortunately also be the starting point for an "allergic march," i.e., the development of subsequent atopic diseases in the airways. Therefore, it is of great importance to understand the immunological mechanisms involved in break of oral tolerance against dietary antigens.
Indirect evidence exists to suggest that the development of food allergy may be controlled by CD4+CD25+ Treg cells. Patients with immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked syndrome, or X-linked autoimmunity-allergic dysregulation syndrome lack this T cell subset, and they often develop food allergic reactions and increased specific IgE antibody levels accompanied by severe eczema (5, 6). Further support for a role of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells in mediating oral tolerance has been obtained from feeding experiments in mice (711). Other T cell subsets possibly involved in oral tolerance, at least in animals, are Th3 cells which produce TGF-ß, Tr1 cells which produce IL-10, and TGF-ß and NK T cells (1214). However, it is not firmly established whether all these subsets represent separate cell lineages or different maturational phenotypes.
A few years after the discovery of naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ Treg cells in mice, a similar T cell subset has been identified in human peripheral blood, thymus, LNs, and cord blood (15). In mice, the CD4+CD25+ Treg cells reportedly play a role in the control of immune responses to infectious agents, transplants, and cancer as well as in graft-versus-host reactions (1621), whereas in humans CD4+CD25+ Treg cells have been shown to be involved in regulating cancer immunity (2224). These human cells are typically anergic upon TCR stimulation (25), although recent studies in mice suggest that Treg cells can be expanded both in vitro and in vivo when interacting with the appropriate APC type (26). This might explain why a constant number of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells is maintained in the circulation.
Common phenotypic markers of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells are CD45RO, L-selectin (CD62L), CTLA-4 (CD152), CD25, and glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor (2730), although the same phenotypic profile can also be displayed by other T cell subsets. Therefore, only functional assays can firmly identify CD4+CD25+ Treg cells. Nevertheless, recent studies in mice and humans have demonstrated that a novel transcription-repressor protein, FOXP3, is exclusively expressed by naturally occurring and induced CD4+CD25+ Treg cells (3138).
Current evidence suggests that human CD4+CD25+ Treg cells employ several mechanisms to suppress immune responses, for instance, via direct cell contact or indirectly by reducing the antigen-presenting capacity of APCs (39). In addition, at least in mice, suppressive cytokines appear to be involved in the effector function of Treg cells (40, 41). It remains an open question whether one or more of these down-regulatory properties may be acquired by any naive CD4+ T cell in a normal peripheral immunostimulatory process.
Cow's milk allergy in children is often a disease of relatively short duration, which makes it an interesting clinical model for the development of oral tolerance. Using depletion of CD25+ cells as a read-out test for the suppressive effect that the Treg subset exerts on effector T cells, we were able to show that children who had outgrown their allergy (i.e., are now tolerant against cow's milk allergens), developed a population of CD4+CD25+ T cells with regulatory function in their peripheral blood 1 wk after an in vivo milk challenge. This subset was numerically and functionally reduced in children who remained allergic to cow's milk. These results suggested mucosal induction of Treg cells in response to cow's milk proteins or, alternatively, that centrally generated Treg cells had become activated and expanded in children with outgrown food allergy.
| Materials and Methods |
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The original allergy diagnosis had been made at a median age of 5 mo (range 218 mo) based on the following criteria: persistent gastroenterological symptoms without, or in combination with, extraintestinal symptoms (see next paragraph) reported by the parents, followed by total disappearance of these symptoms on cow's milk-free diet for a period of at least 1 mo, and then followed by reappearance of similar symptoms by at least two open milk challenges observed by the parents (see next paragraph). Children with a history of anaphylactic symptoms or evidence of cow's milk-specific IgE antibodies were excluded to make the test group as homogeneous as possible.
The patients had demonstrated one or more of the following symptoms (number of cases in parenthesis): bloody and usually loose stools (n = 4), diarrhea (n = 8), failure to thrive (n = 5), eczema (n = 2), vomiting or regurgitation (n = 5), excessive crying (n = 5), and anemia (n = 1). The symptoms had been observed by the parents from a median age of 3 mo (range 2 wk12 mo). Where suspected, lactose intolerance was excluded by routine lactose challenge test (H2 breath test).
