ARTICLE UVB
radiation is immunosuppressive in both humans and
laboratory animals and a major cause of skin cancer [1]. The model of choice
for the study of UVB-induced immune suppression is the contact hypersensitivity
reaction (CHS), which is a delayed-type hypersensitivity mediated by hapten-specific
T cells. In this model, UVB suppress cellular immune responses to antigens
applied both at the site of irradiation (local suppression), or at distant,
nonirradiated sites (systemic suppression). Although it has been known for
years that both systemic [2] and local suppression of CHS [3-5] can be transferred
by T cells, the phenotype and mechanism of action of the suppressor T cell
subset remain unknown. Several hypotheses have been proposed: 1) UVB block
the ability of skin APC to induce priming of antigen-specific effector cells
either by killing the APC [6] or by abrogating expression of co-stimulatory
signals [7-9]; 2) UVB selectively induce activation of suppressor cells
which have been described as CD8+ T cells [10] or CD4+
T cells (Th2 or Tr1-like) [11-13], by converting dendritic cells (DC) from
immunogenic to tolerogenic APCs. UVB-induced suppressor cells may also kill
DC or effector T cells of CHS through Fas ligand-mediated apoptosis [5,
14]; 3) UVB exposed skin cells release suppressive cytokines which may inhibit
either the APC function of DC or the effector T cell activation or both
[15-17].
CHS is a T cell-mediated cutaneous inflammatory reaction occurring after
epicutaneous exposure to haptens in sensitized individuals [18, 19]. In
humans, it frequently manifests as an inflammatory dermatosis referred
to as contact dermatitis. Haptens are low molecular weight chemicals which
covalentely bind to discrete amino acid residues on self or exogenous
proteins [20]. Hapten-modified proteins could then be processed by APCs
into antigenic peptides, which are transported at the cell surface in
association with MHC class I and class II molecules. The sensitization
phase of CHS, also referred to as the afferent phase, occurs after the
first contact of the skin with the hapten. epidermal DC, i.e. Langerhans
cells (LC), play a crucial role in the sensitization phase. They capture
the hapten in the skin and migrate to draining lymph nodes where they
mature into functional APC endowed with the capacity to prime naive T
cells. LCs can present haptenated peptides by both MHC class I and class
II molecules and activate Ag-specific CD8+ and CD4+
T cell subsets. Recent studies conducted in MHC class I- and class II-deficient
mice have shown that: 1) CHS to DNFB was mediated by CD8+ T
cells whereas CD4+ T cells are down-regulatory cells of CHS
[21, 22]; 2) priming of CD8+ T cells occurs without the need
of CD4+ T cell help [21, 22]; 3) DC present haptenated peptides
by both MHC class I and class II molecules and activate Ag-specific CD8+
effector and regulatory T cell subsets, concurrently and independently
[22]. The elicitation phase of CHS, also known as the efferent phase,
develops a few hours after subsequent contact with the hapten and is mediated
by activation of hapten-specific CD8+ T cells in the skin.
We have recently shown that cytotoxicity is mandatory for CD8+
T cell-mediated CHS, since mice deficient in perforine and in Fas-L are
unable to develop a hapten-specific skin inflammation [23].
In the present study we took advantage of the model of CHS to DNFB to
get better insight into the mechanisms of UVB-induced immune suppression.
The existence of a clear-cut functional dichotomy between CD8+
and CD4+ T cells allowed us to study the effect of UVB on these
two T cell subsets and to address several questions: 1) Are UVB able to
block antigen-presenting functions of skin DC in vivo? 2) Is UVB-induced
immunosuppression the consequence of inhibition of CD8+ effector
T cells or rather the consequence of activation of CD4+ down-regulatory
T cells? 3) Do UVB suppress the CHS response by interfering with the sensitization
phase or with the elicitation phase of CHS?
Our data show that UVB have differential effects on DC-induced activation
of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells and that CD4+
T cells mediate the immunosuppressive effects of UVB through inhibition
of expansion of hapten-specific CD8+ effector T cells in the
lymphoid organs.
