Soluble, but Not Transmembrane, TNF-α is Required During Influenza Infection to Limit the Magnitude of Immune Responses and the Extent of Immunopathology
Overview
Affiliations
TNF-α is a pleotropic cytokine that has both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory functions during influenza infection. TNF-α is first expressed as a transmembrane protein that is proteolytically processed to release a soluble form. Transmembrane TNF-α (memTNF-α) and soluble TNF-α (solTNF-α) have been shown to exert distinct tissue-protective or tissue-pathologic effects in several disease models. However, the relative contributions of memTNF-α or solTNF-α in regulating pulmonary immunopathology following influenza infection are unclear. Therefore, we performed intranasal influenza infection in mice exclusively expressing noncleavable memTNF-α or lacking TNF-α entirely and examined the outcomes. We found that solTNF-α, but not memTNF-α, was required to limit the size of the immune response and the extent of injury. In the absence of solTNF-α, there was a significant increase in the CD8(+) T cell response, including virus-specific CD8(+) T cells, which was due in part to an increased resistance to activation-induced cell death. We found that solTNF-α mediates these immunoregulatory effects primarily through TNFR1, because mice deficient in TNFR1, but not TNFR2, exhibited dysregulated immune responses and exacerbated injury similar to that observed in mice lacking solTNF-α. We also found that solTNF-α expression was required early during infection to regulate the magnitude of the CD8(+) T cell response, indicating that early inflammatory events are critical for the regulation of the effector phase. Taken together, these findings suggest that processing of memTNF-α to release solTNF-α is a critical event regulating the immune response during influenza infection.
B cells modulate lung antiviral inflammatory responses via the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.
Baumgarth N, Prieto A, Luo Z, Kulaga H Res Sq. 2024; .
PMID: 38978583 PMC: 11230464. DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4421566/v1.
Fn14 and TNFR2 as regulators of cytotoxic TNFR1 signaling.
Siegmund D, Zaitseva O, Wajant H Front Cell Dev Biol. 2023; 11:1267837.
PMID: 38020877 PMC: 10657838. DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1267837.
Westerhof L, Noonan J, Hargrave K, Chimbayo E, Cheng Z, Purnell T Eur J Immunol. 2023; 53(11):e2350559.
PMID: 37490492 PMC: 10947402. DOI: 10.1002/eji.202350559.
IKK2/NFkB signaling controls lung resident CD8 T cell memory during influenza infection.
Pritzl C, Luera D, Knudson K, Quaney M, Calcutt M, Daniels M Nat Commun. 2023; 14(1):4331.
PMID: 37468506 PMC: 10356942. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-40107-1.
Luciani L, Miller L, Zhai B, Clarke K, Hughes Kramer K, Schratz L Open Forum Infect Dis. 2023; 10(3):ofad095.
PMID: 36949873 PMC: 10026548. DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofad095.