Cow's Milk Challenge Procedure
The reintroduction of cow's milk into the diet was done gradually, increasing the amount of milk or cow's milk-based formula to at least 100 ml/day during the first two days, continuing until the parents experienced unacceptable symptoms or until a routine evaluation was performed at the out-patient clinic after 1 wk. All these clinical evaluations were performed by the same pediatrician, and 8 children (median age 24 mo, range 1645 mo) were deemed to display persistently active cow's milk allergy, whereas 13 children (median age 24 mo, range 949 mo) had outgrown their allergy since they were now found to be tolerant to the milk challenge. A blood sample was taken just before and 1 wk after the start of cow's milk reintroduction.
Ethics
The study was approved by the local Regional medical ethics committee (East Norway, Blindern, pb1139, Norway), and informed consent was obtained from the parents.
Cell Isolation
PBMCs were obtained from heparinized blood by Lymphoprep centrifugation (Nycomed Pharma). Cells were washed and finally diluted in RPMI-1640 medium supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated pooled human serum, 1% L-glutamine, and 1% gentamycin (GIBCO BRL).
Proliferation Assay
PBMCs (105) were cultured in 96-well round-bottom tissue culture plates (200 µl/well) and stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA; 10 µl, 100 µg/ml) or ß-lactoglobulin (ß-LG; 10 µl, 20 mg/ml) from cow's milk (L0130; Sigma-Aldrich). Radioactive thymidine (3H-Tdr, 1 mCi/well, TRK 120; Amersham Biosciences) was added to the wells 6 d after the initiation of stimulation. The cells were harvested 1216 h later. Incorporation of 3H-Tdr was determined in a ß-counter.
Depletion of CD25+ Cells
An Ab-coated microbead isolation procedure was used for depletion of CD25+ cells, according to the manufacturer's instruction (Miltenyi Biotec). Briefly, 20 µl of CD25-specific beads were suspended together with 5 x 106107 PBMCs and incubated for 15 min on ice, followed by two washes. LD columns were prepared as recommended by the manufacturer and used for magnetic depletion. The effluent PBMC samples contained <0.5% CD25+ cells as determined by flow cytometry (see below). Unrelated microbeads, i.e., specific for mouse CD5 (Miltenyi), were used to prepare control samples of PBMCs.
Antibodies
The following mouse mAbs with specificity for human molecules were used for immunostaining of PBMCs: FITC- and PE-conjugated anti-CD25 (IgG1, clone 2A3; Becton Dickinson); biotin-conjugated antiCTLA-4 (IgG1, clone BNI3.1; Becton Dickinson); PerCp anti-CD3 (IgG1) and biotin-conjugated anti-CCR4 (IgG1, clone 1G1; Becton Dickinson); FITC- and APC-conjugated anti-CD4 (IgG2a, clone EDU-2; Diatec); FITC- and PE-conjugated anti-CD8 (IgG2a, clone UCH-T4; Diatec); PE-conjugated anti-CD45RO (IgG2a, clone UCHL-1; LeukoSite Inc.); anti-CCR9 (IgG2b, clone 3C3; LeukoSite); anti-
4ß7 (IgG1, Act 1; courtesy of Dr. A.I. Lazarovits, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada); and PE/FITC-conjugated streptavidin (Southern Biotechnology). Secondary reagents were goat antimouse IgG2b-PE (Southern Biotechnology) and goat antimouse IgG1-PE (Catalog Laboratories).
Flow Cytometric Analysis and Cell Sorting
Immunofluorescence staining was performed after washing the cells with PBS plus 0.5% (wt/vol) BSA (Sigma-Aldrich). Cells were incubated for 20 min on ice with a pretitrated optimal dilution of each mAb. Cells were washed again and then analyzed by flow cytometry (FACS Caliber; Becton Dickinson). Immunostained subsets of T cells were sorted with FACS® Vantage SE (Becton Dickinson).