Materials and methods
Mice
Mice with a mutation in the beta2-microglobulin (I-) or Abeta gene (II-)
have been created by gene targeting techniques [24, 25]. Heterozygous
(I- and II-) knockout mice were backcrossed for more than 8 generations
to C57BL/6 mice and used to generate the offsprings of the present study.
They were obtained from C. Benoist and D. Mathis (IBMG, INSERM U. 184,
Stasbourg, France) and bred in specific-pathogen-free conditions in Iffa
Credo/Transgenic alliance, L'Arbresle, France. C57BL/6 (H-2b)
mice were obtained from Iffa-Credo, L'Arbresle, France. Mice were used
between 2 and 4 months of age.
Assay for CHS: the mouse ear swelling test
The procedure of the mouse ear swelling test has been described in detail
elsewhere [26]. DNFB (2,4-dinitro-fluorobenzene, Sigma, St. Louis, MO)
was diluted in acetone: olive oil (4:1) immediately before use. For sensitization,
irradiated and nonirradiated mice were painted once (day -5) on the shaved
dorsal skin with 25 muL of 0.5% DNFB. Five days later (day 0), mice were
challenged by the application of 5 µl 0.15% DNFB on each side of
the right ear, while the left ear received the vehicle alone. Ear thickness
was assessed before and at various intervals after challenge using a spring-loaded
micrometer (J15, Blet SA, Lyon, France). Ear swelling was calculated by
substracting the initial value from the values recorded on the corresponding
day, and further substracting any swelling recorded for the vehicle-painted
ear from the swelling recorded for the hapten-challenged ear.
UV radiation
UV radiation was provided by a bank of 14 F8T5 UV lamps (Sankio Denki,
Japan), emitting a broad spectrum of UV radiation between 280 and 360
nm, with a peak at 314 nm. Approximately 67% of the energy emitted is
within the UVB range. It produced an irradiance of 19 W/m2
in the UVB range and 7 W/m2 in the UVA range at a distance
of 20 cm from the source, as determined by an IL-1700 radiometer with
a SED 240 detector (International Light, Newburyport, MA). Groups of 5
mice were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital injected i.p. and subsequently
irradiated on shaved dorsal skin on 4 consecutive days (day-9 to day-6),
24 hrs prior to sensitization (Fig. 1A). The ears of the mice were
protected from UV radiation by covering them with opaque tape. Control
mice were treated in an identical manner, but were not exposed to UV radiation.
In some experimental groups, mice were killed at different time intervals
after DNFB challenge, for histological and RT-PCR analysis.
Antibody depletion of CD4+ and CD8+
T cells in vivo
The rat anti-mouse CD4 mAb GK 1.5 was obtained from the ATCC (Rockville,
MD) and the rat anti-mouse CD8 mAb H35.17.2 was kindly provided by G.
Milon (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France). Hybridomas were grown as ascites
in pristane-primed nude mice and used to treat mice. Mice were given i.p.
injections of 200 muL diluted ascites on days - 1, 0, + 1 and + 4
of skin sensitization. The amount of antibodies required for > 95 depletion
of directly detectable CD4+ molecules on spleen, lymph node
and blood lymphocytes was determined in preliminary experiments. Cell
depletion was assessed in each mouse by staining for CD4 molecules on
PBMC from venous blood drawn from the tail vein.
In vitro secondary T cell proliferation
Spleen cells from DNFB-sensitized C57BL/6 mice were collected 5 days
after sensitization. T lymphocytes were purified through negative selection
using anti-Ig columns (Biotex, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) as described
else-where [22]. The resulting cell suspensions contained > 90% CD3+
viable cells. CD8+ T cells were isolated from the spleen T
cells by elimination of CD4+ T cells using columns coated with
goat anti-mouse and goat anti-rat IgG and a rat anti-mouse CD4+
mAb (YTS191.1) (Biotex). FACS analysis of cells eluted from the column
showed < 0.5% of contaminating CD4+ T cells. In vivo
DNFB-primed unfractionned or CD8+T cells (2.5 x 105/well)
obtained on day 5 after DNFB sensitization were co-cultured for 3 days
at 37° C in 96-well plates with 106 mitomycin C-treated
syngenic spleen cells from naive nonirradiated mice, that were either
DNBS-derivatized as described [22] or left untreated. Briefly, 107
cells were incubated for 30 min with 25 µg/mL of mitomycin C (Sigma,
St. Louis, MO), washed and haptenated by 30 min incubation at 37°
C with 4 mM DNBS, ph 8.0, in serum-free RPMI medium. The proliferative
responses were assessed on day 3 of culture by 3H thymidine
incorporation (1 muCi/well) for the last 6 hours of culture. The results
are expressed as proliferation indexes: (cpm in cultured T cells + DNBS-treated
spleen cells)/(cpm in cultured T cells + untreated spleen cells).
