IMMUNOLOGY
Aging Helper T Cells
Gain New Life
as Regulatory Agents
Converted Regulatory T Cells Dampen Fire
of Inflammation, Stifle Graft Rejection
There is a Chinese saying, “When things reach an extreme, they reverse
to their opposite.” HMS researchers, guided in part by this adage,
have discovered a remarkable turnabout: they found that a cell responsible
for initiating the immune response can turn around and quell that response
when the inflammatory fire gets too big or lasts too long.
The conversion—from helper T cell to regulatory T cell—entails
a remarkable change in the cell’s appearance and activity. T helper
cells are recognized by an array of cell surface markers, most notably the
CD4 protein. Xin Xiao Zheng, Dong Zhang, and colleagues found that cells
converted to a regulatory way of life stop expressing CD4.

Photo by Graham Ramsay
A new army of regulatory T cell—discovered by
Dong Zhang (left), Xin Xiao Zheng, and colleagues—might be harnessed
for taming unwanted inflammation.
Even more striking is the change in behavior. Helper T cells typically
work by summoning other immune cells to destroy pathogens or cancer cells.
Yet it appears that the regulatory cells develop a taste for killing. They
start expressing high levels of cytotoxic proteins that they appear to direct
at their non-converted helper T cell cousins. Zheng, HMS assistant professor
of medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Zhang, research fellow
in medicine, and their colleagues found that in the presence of the converted
cells, activated helper T cells exhibited high levels of cell death. Intriguingly,
the converts, who are recruited from the oldest members of the helper T cell
population, resist apoptosis.
The findings, which appear in the Dec. 29, 2006, Blood, have exciting implications.
Immunologists have labored to find ways to control unwanted inflammation
that occurs in autoimmune disease and transplant rejection. One approach
may be to raise an army of regulatory converts. Zheng, Zhang, and colleagues
have already taken a step in that direction. They converted helper T cells
into regulatory cells, then transplanted the converts with skin grafts into
mice. They performed similar experiments with pancreatic islet cells. In
each case, the mice accepted the transplants, even though skin and islet
cells are notoriously susceptible to immune attack.
The Yin and Yang of T Cells
Researchers have known for some time that inflammatory fires are lit and
then put out by a variety of homeostatic mechanisms. Immune cells, such as
helper T cells, appear to burn themselves out when an inflammatory response
has done its work. CD4 cells have been observed to undergo apoptosis after
four or five rounds of replication. The T cells may also be actively suppressed
by external agents, the regulatory T cells. This immune contingent has attracted
a great deal of attention, not least for its potential therapeutic value,
but much about the cells remains mysterious. Several types have been identified,
but little is known about how they arise in the immune system. Certainly,
no one had observed them developing from aging helper T cells.
That is, essentially, what Zheng, Zhang, and colleagues have found—and
they did so thanks, they say, to a combination of careful science, luck,
and cultural perspective.
“Chinese philosophy was helpful—it provides a guide,” Zheng
said. “You do not just expect a cell to be one thing or another, that
a CD4-postive cell is always positive or a CD4-negative cell is always negative.
You have the idea that things can be converted.”
The Conversion Experience
The researchers did not set out to contradict the prevailing view. “It
was an accident,” said Zhang. Their initial goal was quite practical.
They wanted to spur proliferation of a well-known regulatory T cell, the
so-called CD4+CD25+ T cells. “We thought there might be clinical applications
for these cells,” he said.
D4+CD25+ T cells—the first regulatory
T cells ever found—originate in the thymus as CD4+ T cells and are
activated in the periphery. In vitro, the regulatory T cells proliferate
when they encounter a particular class of antigen-presenting cell. Zheng
and colleagues wanted to see if they could increase this proliferation by
adding growth factors.
Zhang began by mixing highly purified CD4+ cells with the special antigen-presenting
cells; to some samples, he added the growth factor IL2 or IL15. He had only
run a couple of experiments when he noticed something strange. “Dong
came to me and said, ‘We’ve got something nobody else has described—it
looks like some of the proliferating CD4 cells are losing CD4 expression,’” Zheng
said.
The researchers reran their experiments. If the CD4– cells were contaminants,
they should have been evident almost immediately. In fact, they showed up
only on day four, after a burst of proliferation. And the loss of the CD4
marker appeared only on cells that had already undergone the requisite four
or five rounds of proliferation. That left an intriguing possibility: might
the CD4– cells be a product of the proliferating helper T cells?
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“We’ve got something
nobody else has described—it looks like some of the proliferating CD4
cells
are losing CD4 expression.”
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To get a better picture of the cells, the researchers examined the cell
surface markers. There was no evidence of the CD8 marker, usually expressed
on killer T cells. The reason this was significant is that in 2000, a Canadian
researcher had identified a regulatory T cell that expressed neither the
CD4 nor CD8 markers. But she had used CD8+ transgenic mice in her experiments,
which meant the regulatory cells were derived from CD8+ cells. Zheng and
colleagues began their experiments with purified CD4+ cells. To distinguish
their new CD4–CD8– regulatory cells, Zhang decided to call them CD4+ T
cell–converted double-negative (DN) cells.
Role Reversal
Still, it was not clear how the double-negative cells arose or what they
did. A gene expression panel indicated that the CD4 gene had, indeed, been
silenced, but the mechanism remained a mystery. Also puzzling, an apoptosis-revealing
stain showed that the cells were not dying, despite their age. Yet the death
toll among non-converted helper T cells appeared to increase when cultured
with the converts.
The researchers looked at what other genes were expressed by the double-negative
cells and found an important clue. The cells had apparently turned down the
production of cytokines, the signals normally employed by helper T cells,
and turned up the expression of two cytotoxic enzymes, perforin and granzyme
B. To see if the converts were using the enzymes to kill helper T cells,
and in this manner control inflammation, the researchers repeated their experiments,
this time using CD4+ cells taken from a perforin-knockout mouse. In culture,
the perforin-deprived double-negative cells did not appear to have as
great an effect on the helper T cells, which exhibited lower levels of apoptosis,
presumably because they were not being
damaged by perforin.
To test the converts’ mettle in a living animal, the researchers
raised an army of them and introduced them, along with skin tissue from a
donor mouse, into a recipient mouse. The grafts were protected, but only
when the double-negative recruits had been trained to recognize antigens
specific to that tissue. Skin transplants from a third mouse were rejected.
The scientists then tried a similar experiment, this time using a single,
relatively small dose of double-negative cells and pancreatic islet cells,
which they introduced into diabetic mice. The small infusion led to prolonged
and, in some cases, permanent engraftment of the islets.
Zheng hopes to move the discovery into humans. “We envision that healthy
people might make a cell bank for themselves, for their future,” he
said. “I am healthy now so if I convert some of my cells to double-negative
now, there is no health impact. In the future, if I need immune suppression,
I could take my own cells from the cell bank and have them put back into
me.”
—Misia Landau
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