IL-10 deficiency unleashes an influenza-specific Th17 response and enhances survival against high-dose challenge

KK McKinstry, TM Strutt, A Buck, JD Curtis… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
KK McKinstry, TM Strutt, A Buck, JD Curtis, JP Dibble, G Huston, M Tighe, H Hamada, S Sell…
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
We examined the expression and influence of IL-10 during influenza infection. We found that
IL-10 does not impact sublethal infection, heterosubtypic immunity, or the maintenance of
long-lived influenza Ag depots. However, IL-10-deficient mice display dramatically
increased survival compared with wild-type mice when challenged with lethal doses of virus,
correlating with increased expression of several Th17-associated cytokines in the lungs of IL-
10-deficient mice during the peak of infection, but not with unchecked inflammation or with …
Abstract
We examined the expression and influence of IL-10 during influenza infection. We found that IL-10 does not impact sublethal infection, heterosubtypic immunity, or the maintenance of long-lived influenza Ag depots. However, IL-10-deficient mice display dramatically increased survival compared with wild-type mice when challenged with lethal doses of virus, correlating with increased expression of several Th17-associated cytokines in the lungs of IL-10-deficient mice during the peak of infection, but not with unchecked inflammation or with increased cellular responses. Foxp3− CD4 T cell effectors at the site of infection represent the most abundant source of IL-10 in wild-type mice during high-dose influenza infection, and the majority of these cells coproduce IFN-γ. Finally, compared with predominant Th1 responses in wild-type mice, virus-specific T cell responses in the absence of IL-10 display a strong Th17 component in addition to a strong Th1 response and we show that Th17-polarized CD4 T cell effectors can protect naive mice against an otherwise lethal influenza challenge and utilize unique mechanisms to do so. Our results show that IL-10 expression inhibits development of Th17 responses during influenza infection and that this is correlated with compromised protection during high-dose primary, but not secondary, challenge.
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