IFN-gamma ELISA
Murine IFN-gamma was measured by ELISA in secondary T cell proliferation
culture supernatants using commercially available kits HyCult biotechnology
(Liden, The Netherlands). Assays were performed according to the manufacturer's
instructions.
IFN-gamma ELISPOT assay
Inguinal and axillary lymph nodes were harvested 5 days after DNFB sensitization.
Cell suspensions were restimulated in vitro by overnight culture
in complete RPMI medium supplemented with 10% FCS and containing a final
concentration of 0.4 muM DNBS. Control cultures included cells cultured
overnight in medium supplemented with 0.2 mM of the irrelevant hapten
TNBS, or in medium alone. The number of IFN-gamma producing cells was
determined using an Elispot assay. Briefly, 96 well nitrocellulose plates
(MAHA 45 Millipore) were coated overnight at 4° C with anti-IFN-gamma
antibody (R46A2) and blocked with PBS/2% BSA for 2 hrs at 37° C.
The plates were washed 3 times with PBS/Tween 0.1% before use. The cell
suspensions were washed, and incubated at different concentrations in
duplicate wells for 4hrs at 37° C, 5% CO2. Plates were
washed 3 times with PBS/0.1% Tween and incubated with a biotinylated anti-IFN-gamma
antibody (AN18). IFN-gamma spot forming cells (SFC) were developed using
streptavidine-alkaline phosphatase (Boehringer Mannheim), incubated for
two hrs and extensively washed before adding the substrat (5-Bromo-4-Chloro-3-Indolyl-Phosphate,
Sigma). The number of IFN-gamma SFC present in each well was counted using
a microscope and the results expressed as IFN-gamma SFC/106 cells.
RNA extraction and RT-PCR analysis of CD8 and
IFN-gamma mRNA
At different intervals after challenge, ear samples were collected from
irradiated and nonirradiated mice and frozen in liquid nitrogen. The detection
of RNA was conducted as described in detail elsewhere [23, 27]. Briefly,
total RNA was extracted using a RNAXEL kit (Eurobio, Les Ullis, France).
After DNase I treatment, 1 mug of total mRNA was reverse transcribed using
poly dT15 primers and Superscript II RT (Gibco, BRL) (90 min 37°
C). The amount of RNA to be used for detection was normalized using the
housekeeping gene HPRT (hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase) as reference.
The cDNA obtained was amplified using different sets of primers, for HPRT
(5'primer: 5'GTA ATG ATC AGT CAA CGG GGG AC 3'-3'primer: 5'CCA GCA AGC
TTG CAA CCT TAA CCA 3'), for CD4 (5'primer: 5'AGC AAC TCT AAG GTC TCT
AAC C 3'-3'primer: 5'AGA GTC AGA GTC AGG TTG CC 3'), for CD8 (5'primer:
5'AGG ATG CTC TTG GCT CTT CC 3'-3'primer: 5'TCA CAG GCG AAG TCC AAT CC
3') and for IFN-gamma (5'primer: 5'GCT CTG AGA CAA TGA ACG CT 3'-3'primer:
5'AAA GAG ATA ATC TGG CTC TGC3'). The amplifications were carried out
with 29 cycles for HPRT, 31 cycles for CD4 and 33 cycles for IFN-gamma
and CD8 (1 min at 94° C, 1 min 30 s at 60° C, 2 min at 72°
C). The PCR products were analysed on 1.5% agarose gel.