Transwell Experiments
Transwell experiments were performed in 24-well plates with a 0.4-µm pore size (Costar Inc.). FACS®-sorted CD4+CD25 cells (4 x 105) were added to the lower chamber. FACS-sorted CD4+CD25+ cells (105) with a purity
99% were added either directly to the lower chamber (together with the CD4+CD25 subset) or placed in the upper transwell chamber. After 48 h of stimulation with anti-CD3/CD28 beads (106 beads/well; Dynalbiotech), the cells in the lower chambers were transferred to a 96-well plate and radioactive thymidine was added for 1216 h. Incorporation of 3H-Tdr was determined in a ß-counter.
Cytokine Analysis
PBMCs (5 x 105) were cultured in flat 24-well plates (1 ml/well) and stimulated with PHA (50 µg/ml) or ß-LG (1 mg/ml) or remained unstimulated in medium alone for 96 h. The supernatants were collected and frozen at 70°C until analysis by the following assays.
TGF-ß.
An ELISA was performed in round-bottom wells coated overnight with a pretitrated optimal concentration of mAb to human TGF-ß in its inactive complex (antiTGF-ß1-LAP; 2 µg/ml, clone 27235.1; RD System Europe Ltd.). The supernatants and standard recombinant TGF-ß (RD System Europe) were serially diluted in PBS-Tween and incubated overnight at 4°C. A biotinylated mouse mAb to human TGF-ß1-LAP (125 ng/ml, clone 27240; RD System Europe) was added to the wells and incubated overnight at 4°C. The wells were than incubated with a Streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (RD System Europe) for 20 min in room temperature. Finally, TMB (Microwell Peroxidase Substrate System; KLP) was added for 30 min at room temperature, and the reaction was then stopped with 2 M HCl. The incubations were performed in humid chambers, with intervening washes (3 x 200 µl PBS containing 0.05% Tween).
IL-10.
Human Th1/Th2 Cytokine Cytometric Bead Array kit was used (550749; Becton Dickinson). The assay was performed according to the manufacturer's recommendation.
Statistics.
Shapiro-Francia W test was used for normality distribution test. Unpaired and paired two-tailed Student's t tests were used for statistical analyses. (Statview software designed for Macintosh computers.)
| Results |
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Peripheral blood from the two groups of children was analyzed with regard to the frequency of CD4+ T cells expressing CD25 and the modulation of this subset caused by the in vivo milk challenge. The percentage of CD4+ CD25+ T cells was fairly similar in the allergic and tolerant groups before this challenge. After the in vivo milk exposure, however, the tolerant group tended to show an increased frequency of circulating CD25+ cells (P = 0.07), whereas the number was significantly reduced (P < 0.01) in the allergic children (Fig. 1 A). Within this human T cell subset, the fraction with a high level of CD25 has been reported to be responsible for a down-regulatory function (39), but we did not detect differences in the immunostaining intensity between the two groups of children at either time points. Nevertheless, the CD4+CD25+ T cell subset profile was more distinct in the FACS® histogram 1 wk after the in vivo milk challenge for children with outgrown allergy than for those remaining allergic (Fig. 1 A). Also, comparison between the tolerant and allergic group with regard to the fraction of CD4+CD25+ T cells before and after the in vivo milk challenge revealed a significant difference (P < 0.03) in the modulation of this subset relative to the prechallenge levels; although only one out of seven of the allergic group showed an increased frequency of the CD25+ subset, this was the case for five out of ten of the tolerant group (Fig. 1 B). Notably, the percentage of CD3+CD4+ cells showed a similar range for both groups, both before (tolerant group: median 39.9%, range 28.756.3%; allergic group: median 43.9, range 36.557.2%) and after (tolerant group: median 42.5%, range 34.160.2%; allergic group: median 40.1%, range 24.956.3%) the challenge.
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4ß7, CCR9, CCR4, CD8, surface CTLA-4, CD40L, and CD45RA, but we did neither reveal any differences between the two groups of children nor an effect of in vivo milk challenge on these markers (unpublished data).
