2018
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1701248
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IL-10 Deficiency Reveals a Role for TLR2-Dependent Bystander Activation of T Cells in Lyme Arthritis

Abstract: T cells predominate the immune responses in the synovial fluid of patients with persistent Lyme arthritis; however, their role in Lyme disease remains poorly defined. Using a murine model of persistent Lyme arthritis, we observed that bystander activation of CD4 and CD8 T cells leads to arthritis-promoting IFN-γ, similar to the inflammatory environment seen in the synovial tissue of patients with posttreatment Lyme disease. TCR transgenic mice containing monoclonal specificity toward non- epitopes confirmed th… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…In mice, dysregulated Type I (IFNα/β) or Type II IFN (IFNγ) production is associated with severe LA (Lochhead et al, ; Sonderegger et al, ; Whiteside et al, ). Therefore, Interferome analysis (Rusinova et al, ) was performed to identify the percentage of IFN‐upregulated genes from those upregulated in LA synovial tissue compared with OA or other forms of chronic inflammatory arthritis (Figure a).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In mice, dysregulated Type I (IFNα/β) or Type II IFN (IFNγ) production is associated with severe LA (Lochhead et al, ; Sonderegger et al, ; Whiteside et al, ). Therefore, Interferome analysis (Rusinova et al, ) was performed to identify the percentage of IFN‐upregulated genes from those upregulated in LA synovial tissue compared with OA or other forms of chronic inflammatory arthritis (Figure a).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Arthritogenic C3H/HeN and C57BL/6 Il10 −/− mice have robust upregulation of IFN‐response pathways in infected joints early in infection that negatively correlate with expression of tissue repair genes (Crandall et al, ). This phenotype is dependent on Type I IFN (IFNαβ) overexpression by myeloid cells in C3H mice (Lochhead et al, ; Ma et al, ; Miller, Ma, Crandall, Wang, & Weis, ; Paquette et al, ) and on Type II IFN (IFNγ) overexpression by T cells in B6 Il10 −/− mice (Sonderegger et al, ; Whiteside et al, ). Conversely, wild‐type C57BL/6 mice, which develop mildly inflammatory LA, have marked upregulation of tissue repair genes in infected joints, with only a modest upregulation of IFN‐responsive genes (Crandall et al, ), similar to our OA cohort or the low inflammatory RA subgroup.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although wild‐type mice resolve their arthritis with antibiotic therapy, the Il10 −/− mouse model of IFNγ‐dependent LA is the closest equivalent to human postinfectious LA, in which IFNγ, rather than Borrelia infection, appears to play a central role in pathogenesis (Lochhead et al, ). In both Il10 −/− mice (Whiteside et al, ) and patients with postinfectious LA (Lochhead et al, ), IFNγ responses persist or worsen, despite undetectable pathogen loads (Li et al, ). These results suggest that impaired or inadequate IL‐10 responses during and/or after infection may play a role in human postinfectious LA pathogenesis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In B. burgdorferi-infected mice, robust IFN responses and suppressed tissue repair responses are found in joints of mouse strains that develop severe LA (Crandall et al, 2006). In particular, Il10 −/− (C57BL/6) mice have a marked Th1 signature and overproduction of arthritogenic IFNγ by T cells Whiteside et al, 2018). This Th1/IFNγ signature is sustained in joints of Il10 −/− mice for up to 18 weeks post infection, when B. burgdorferi are no longer detectible in joint tissue (Whiteside et al, 2018).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%