Statistical analysis
Panels consisted of 5 mice each and all experiments were performed at
least twice. Data were examined for normality and equal variance. Statistical
significance of differences between mean values of experimental groups
was evaluated using the two-tailed Student's t test (p < 0.05).
Results
MHC class II-deficient mice are resistant to
UVB-induced immunosuppression
We studied the dose-response of UVB-induced suppression of the CHS reaction
in C57BL/6 (I+II+) and in class II-deficient (I+II-)
mice (Fig. 1). Daily UVB
doses equal to or higher than 600 J/m2 induced dose-dependent
inhibition of the inflammatory reaction in I+II+
mice. The suppression was significant at 800 J/m2 and at 1,200
J/m2 the ear-swelling response was equal to the negative controls
(naive challenged mice) (Fig.
1B). We have therefore used 1,200 J/m2 as a suppressive
daily UVB dose in our further experiments.
I+II- mice developed an enhanced and prolonged
DNFB-specific CHS reaction, confirming previous studies which demonstrated
the down-regulatory role of CD4+ T cells [21] (Fig.
2A). UV irradiation doses which were suppressive in I+II+
mice failed to inhibit the CHS reaction in I+II-
mice. 2,000 J/m2 was the lowest daily irradiation dose at which
a mild reduction of CHS was observed. Irradiation at higher doses induced
erosive lesions at irradiation sites but failed to completely abolish
the hapten-specific ear-swelling. As shown on Figure
2B, ear sections obtained from I+II+ mice irradiated
at 1,200 J/m2 displayed none of the characteristics of an inflammatory
reaction and thus resemble naive nonirradiated controls. Nonirradiated
as well as irradiated I+II- mice exhibited
an enhanced CHS reaction as compared to nonirradiated I+II+
mice, namely exagerated dermal edema, vascular enlargement and mononuclear
cell infiltration.
CD4+ T cells mediate UVB-induced suppression
of CHS to DNFB
The lack of inhibition of the inflammatory reaction in irradiated I+II-
mice (which lack class II-restricted CD4+ T cells) suggested
that MHC class II-restricted CD4+ T cells could mediate UVB-induced
suppression. To test this hypothesis we performed CD4+ and
CD8+ T cell depletion experiments on irradiated and nonirradiated
I+II+ C57BL/6 mice (Fig.
3). As reported earlier [2], CD4+ T cell-depleted nonirradiated
I+II+ mice developed an enhanced and prolonged inflammatory
reaction, while CD8+ T cell depletion completely abolished
hapten-specific ear swelling. In contrast, irradiated I+II+
mice did not develop a CHS reaction and depletion of CD8+ T
cells did not affect this lack of response. Surprisingly, UV-irradiated
mice, depleted of CD4+ T cells exhibited a normal CHS response
with a magnitude and kinetics similar to that of nonirradiated mice. Taken
together these data confirm that the lack of inhibition of the inflammatory
reaction in UV-irradiated class II-deficient mice is due to the deficiency
in CD4+ T cells and that CD4+ T cells mediate UVB-induced
immune suppression in contact sensitivity to DNFB.
UVB irradiation is associated with a lack of
infiltration of IFN-gamma-producing CD8+ effector T
cells in the challenged skin
Two possibilities could explain the suppression of CHS reaction by UVB-induced
CD4+ T cells: a) they exert their action at the periphery,
at hapten-challenged sites, by inhibiting effector mechanisms initiated
by effector T cells of CHS that have already migrated to the skin; b)
they impair the priming and expansion of effector populations in the lymphoid
organs.
To discriminate between these two hypotheses we studied the expression
of CD4, CD8 and IFN-gamma mRNA in the skin of irradiated and nonirradiated
mice after sensitization and challenge (Fig.
4). CD4 mRNA is normally expressed at low levels in the skin of naive
mice and probably reflects the infiltration of recirculating skin homing
CD4+ T cells. In sensitized challenged mice it is down-regulated,
declining to its lowest values at 24 hrs post-challenge. It is up-regulated
thereafter, returning to pre-irradiation values at 48 hrs. PCR analysis
in this study confirmed these previous findings as to mRNA expression
in the skin of nonirradiated mice. CD4 mRNA in the skin of irradiated
mice did not show any significant changes in magnitude and kinetics in
comparison to nonirradiated mice. Thus, UVB-induced immunosuppression
is not due to increased infiltration of the skin by down-regulatory CD4+
T cells.