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| Discussion |
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Our study compared phenotypic and functional characteristics of PBMCs from children with clinically active or outgrown cow's milk allergy collected before and 1wk after an in vivo challenge with cow's milk. PBMCs from the tolerant group showed reduced proliferation induced in vitro by the major milk allergen ß-LG. Furthermore, the same children had a CD25+ T cell subset within their PBMCs that was able to suppress such proliferation. In this group, 30% of CD4+CD25+ T cells expressed the maturation marker CD45RO both before and after challenge with cow's milk, whereas the corresponding figure was only some 5% in the group with active allergy. All children included in our study had negative skin prick test against cow's milk proteins and no elevated specific IgE antibody levels in serum. This suggested that the observed symptoms were most probably produced via cell-mediated immunity. Approximately 50% of children suffering from food allergy appear by standard diagnostic tests to have a non-IgEmediated allergic reaction (43, 44), presumably delayed-type hypersensitivity, although the pathological process in the gut may be indistinguishable from an atopic disorder (45). We selected our patients to be homogeneously nonatopic, but it would certainly be of interest in the future to also study children with elevated IgE antibody levels against food allergens in a similar experimental set-up.
Such studies in young children (with repeated sampling) have profound ethical restrictions. Therefore, we had to design our in vitro experiments on the basis of the limited blood volumes available. We also had to take into account that with the large age range of the patients (656 mo), they had a highly variable immunological history in terms of exposure to antigens from vaccines and the environment. This related not only to their systemic but also to their mucosal immune system. Importantly, we investigated tolerance induction via the gut, and recent animal experiments have demonstrated that the systemic and local immunization routes provide different results when it comes to dampening of mucosal allergy (46). In view of this complex scenario, we decided that PHA stimulation, rather than an arbitrarily selected T celldependent antigen, would best ensure a consistent base-line response as a reference for the mucosal induction of Treg cells by cow's milk proteins.
The in vitro proliferative activity of PBMCs against ß-LG was presumably a T cell recall response. Notably, however, there was no significant difference when we compared PBMCs collected from the two groups of children before the in vivo cow's milk challenge with regard to proliferation elicited by ß-LG, frequency of CD4+CD25+ T cells, and a suppressive effect of CD25+ cells revealed by their depletion. This result probably reflected that the patients with active allergy at this time point did not have a substantially larger number of circulating memory T cells specific for ß-LG than tolerant children. The avoidance of cow's milk proteins for at least 2 mo before the challenge might have reduced this number, and specific T cells activated in GALT and mesenteric LNs would presumably start homing back to the intestinal lamina propria during milk challenge. Thus, there was a reduced relative frequency of circulating CD4+CD25+ T cells in most allergic children after the challenge (Fig. 1 B).
It is of note that the ß-LG preparations contained LPS comparable to an endotoxin activity of 5000 EU/ml at 5 mg/ml (Limulus Amebocyte Lysate test); but the polyclonal immunostimulation exerted by this contamination did not mask the antigen-specific T cell response elicited by ß-LG in vitro (unpublished data). Interestingly, the proliferative response of PBMCs against ß-LG was significantly decreased in milk-tolerant compared with allergic children after the in vivo milk challenge. Our findings therefore suggested that in the tolerant children this challenge had resulted in GALT activation and expansion not only of specific effector T cells but also of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells, which suppressed the in vitro proliferative response elicited by ß-LG. The observed relative increase of this circulating subset in half of the tolerant children 1 wk after challenge (Fig. 1 B) was probably an underestimate due to homing of allergen-activated T cells to the milk proteinexposed gut lamina propria as alluded to above.
Although it was originally believed that CD4+CD25+ Treg cells are anergic, at least two independent reports recently showed that mouse CD4+CD25+ T cells initially multiply in vivo after appropriate antigen stimulation (26, 47). We cannot exclude that the increased frequency of circulating CD4+CD25+ T cells after challenge in tolerant children partly reflected expansion of ordinary memoryeffector T cells, but the striking increase (fivefold) of proliferative activity against ß-LG exhibited by PBMCs from these children after depletion of CD25+ cells strongly suggested that their CD4+CD25+ subset contained a substantial fraction of Treg cells. This homeostatic mechanism most likely explained that they had outgrown their cow's milk allergy. For ethical reasons we could not obtain blood at a later time point after the milk challenge, so we have no information with regard to the persistence of the elevated level of CD4+CD25+ T cells in the circulation of the tolerant children.
