Ortega-Mejia Ingrid Itzayanna, Romero-López Nayeli, Casasola-Vargas Julio César, Burgos-Vargas Rubén, Domínguez-López María Lilia, Romero-López José Pablo
Laboratorio de Patogénesis Molecular, Edificio A4, Carrera de Médico Cirujano, Facultad de Estudios Superiores Iztacala, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Tlalnepantla de Baz, Estado de Mexico, Mexico.
Laboratorio de Inmunoquímica 1, Posgrado en Ciencias Quimicobiológicas, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico.
Front Immunol. 2025 Jul 24;16:1621396. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1621396. eCollection 2025.
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are critical for maintaining immune tolerance by suppressing effector T cell responses. However, in chronic inflammatory diseases such as spondyloarthritis (SpA) and psoriasis (PsO), Tregs can lose their stability and acquire pro-inflammatory characteristics, a phenomenon known as Treg plasticity. Under inflammatory conditions, Tregs may downregulate FoxP3, upregulate RORγt, and produce cytokines such as IL-17 and IFN-γ, thus losing their suppressive function and contributing to disease progression. In SpA, altered numbers and impaired Treg function have been identified in peripheral blood and synovial fluid. Specific subsets, such as CD161 Tregs with Th17-like features, suggest that inflammatory cytokines and signals like STAT3 activation and ICOS engagement promote pathogenic reprogramming. Genetic factors, including HLA-B27, may further predispose Tregs to instability. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses have provided evidence of shared TCR repertoires between Tregs and effector T cells, reinforcing the concept of lineage plasticity. Similarly, in PsO, skin-resident Tregs exposed to IL-23, IL-6, and IL-21 can acquire a Th17-like phenotype, producing IL-17A and exacerbating local inflammation. Environmental factors such as hypoxia also contribute to destabilizing Treg identity. The persistence of pathogenic Tregs, even following therapy blockade of IL-17 or IL-23, highlights the challenge of achieving long-term disease remission.
调节性T细胞(Tregs)通过抑制效应T细胞反应对维持免疫耐受至关重要。然而,在诸如脊柱关节炎(SpA)和银屑病(PsO)等慢性炎症性疾病中,Tregs会失去其稳定性并获得促炎特性,这一现象被称为Treg可塑性。在炎症条件下,Tregs可能会下调FoxP3,上调RORγt,并产生诸如IL-17和IFN-γ等细胞因子,从而失去其抑制功能并促进疾病进展。在SpA中,外周血和滑液中已发现Tregs数量改变和功能受损。特定亚群,如具有Th17样特征的CD161 Tregs,表明炎症细胞因子和信号,如STAT3激活和ICOS参与,促进了致病性重编程。包括HLA-B27在内的遗传因素可能进一步使Tregs易发生不稳定。单细胞转录组分析提供了Tregs和效应T细胞之间共享TCR库的证据,强化了谱系可塑性的概念。同样,在PsO中,暴露于IL-23、IL-6和IL-21的皮肤驻留Tregs可获得Th17样表型,产生IL-17A并加剧局部炎症。诸如缺氧等环境因素也有助于破坏Treg的特性稳定性。即使在阻断IL-17或IL-23治疗后,致病性Tregs仍持续存在,这凸显了实现疾病长期缓解的挑战。