Chitin induces upregulation of B7‐H1 on macrophages and inhibits T‐cell proliferation |
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Authors: | Claudia J Wagner Silke Huber Stefanie Wirth David Voehringer |
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Institution: | Institute for Immunology, Medical Faculty, University of Munich, Munich, Germany |
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Abstract: | Chitin is a highly abundant glycopolymer, which serves as structural component in fungi, arthropods and crustaceans but is not synthesized by vertebrates. However, vertebrates express chitinases and chitinase‐like proteins, some of which are induced by infection with helminths suggesting that chitinous structures may be targets of the immune system. The chitin‐induced modulations of the innate and adaptive immune responses are not well understood. Here, we demonstrate that intranasal administration of OVA and chitin resulted in diminished T‐cell expansion and Th2 polarization as compared with OVA administration alone. Chitin did not promote nor attenuate Th2 polarization in vitro. Chitin‐exposed macrophages inhibited proliferation of CD4+ T cells in a cell–cell contact‐dependent manner. Chitin induced upregulation of the inhibitory ligand B7‐H1 (PD‐L1) on macrophages independently of MyD88, TRIF, TLR2, TLR3, TLR4 and Stat6. Inhibition of T‐cell proliferation was largely dependent on B7‐H1, as the effect was not observed in cocultures with cells from B7‐H1‐deficient mice. |
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Keywords: | B7‐H1 Chitin Macrophages T‐cell proliferation |
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