Abstract
Patients with aplastic anemia have elevated T-bet, a Th1 transcription factor, in peripheral blood CD4 and CD8 T cells, suggesting that T-bet over-expression and dysregulated Th1 immune response contributes to pathophysiology of marrow failure (
Solomou EE et al., Blood. 2006; 107:3983
). In the present study, we studied the role of T-bet in inducing bone marrow failure in a mouse model of immune-mediated BM failure, employing mice engineered with a germline T-bet deletion as lymphocyte donors. Compared with T-bet +/+ wild-type controls, T-bet−/− mice have similar cellular composition in various lymphohematopietic tissues including peripheral blood, spleen, thymus, lymph nodes (LN), and BM. Incubation of effector T-bet−/− LN cells with MHC-mismatched target CByB6F1 (F1) BM cells in an in vitro cytotoxicity assay resulted in a significantly lower proportion of apoptotic target cells than did wild-type T-bet+/+ LN effector cells, suggesting that T-bet−/− effector LN cells are functionally defective. While infusion of 5×106 wild-type T-bet+/+ LN cells into sublethally-irradiated F1 mice led to severe pancytopenia and aplastic bone marrow in recipient mice, infusion of the same number of T-bet−/− LN cells failed to result in marrow failure, and recipients had relatively normal blood counts and bone marrow cellularity. By flow cytometry, both expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and elevation in intracellular Th1 cytokine gamma interferon (IFN-γ), which are characteristic of marrow cells in recipients received B6 LN cells, were absent in recipients receiving T-bet −/− LN cells. Serum IFN-γ concentration in F1 mice infused with T-bet −/− LN cells was similar to the level in F1 control mice received TBI alone, and both were significantly lower than serum IFN-γ in recipients of wild-type B6 LN cells. In contrast, serum TGF-γ concentration was higher in F1 mice that received TBI alone or TBI plus T-bet −/− LN cell infusion, compared with mice that received TBI plus B6 LN cells. An increase of T-bet −/− LN cell infusion to 10×106 cells per recipient led to very mild BM failure. Contrary to the markedly increased number of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and elevated IFN-γ level in the BM of F1 mice which have received wild type B6 LN cells, F1 mice infused with T-bet −/− LN have low CD4+ and CD8+ cells and low IFN-γ level in the BM similar to F1 mice received TBI alone, but they show increased IL4 and IL17 levels within bone marrow T cells, indicating that the diminished Th1 immune response due to T-bet deficiency was partially compensated by up-regulated Th2 and Th17 responses. Our data demonstrated that T-bet plays a critical role in immune mediated bone marrow failure. Approaches targeting to T-bet signal pathway may lead to novel treatment for bone marrow failure and other autoimmune diseases.Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Corresponding author
2008, The American Society of Hematology
2008
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal