TY - JOUR
T1 - NADPH oxidase deficiency underlies dysfunction of aged CD8+ Tregs
AU - Wen, Zhenke
AU - Shimojima, Yasuhiro
AU - Shirai, Tsuyoshi
AU - Li, Yinyin
AU - Ju, Jihang
AU - Yang, Zhen
AU - Tian, Lu
AU - Goronzy, Jörg J.
AU - Weyand, Cornelia M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants from the NIH (R01 AR042527, R01 AI044142, P01 HL058000, R01 AI108891, R01 HL117913, R01 AG045779, and R01 AI108906). Z. Yang received fellowship support from the Govenar Discovery Fund. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH.
PY - 2016/5/2
Y1 - 2016/5/2
N2 - Immune aging results in progressive loss of both protective immunity and T cell-mediated suppression, thereby conferring susceptibility to a combination of immunodeficiency and chronic inflammatory disease. Here, we determined that older individuals fail to generate immunosuppressive CD8+ CCR7+ Tregs, a defect that is even more pronounced in the agerelated vasculitic syndrome giant cell arteritis. In young, healthy individuals, CD8+ CCR7+ Tregs are localized in T cell zones of secondary lymphoid organs, suppress activation and expansion of CD4 T cells by inhibiting the phosphorylation of membrane-proximal signaling molecules, and effectively inhibit proliferative expansion of CD4 T cells in vitro and in vivo. We identified deficiency of NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2) as the molecular underpinning of CD8 Treg failure in the older individuals and in patients with giant cell arteritis. CD8 Tregs suppress by releasing exosomes that carry preassembled NOX2 membrane clusters and are taken up by CD4 T cells. Overexpression of NOX2 in aged CD8 Tregs promptly restored suppressive function. Together, our data support NOX2 as a critical component of the suppressive machinery of CD8 Tregs and suggest that repairing NOX2 deficiency in these cells may protect older individuals from tissue-destructive inflammatory disease, such as large-vessel vasculitis.
AB - Immune aging results in progressive loss of both protective immunity and T cell-mediated suppression, thereby conferring susceptibility to a combination of immunodeficiency and chronic inflammatory disease. Here, we determined that older individuals fail to generate immunosuppressive CD8+ CCR7+ Tregs, a defect that is even more pronounced in the agerelated vasculitic syndrome giant cell arteritis. In young, healthy individuals, CD8+ CCR7+ Tregs are localized in T cell zones of secondary lymphoid organs, suppress activation and expansion of CD4 T cells by inhibiting the phosphorylation of membrane-proximal signaling molecules, and effectively inhibit proliferative expansion of CD4 T cells in vitro and in vivo. We identified deficiency of NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2) as the molecular underpinning of CD8 Treg failure in the older individuals and in patients with giant cell arteritis. CD8 Tregs suppress by releasing exosomes that carry preassembled NOX2 membrane clusters and are taken up by CD4 T cells. Overexpression of NOX2 in aged CD8 Tregs promptly restored suppressive function. Together, our data support NOX2 as a critical component of the suppressive machinery of CD8 Tregs and suggest that repairing NOX2 deficiency in these cells may protect older individuals from tissue-destructive inflammatory disease, such as large-vessel vasculitis.
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U2 - 10.1172/JCI84181
DO - 10.1172/JCI84181
M3 - Article
C2 - 27088800
AN - SCOPUS:84971309786
VL - 126
SP - 1953
EP - 1967
JO - Journal of Clinical Investigation
JF - Journal of Clinical Investigation
SN - 0021-9738
IS - 5
ER -