Expression of integrin
4ß7 and CCR9 on T cells determines their homing into the small intestinal lamina propria (48). We analyzed the frequency of T cells with these markers, but there were no apparent differences between the two groups of children. It has been reported that the
4ß7 subset is increased in peripheral blood from children with cow's milk allergy, but that finding was obtained with T cells kept in culture for 1 wk (49). Also, it might be unrealistic to expect that we should be able to identify a phenotypic change induced by milk proteins in the total circulating pool of T cells with gut-homing properties.
Most functional studies of Treg cells have been performed in animal models for autoimmunity, inflammatory bowel disease, and transplantation. The first human studies of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells were in fact published quite recently (39, 5052). Evidence suggests that Treg cells may be antigen nonspecific, at least in the effector phase, and bystander suppression is a well-known phenomenon in oral tolerance (53, 54). A nonspecific effect of Treg cells could explain why we obtained a moderate enhancement of proliferation against PHA in PBMCs from tolerant children after depletion of CD25+ cells (Fig. 4). Altogether, our results implied that mucosally induced Treg cells responding to milk antigens were involved in the observed tolerance induction or, alternatively, that centrally generated Treg cells had become activated and expanded in the children with outgrown cow's milk allergy.
Expression of CTLA-4 has been associated with human CD4+CD25+ Treg cells (55). This molecule is constitutively expressed in the cytoplasm (27, 39), but once the cell is activated via the TcR complex it appears on the surface. However, the mechanistic role of surface CTLA-4 in cell contactdependent suppression in humans is debated. Several studies show that blocking CTLA-4 with antibodies does not abolish the suppressive activity of Treg cells (39, 51, 52). We did not find any difference in the expression level of this surface marker, either between the two groups of children or the two time points for sampling of PBMCs. Nevertheless, transwell experiments demonstrated that CD4+CD25+ Treg cells from milk-tolerant children exert their antiproliferative effect via a contact-dependent mechanism. Regrettably, we had no possibility to study the involvement of other inhibitory molecules such as PD-1 (39, 56).
The role in oral tolerance of the immunosuppressive cytokine TGF-ß derived from so-called regulatory Th3 cells induced in experimental animals is extensively documented (57). The reduced production of TGF-ß by ß-LGstimulated PBMCs after the in vivo milk challenge in the allergic group (Fig. 6 A) is in line with a recent study by Perez-Machado et al. (58) which shows that T cells obtained from duodenal mucosa of food-allergic children had a decreased potential for TGF-ß production compared with healthy controls. Conversely, we found that PBMCs stimulated by ß-LG 1 wk after the in vivo challenge tended to show increased production of TGF-ß in children with outgrown allergy, which could have contributed to the observed suppressive effect on proliferation. The major source for IL-10 production in ß-LGstimulated PBMC cultures in our experiments remains unknown, and the results obtained were inconclusive.
It has been shown in mouse models that the thymic epithelium is important in the generation of naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ Treg cells involved in the maintenance of tolerance (59). Because our study strongly suggests that CD4+CD25+ Treg cells reactive to dietary antigens can be induced via the gut, it will be of considerable interest to investigate whether exosomes released from the intestinal epithelium play a role in the development of such cells. We have previously obtained results indicative of a tolerance-inductive function of epithelial exosomes produced in the gut of experimental animals and therefore called these structures "tolerosomes" (60).
In conclusion, the observations presented here provide new insight into the possible relationship between mucosal induction of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells and protection against food allergy in humans. These results may aid the development of better diagnostic tools for such disorders and perhaps contribute to promote a future goal of generating Treg cells in vitro for immunotherapy of allergic diseases.
| Acknowledgments |
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4ß7 mAb, respectively. This work was supported by grants from the Norwegian Foundation for Health and Rehabilitation, the Norwegian Asthma and Allergy Association, the University of Oslo, the Research Council of Norway, and the Norwegian Cancer Society.
Submitted: 8 December 2003
Accepted: 6 May 2004
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