Abstract

Glucocorticoids are known to increase production of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, and this action is associated with their clinical efficacy in asthmatics. However, glucocorticoids also enhance the synthesis of IL-17A by PBMCs, which, in excess, is associated with increased asthma severity and glucocorticoid-refractory disease. In this study, we show that the glucocorticoid dexamethasone significantly increased IL-10 production by human memory CD4+ T cells from healthy donors, as assessed by intracellular cytokine staining. In addition, dexamethasone increased production of IL-17A, IL-17F, and IL-22, with the most striking enhancement in cells coproducing Th17-associated cytokines together with IL-10. Of note, an increase in IFN-γ+IL-10+ cells was also observed despite overall downregulation of IFN-γ production. These dexamethasone-driven IL-10+ cells, and predominantly the IL-17+IL-10+ double-producing cells, were markedly refractory to the inhibitory effect of dexamethasone on proliferation and IL-2Rα expression, which facilitated their preferential IL-2–dependent expansion. Although lower concentrations of exogenous IL-2 promoted IL-10+ cells coproducing proinflammatory cytokines, higher IL-2 doses, both alone and in combination with dexamethasone, increased the proportion of single IL-10+ T cells. Thus, glucocorticoid-induced IL-10 is only accompanied by an increase of IL-17 in a low IL-2 setting, which is, nevertheless, likely to be protective owing to the induction of regulatory IL-17+IL-10+–coproducing cells. These findings open new avenues of investigation with respect to the role of IL-2 in glucocorticoid responsiveness that have potential implications for optimizing the benefit/risk ratio of glucocorticoids in the clinic.

Highlights

  • High-Dose IL-2 Skews a Glucocorticoid-Driven IL-17 +IL-10+ Memory CD4 + T Cell Response towards a Single IL-10−Producing Phenotype

  • The proportion of IL-17A+ cells gradually increased with time and dexamethasone significantly, albeit more modestly, further enhanced the frequency of IL-17A+ T cells on days 5 and 6 of culture (Fig. 2A)

  • Expression of IFN-g, IL-4, and IL-2 was reduced or unaltered by dexamethasone throughout the culture (Fig. 2A, 2B). These findings are in keeping with our previous findings [6, 7, 12] and further demonstrate that memory CD4+ T cells are the cellular source of both IL-10 and IL-17A following dexamethasone treatment

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Summary

Introduction

High-Dose IL-2 Skews a Glucocorticoid-Driven IL-17 +IL-10+ Memory CD4 + T Cell Response towards a Single IL-10−Producing Phenotype. We show that the glucocorticoid dexamethasone significantly increased IL-10 production by human memory CD4+ T cells from healthy donors, as assessed by intracellular cytokine staining.

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