Infected CD8α dendritic cells are the predominant source of IL-10 during establishment of persistent viral infection

CT Ng, MBA Oldstone - Proceedings of the National …, 2012 - National Acad Sciences
CT Ng, MBA Oldstone
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012National Acad Sciences
Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is an important factor involved in T-cell dysfunction during persistent
viral infection. Although several factors can negatively regulate T-cell activity, targeting of the
IL-10 pathway alone is sufficient to regenerate T-cell activity and increase viral control. How
IL-10 mediates these effects is unclear. Here, we investigated the cellular source of IL-10
necessary for establishing T-cell exhaustion and viral persistence, using IL-10 reporter mice
(VertX), cell-type–specific IL-10 and IL-10 receptor deletion mice, and bone marrow chimeric …
Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is an important factor involved in T-cell dysfunction during persistent viral infection. Although several factors can negatively regulate T-cell activity, targeting of the IL-10 pathway alone is sufficient to regenerate T-cell activity and increase viral control. How IL-10 mediates these effects is unclear. Here, we investigated the cellular source of IL-10 necessary for establishing T-cell exhaustion and viral persistence, using IL-10 reporter mice (VertX), cell-type–specific IL-10 and IL-10 receptor deletion mice, and bone marrow chimeric mice. During establishment of viral persistence, the cellular subset with the most prevalent expression of IL-10 was CD8αCD4+ dendritic cells (DCs), which produced IL-10 with increasing kinetics until 9 d postinfection. After this time point, DCs exhibited a modest decline in percentage of IL-10+ cells whereas B cells and CD4+ T cells increased minimally. Further analysis of the DC population demonstrated that IL-10 was primarily expressed in infected DCs. These DCs were a notable source of IL-10 as mutant mice with a DC-specific deletion of IL-10 had significantly decreased serum levels. Interestingly, viral infection was not directly causative of IL-10 expression; rather, IL-10 production appeared to be linked to type I IFN signaling. Our findings further illuminate the contribution of DCs to the production of IL-10 and to viral persistence.
National Acad Sciences