Bilyk N, Holt P G
Division of Cell Biology, Institute for Child Health Research, Subiaco, Western Australia.
Immunology. 1995 Oct;86(2):231-7.
Under steady-state conditions, T-cell activation in the lung is tightly controlled by lymphocytostatic signals from resident pulmonary alveolar macrophages (PAM). The present study focuses upon the mechanism of suppression in the mouse, and how it is bypassed during local inflammatory challenge. Reactive nitrogen intermediates such as nitric oxide (NO) are shown to play a central role in the process as the expression of lymphocytostatic activity by resident murine PAM was abrogated by the NO synthetase inhibitor N-monomethyl-arginine. Overnight pretreatment of resident PAM with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) abrogated lymphocytostatic activity, with a concomitant small decrease in NO production; this effect was markedly amplified by tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), but the latter was ineffective alone. The cytokines were inactive if added singly or in combination to fresh PAM:T-cell co-cultures. If GM-CSF plus TNF-alpha exposure of PAM was prolonged beyond 48 hr, both lymphocytostatic and NO-producing capacity were spontaneously re-established. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) also inhibited both NO production and lymphocytostatic activity of PAM, but in contrast to GM-CSF and TNF-alpha, TGF-beta was only active if present throughout the PAM:T-cell coculture period. Additionally, monocytes recruited into the lung by a sterile inflammatory stimulus are shown to be initially stimulatory towards T-cell activation, and to progressively develop both T-cell suppressive- and NO synthetic-capacity as they mature into mature PAM in vivo. Thus, during acute lung inflammation, a series of overlapping mechanisms are potentially available to bypass local immunosuppression: secretion of cytokines which are capable of temporarily abrogating the immunosuppressive activity of resident PAM, and the recruitment of permissive monocytes which exhibit potent accessory cell activity, the net result being the creation of a transient 'window' for induction of local T cell-mediated immunity.
在稳态条件下,肺内T细胞的激活受到驻留肺泡巨噬细胞(PAM)产生的淋巴细胞抑制信号的严格控制。本研究聚焦于小鼠体内的抑制机制,以及在局部炎症刺激过程中该机制是如何被绕过的。研究表明,活性氮中间体如一氧化氮(NO)在这一过程中起核心作用,因为NO合酶抑制剂N-单甲基精氨酸可消除驻留小鼠PAM的淋巴细胞抑制活性。用粒细胞-巨噬细胞集落刺激因子(GM-CSF)对驻留PAM进行过夜预处理可消除淋巴细胞抑制活性,同时NO产生量略有下降;肿瘤坏死因子-α(TNF-α)可显著增强这一效应,但后者单独作用时无效。若将这些细胞因子单独或联合添加到新鲜的PAM与T细胞共培养体系中则无活性。如果PAM暴露于GM-CSF加TNF-α的时间延长至48小时以上,淋巴细胞抑制能力和产生NO的能力会自发恢复。转化生长因子-β(TGF-β)也可抑制PAM的NO产生和淋巴细胞抑制活性,但与GM-CSF和TNF-α不同的是,TGF-β只有在整个PAM与T细胞共培养期间都存在时才具有活性。此外,无菌炎症刺激募集到肺内的单核细胞最初对T细胞激活具有刺激作用,并在体内成熟为成熟PAM的过程中逐渐发展出T细胞抑制能力和NO合成能力。因此,在急性肺部炎症期间,一系列重叠机制可能会绕过局部免疫抑制:分泌能够暂时消除驻留PAM免疫抑制活性的细胞因子,以及募集具有强大辅助细胞活性的允许性单核细胞,最终结果是为诱导局部T细胞介导的免疫创造一个短暂的“窗口”。