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Browsing by Author "Nguyen, Evelyn T."

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    Bcl6 Controls the Th2 Inflammatory Activity of Regulatory T Cells by Repressing Gata3 Function
    (Oxford University Press, 2012) Sawant, Deepali V.; Sehra, Sarita; Nguyen, Evelyn T.; Jadhav, Rohit; Englert, Kate; Shinnakasu, Ryo; Hangoc, Giao; Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Nakayama, Toshinori; Perumal, Narayanan B.; Kaplan, Mark H.; Dent, Alexander L.; Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine
    The transcriptional repressor Bcl6 is a critical arbiter of Th cell fate, promoting the follicular Th lineage while repressing other Th cell lineages. Bcl6-deficient (Bcl6(-/-)) mice develop a spontaneous and severe Th2-type inflammatory disease, thus warranting assessment of Bcl6 in regulatory T cell (Treg) function. Bcl6(-/-) Tregs were competent at suppressing T cell proliferation in vitro and Th1-type colitogenic T cell responses in vivo. In contrast, Bcl6(-/-) Tregs strongly exacerbated lung inflammation in a model of allergic airway disease and promoted higher Th2 responses, including systemic upregulation of microRNA-21. Further, Bcl6(-/-) Tregs were selectively impaired at controlling Th2 responses, but not Th1 and Th17 responses, in mixed chimeras of Bcl6(-/-) bone marrow with Foxp3(-/-) bone marrow. Bcl6(-/-) Tregs displayed increased levels of the Th2 transcription factor Gata3 and other Th2 and Treg genes. Bcl6 potently repressed Gata3 transcriptional transactivation, providing a mechanism for the increased expression of Th2 genes by Bcl6(-/-) Tregs. Gata3 has a critical role in regulating Foxp3 expression and functional fitness of Tregs; however, the signal that regulates Gata3 and restricts its transactivation of Th2 cytokines in Tregs has remained unexplored. Our results identify Bcl6 as an essential transcription factor regulating Gata3 activity in Tregs. Thus, Bcl6 represents a crucial regulatory layer in the Treg functional program that is required for specific suppression of Gata3 and Th2 effector responses by Tregs.
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    Interleukin-9 is Required for Allergic Airway Inflammation Mediated by the Cytokine Thymic Stromal Lymphopoietin
    (Elsevier, 2013) Yao, Weiguo; Zhang, Yanlu; Jabeen, Rukhsana; Nguyen, Evelyn T.; Wilkes, David S.; Tepper, Robert S.; Kaplan, Mark H.; Zhou, Baohua; Pediatrics, School of Medicine
    Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) is an epithelial cell-derived cytokine important for the initiation and development of T helper (Th2) cell-mediated allergic inflammation. In this study, we identified a positive association between interleukin-9 (IL-9) and TSLP concentration in the serum of infants with atopic dermatitis. In primary cell cultures, the addition of TSLP led to an increase in IL-9 production from human and mouse Th9 cells, and induced an increase in signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 (STAT5) activation and binding to the Il9 promoter. In vivo, use of an adoptive transfer model demonstrated that TSLP promoted IL-9-dependent, Th9 cell-induced allergic inflammation by acting directly on T cells. Moreover, transgenic expression of TSLP in the lung stimulated IL-9 production in vivo, and anti-IL-9 treatment attenuated TSLP-induced airway inflammation. Together, our results demonstrate that TSLP promotes Th9 cell differentiation and function and define a requirement for IL-9 in TSLP-induced allergic inflammation.
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    TH9 cells are required for tissue mast cell accumulation during allergic inflammation
    (Elsevier, 2015-08) Sehra, Sarita; Yao, Weiguo; Nguyen, Evelyn T.; Glossen-Byers, Nicole L.; Akhtar, Nahid; Zhou, Baohua; Kaplan, Mark H.; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of Medicine
    BACKGROUND: IL-9 is important for the growth and survival of mast cells. IL-9 is produced by T cells, natural killer T cells, mast cells, eosinophils, and innate lymphoid cells, although the cells required for mast cell accumulation during allergic inflammation remain undefined. OBJECTIVE: We sought to elucidate the role of TH9 cells in promoting mast cell accumulation in models of allergic lung inflammation. METHODS: Adoptive transfer of ovalbumin-specific TH2 and TH9 cells was used to assess the ability of each subset to mediate mast cell accumulation in tissues. Mast cell accumulation was assessed in wild-type mice and mice with PU.1-deficient T cells subjected to acute and chronic models of allergic inflammation. RESULTS: Adoptive transfer experiments demonstrated that recipients of TH9 cells had significantly higher mast cell accumulation and expression of mast cell proteases compared with control or TH2 recipients. Mast cell accumulation was dependent on IL-9, but not IL-13, a cytokine required for many aspects of allergic inflammation. In models of acute and chronic allergic inflammation, decreased IL-9 levels in mice with PU.1-deficient T cells corresponded to diminished tissue mast cell numbers and expression of mast cell proteases. Mice with PU.1-deficient T cells have defects in IL-9 production from CD4(+) T cells, but not natural killer T cells or innate lymphoid cells, suggesting a TH cell-dependent phenotype. Rag1(-/-) mice subjected to a chronic model of allergic inflammation displayed reduced mast cell infiltration comparable with accumulation in mice with PU.1-deficient T cells, emphasizing the importance of IL-9 produced by T cells in mast cell recruitment. CONCLUSION: TH9 cells are a major source of IL-9 in models of allergic inflammation and play an important role in mast cell accumulation and activation.
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