Alternatively, UVB irradiation was associated with an impaired infiltration
of CD8+ T cells at challenged site. CD8 and IFN-gamma mRNA
were found neither in the skin of naive mice, nor of naive challenged
mice. Up-regulation of both CD8 and IFN-gamma mRNA occurred as early as
6 hrs after challenge in nonirradiated mice, with a gradual increase in
the intensity thereafter (Fig.
4). Interestingly, sensitized irradiated mice showed only a mild increase
in CD8+ and IFN-gamma mRNA which appeared later than in nonirradiated
mice, at 24 hrs (Fig. 4).
Thus, the lack of CHS reaction observed in UVB-irradiated mice is associated
with a lack of infiltration of CD8+ T cells in situ.
Quantitative and qualitative alterations of DNFB-specific
CD8+ T cells in the lymphoid organs of UV-irradiated mice
The lack of infiltration of IFN-gamma-producing CD8+ effector
cells in the challenged site of irradiated mice could be secondary either
to their inability to migrate from blood to skin or to an impaired priming
and expansion of specific CD8+ T cells in the lymphoid organs.
To test for the latter hypothesis, lymphoid cells from irradiated and
nonirradiated animals were recovered 5 days post-sensitization and tested
for specific T cell proliferation and IFN-gamma production.
Both total T cells and CD8+ T cells obtained from nonirradiated
mice responded vigorously in a secondary T cell proliferation assay to
DNBS-treated but not to TNBS-treated syngeneic splenocytes (Fig.
5A). Conversely, hapten-specific responses were significantly diminished
when total T cells and CD8+ T cells were obtained from irradiated
mice (Fig. 5A). CD4+
T cells recovered from lymphoid organs of both irradiated and nonirradiated
animals yielded only low proliferative responses.
We next studied IFN-gamma production by T cell subsets recovered from
lymph nodes of irradiated and nonirradiated mice (Fig.
5B). Total T cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were
restimulated in vivo as previously described and 24 hrs later IFN-gamma
release in culture supernatants was analysed using an ELISA assay. As
shown on Figure 5B, IFN-gamma
is produced exclusively by the CD8+ T cell subset and its secretion
is greatly diminished in cultures of total T cells and CD8+
T cells recovered from lymphoid organs of irradiated animals.
We next used an ELISPOT assay to determine the frequency of DNFB-specific,
IFN-gamma-producing lymph node cells in irradiated and nonirradiated animals
(Fig. 5C). Previous studies
using lymph node cells from CD8+ T cell-depleted mice showed
that IFN-gamma producing cells were entirely contained in the CD8+
T cell subset [23]. UVB irradiation resulted in a major reduction in the
frequency of spot forming lymph node cells. An average number of only
10 IFN-gamma-SPF/106 LN cells was detected in irradiated mice,
compared to 35/106 in nonirradiated animals (Fig.
5C).
Taken together, these results indicate that UVB irradiation is responsible
for an impairment in the induction of hapten-specific CD8+
T cells in the lymphoid organs.
CD4+ T cells impair the induction
of hapten-specific CD8+ T cells in the lymphoid organs of irradiated
animals
Since UVB-induced CD4+ T cells do not inhibit the CHS reaction
by infiltrating the challenged site and since CD8+ hapten-specific
activation is impaired, we examined the hypothesis that the immune suppression
could be generated in the lymphoid organs, through CD4+ T cell-induced
inhibition of priming and expansion of effector CD8+ T cell
population of CHS.
We determined the effect of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell
depletion on the frequency of IFN-gamma-producing T cells in the lymphoid
organs of irradiated I+II+ C57BL/6 mice (Fig.
6). As expected, depletion of CD8+ T cells totally abrogated
the expansion of hapten-specific T cells. Interestingly, depletion of
CD4+ T cells induced a dramatic increase in the number of IFN-gamma-producing
SFC, compared to that obtained in irradiated C57BL/6 mice (180 and 38
SFC/106 LNC respectively). More importantly, the number of
IFN-gamma SFC was identical in irradiated and nonirradiated mice, i.e.
