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ALS patients’ regulatory T lymphocytes are dysfunctional, and correlate with disease progression rate and severity
David R. Beers, … , Katy Rezvani, Stanley H. Appel
David R. Beers, … , Katy Rezvani, Stanley H. Appel
Published March 9, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(5):e89530. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.89530.
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Research Article Neuroscience

ALS patients’ regulatory T lymphocytes are dysfunctional, and correlate with disease progression rate and severity

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Abstract

Neuroinflammation is a pathological hallmark of ALS in both transgenic rodent models and patients, and is characterized by proinflammatory T lymphocytes and activated macrophages/microglia. In ALS mouse models, decreased regulatory T lymphocytes (Tregs) exacerbate the neuroinflammatory process, leading to accelerated motoneuron death and shortened survival; passive transfer of Tregs suppresses the neuroinflammation and prolongs survival. Treg numbers and FOXP3 expression are also decreased in rapidly progressing ALS patients. A key question is whether the marked neuroinflammation in ALS can be attributed to the impaired suppressive function of ALS Tregs in addition to their decreased numbers. To address this question, T lymphocyte proliferation assays were performed. Compared with control Tregs, ALS Tregs were less effective in suppressing responder T lymphocyte proliferation. Although both slowly and rapidly progressing ALS patients had dysfunctional Tregs, the greater the clinically assessed disease burden or the more rapidly progressing the patient, the greater the Treg dysfunction. Epigenetically, the percentage methylation of the Treg-specific demethylated region was greater in ALS Tregs. After in vitro expansion, ALS Tregs regained suppressive abilities to the levels of control Tregs, suggesting that autologous passive transfer of expanded Tregs might offer a novel cellular therapy to slow disease progression.

Authors

David R. Beers, Weihua Zhao, Jinghong Wang, Xiujun Zhang, Shixiang Wen, Dan Neal, Jason R. Thonhoff, Abdullah S. Alsuliman, Elizabeth J. Shpall, Katy Rezvani, Stanley H. Appel

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Figure 5

The percentage methylation of the Treg-specific demethylated region (TSDR) between ALS patients’ and controls’ Tregs.

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The percentage methylation of the Treg-specific demethylated region (TSD...
(A) The percentage TSDR methylation combining all 15 CpG islands among the 3 groups. ALS patients exhibited more methylation in the TSDR of Tregs compared with the TSDR of slowly progressing ALS patients and the control group. Significance determined by Student’s t test. (B) The percentage TSDR methylation of each individual CpG island among the 3 groups. The TSDR methylation was especially enhanced in islands 12 through 15 in the rapidly progressing ALS patients compared with slowly progressing ALS patient and the control group. There were no differences across all 15 CpG island between slowly progressing ALS patients and the control group.

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