Abstract

Ocular infection with HSV causes a chronic T cell-mediated inflammatory lesion in the cornea. Lesion severity is affected by the balance of different CD4 T cell subsets, with greater severity occurring when the activity of regulatory T cells (Tregs) is compromised. In this study, fate-mapping mice were used to assess the stability of Treg function in ocular lesions. We show that cells that were once Foxp3+ functional Tregs may lose Foxp3 and become Th1 cells that could contribute to lesion expression. The instability primarily occurred with IL-2Rlo Tregs and was shown, in part, to be the consequence of exposure to IL-12. Lastly, in vitro-generated induced Tregs (iTregs) were shown to be highly plastic and capable of inducing stromal keratitis when adoptively transferred into Rag1-/- mice, with 95% of iTregs converting into ex-Tregs in the cornea. This plasticity of iTregs could be prevented when they were generated in the presence of vitamin C and retinoic acid. Importantly, adoptive transfer of these stabilized iTregs to HSV-1-infected mice prevented the development of stromal keratitis lesions more effectively than did control iTregs. Our results demonstrate that CD25lo Treg and iTreg instability occurs during a viral immunoinflammatory lesion and that its control may help to avoid lesion chronicity.

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