UVB irradiation did not modify the number of hapten-specific CD8+
T cell precursors in CD4+ T cell-depleted mice.
Thus, MHC class II-restricted CD4+ T cells are the targets
of UVB-induced immunosuppression, since in their absence there is a full
development of hapten-specific IFN-gamma producing CD8+ T cells
and the expression of a normal CHS reaction to DNFB.
Discussion
In the present study, we addressed the question of the mechanisms involved
in immune suppression induced by UVB radiation using the classical model
of CHS, which is a hapten-specific inflammatory skin DTH response mediated
by hapten-specific MHC class I-restricted CD8+ T cells and
down-regulated by MHC class II-restricted CD4+ T cells. The
immunosuppressive effect of UVB in this system is attested by the dose-dependant
inhibition of the CHS response. We show that CD4+ T cells mediate
UVB-induced immune suppression through inhibition of expansion of the
CD8+ effector T cell pool. More importantly, UVB have differential
effects on CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets. Using mice
deficient in MHC class II molecules, we demonstrate that UVB do not affect
directly the MHC class I-restricted CD8+ T cell activation
pathway. Conversely, UVB induce suppressor CD4+ T cells which
are able to prevent expansion of CD8+ effector T cells.
A major finding in this study is that UVB have differential effects
on CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets. Although the final
effect of UVB is the inhibition of hapten-specific CD8+ effector
T cell expansion, UVB do not directly impair the priming and expansion
of the CD8+ T cell subset. Indeed, MHC class II-deficient mice
and CD4+ T cell-depleted mice are resistant to the immune suppression
induced by UVB and develop a normal antigen-specific skin inflammation.
In other words, in the absence of CD4+ T cells, UVB radiation
is unable to suppress CD8+ T cell-mediated CHS reaction, even
if UV doses are increased up to skin toxicity. Thus, CD4+ T
cells are the targets of UVB radiation whereas CD8+ T cells
are unaffected by UVB. These data confirm and extend earlier studies suggesting
that CD4+ T cells mediate UVB-induced immune suppression [2,
3, 12, 13].
That UVB do not alter the development of antigen-specific CD8+
T cells in CD4+ T cell-deficient mice, has important implications
for the understanding of the immunosuppressive effect of UVB. Indeed,
in CD4+ T cell-deficient mice, the kinetics and magnitude of
the CHS reaction is similar to that of non-irradiated mice. Priming of
CD8+ effector T cells in the lymph nodes is unaffected by UVB,
as shown by a normal number of hapten-specific IFN-gamma-producing CD8+
T cells in irradiated mice. Thus, in contradiction to several data obtained
using in vitro irradiated DC [7-9, 28], our results show that UVB
do not impair the functional properties of APCs which are necessary for
priming CD8+ effector T cells of CHS, in the lymphoid organs.
Therefore, we have to assume that UVB do not affect the migration of epidermal
DC from the irradiated skin to the draining lymph nodes and do not alter
their functional maturation into potent APCs able to present antigen to
MHC class I-resctricted CD8+ T cells. Similarly, in the absence
of CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cell functions are unaffected
by UVB. Infiltration of the challenged site by CD8+ T cells
is normal in these irradiated mice (data not shown) and constitution of
the inflammatory cell infiltrate occurs with identical kinetics as in
non irradiated mice. We conclude from these data that the MHC class I-restricted
pathway for antigen-specific CD8+ T cell activation is not
sensitive to UVB.
