The innate cytokine IL-18 inhibits CNS autoimmunity through preferential activation of protective CD8 T-cells
Morrissette, J. A.; Dang, V.; Huang, L.; Varghese, J.; Lanzar, Z. R.; Frank-Kamenetskii, A.; Canna, S. W.
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Chronic innate immune activation is widely thought to challenge self-tolerance. IL-18 is an inflammasome-activated cytokine and potent amplifier of T-cell activation whose excess is associated with certain autoinflammatory, but not autoimmune, diseases. We tested how excess IL-18 affected susceptibility to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a model of CNS autoimmunity driven by IL-18 responsive, myelin-autoreactive CD4 T-cells (CD4Tauto). We hypothesized that IL-18 would exacerbate immunopathology in EAE. Instead, excess IL-18 was profoundly protective. IL-18 did not impair CD4Tauto priming or early expansion. Rather, it selectively restricted later accumulation of highly activated, splenic CD4Tauto bearing CNS-homing integrins. Despite high IL-18 receptor expression on CD4Tauto and Foxp3+ CD4Treg, excess IL-18 acted specifically through mature CD8 T-cells to promote a highly activated CD8Teffector phenotype and IFN{gamma}-dependent protection from EAE. Therapeutic administration of a "decoy-resistant" IL-18 agonist (DR-18) to wild-type mice, even after CD4Tauto expansion, nevertheless engaged CD8 T-cells to diminish CD4Tauto abundance, prevent CNS infiltration, and block immunopathology. Together, these findings demonstrate IL-18s unexpected, dominant ability to mobilize protective CD8 T-cells against highly activated CD4Tauto and protect from CNS autoimmune pathology; illustrating a potential therapeutically relevant mechanism by which autoinflammation actively opposes autoimmunity.
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