Immunomodulatory intervention: IL-17A and regulatory T cells in a model of retinopathy of prematurity
thesis
posted on 2017-06-12, 01:58authored byDean Talia
Retinopathy of
prematurity (ROP) is characterised by tissue ischaemia which leads to aberrant
vascularisation of the developing retina. This disorder is a leading cause of
vision loss and blindness in premature infants. ROP is initiated upon exposure
of the infant to high levels of supplemental oxygen to provide for normal
cardiovascular development. This results in the degeneration of the peripheral
retinal microvasculature. When infants are returned to room air conditions, the
reduced vascular network is insufficient in supplying oxygen, resulting in
relative hypoxia in the retina. Hypoxia is a trigger for the stimulation of
inflammatory and angiogenic factors including vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF), initiating vascular leakage and pathological neovascularization.
Unfortunately preventative treatments are unavailable and hence there is considerable
interest in defining the cellular and biochemical mechanisms in ROP in order to
identity potential treatment targets. Inflammation has emerged as a key
contributor to the progression of ROP. The pro- or anti-inflammatory activation
state of the resident retinal immunocompetent cells, microglia has been
recognised as a determinant in the development of retinal vasculopathy.
However, the factors regulating microglia activation are not well understood.
The inflammatory mediator interleukin (IL)-17A, the signature
cytokine of TH17 cells, can stimulate VEGF-induced neovascularization. However,
it is largely unknown whether non-lymphoid cells can secrete IL-17A in the
retina and if this is a contributing factor to the development of ROP. The
findings of this thesis established microglia as a source of IL-17A under
hypoxic conditions. Müller and ganglion cells however didn’t produce IL-17A,
but expressed IL-17 receptors and demonstrated the responsiveness to IL-17A
through increased production of VEGF and inflammatory factors. Deficiency in
IL-17A via direct neutralisation and upstream inhibition attenuated vascular
injury and inflammation in a mouse model of ROP, oxygen-induced retinopathy
(OIR). Also reduced were key signifiers of OIR including vascular leakage and
microglia infiltration as well as macroglial Müller cell and ganglion cell
damage.
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) expressing the transcription
factor, Forkhead box 3 (Foxp3), play a central role in repressing inflammation
and immune-mediated pathology. However, the contribution of Tregs to the
development of ROP inflammation and vasculopathy is unknown. It is reasoned
that Foxp3+ T regulatory cells (Tregs) penetrate the ischemic retina,
immunosuppress microglia and reduce proliferative vasculopathy. This thesis
presents novel data utilising OIR and Foxp3+ reporter mice, with Treg numbers
in lymphoid organs, retina and blood altered during the course of disease and
increased following Treg expansion with an IL-2/anti-IL-2 mAb complex. This
data was confirmed using a clinically relevant treatment, the adoptive transfer
of Tregs. Both approaches reduced retinal vaso-obliteration,
neovascularization, vascular leakage and key retinal pro-angiogenic factors;
VEGF and placental growth factor. Tregs physically contacted microglia, which
were deactivated as demonstrated by FACS and confocal microscopy. These
findings were corroborated in primary cultured microglia activated by hypoxia,
where Tregs inhibited microglia activation through cell-to-cell contact and
hindered their capacity to produce injurious cytokines. Collectively, this
thesis demonstrated that boosting Tregs and IL-17A/RORγ ablation are previously
unrecognized avenues for research into new therapeutic interventions for ROP.