MHC class II-restricted CD4+ T cells are clearly the targets
of UVB and mediate the UVB-induced immune suppression since their presence
is mandatory for the immunosuppressive effect of UVB. Indeed, I+II+
C57BL/6 mice, but not MHC class II-KO mice, are sensitive to UVB and show
an impaired CHS response and deficient infiltration of the skin by CD8+
effector cells. The possibility that CD4+ T cells exert their
suppressive functions at the periphery, in the skin, during the elicitation
phase of CHS was ruled out. Indeed, the pattern and kinetics of infiltration
of CD4+ T cells at the challenge site was identical in irradiated
versus non-irradiated mice, excluding the possibility that massive and
early recruitment of CD4+ T cells was responsible for impaired
CD8+ T cell infiltration. Alternatively, our data show that
CD4+ T cells act at the time of sensitization by blocking the
expansion of CD8+ T cells in the lymphoid organs. In C57BL/6
mice, UVB irradiation was associated with diminished CD8+ T
cell proliferation, IFN-gamma production and with decreased induction
of hapten-specific, IFN-gamma-producing, CD8+ T cells in lymph
nodes. The role of CD4+ T cells in impeding the development
of CD8+ T cells was further supported by the observation that
depletion in CD4+ T cells restores the number of antigen-specific
CD8+ T cells in the lymphoid organs. Thus, CD4+
T cells exert their suppressive effect in lymphoid organs at the time
of the sensitization. These data are in keeping with recent studies, which
showed that UV-induced CD4+ suppressor cells were found in
lymphoid organs of irradiated mice [12, 13, 29].
The mechanisms by which UV-induced CD4+ T cells suppress
CHS is not fully understood although recent data have pointed to a major
role of IL-10-producing Th2/Tr1 cells [11-13]. Cloned CD4+
T cells [13] and CD4+ T cell lines recovered from LN of UV-irradiated
mice produce IL-10 and high levels of IL-10 are found in the serum of
irradiated mice [13]. Furthermore, IL-10-KO mice are resistant to UVB-induced
immune suppression. Interestingly, IL-10 which was initially decribed
as an immunosuppressant for CD4+ T cells, was recently shown
to inhibit the antigen-specific proliferation and cytolytic functions
of CD8+ T cells [30, 31]. These effects were indirect and were
mediated through inhibition of MHC class I antigen expression and co-stimulatory
function of APC. Since CD8+ T cells are effector cells of CHS
through their cytotoxic activity [23], the pathophysiology of UV-induced
immune suppression could be as follow: 1) UVB, delivered before the skin
sensitization, are able to activate CD4+ T cells which produce
IL-10; 2) upon skin sensitization, epidermal DC migrate to the lymph nodes
for presentation of haptenated peptides to MHC class I-restricted CD8+
T cells; 3) activation and expansion of hapten-specific CD8+
T cells is inhibited because of the presence in the LN microenvironment
of high quantities of IL-10.
UV-induced suppressive CD4+ T cells share many phenotypic
and functional properties with down-regulatory CD4+ T cells
of CHS. In CHS, CD4+ T cells have been clearly identified as
down-regulatory cells, since MHC class II-deficient (I+II-)
mice develop an enhanced and prolonged CHS reaction [21, 32]. Both types
of cells produce Th2/Tr1 cytokines and are MHC class II-restricted suggesting
they are activated by epidermal DC through presentation of peptide/MHC
class II complexes [12, 13, 33]. IL-10 is the major suppressive cytokine
in both CHS and UVB-induced immune suppression of CHS, since IL-10-KO
mice develop an enhanced CHS to DNFB [34] and are resistant to the UVB-induced
immune suppression [35]. Therefore, it is tempting to speculate that UVB
is able to activate IL-10 producing CD4+ T cells which are
involved in the physiological down-regulation of the CHS response. In
this respect, we have previously shown in the classical model of CHS to
DNFB, that injection of haptenated MHC class I-II+ DC before
sensitization with DNFB was responsible for suppression of the CHS response
and was associated with activation of DNFB-specific CD4+ T
cells in the lymph nodes [22]. Thus, suppression of the CHS response may
be due to activation of down-regulatory CD4+ T cells before
that of effector CD8+ T cells. Based on the above data, we
postulate that UVB light, which is delivered before the sensitization
phase, is able to activate the normal IL-10 producing CD4+
T cells responsible for the down-regulation of CHS.
Abbreviations
DC dendritic cell
HPRT hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
CHS contact hypersensitivity
DNBS 2,4-dinitrobenzenesulfonic acid
DNFB dinitrofluorobenzene
DTH delayed-type hypersensitivity
LC Langerhans cell
SPF spot forming cell
TNBS 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid
Article accepted on 31/8/01
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