Suppression of T-cell functions by human granulocyte arginase

M Munder, H Schneider, C Luckner, T Giese… - Blood, 2006 - ashpublications.org
M Munder, H Schneider, C Luckner, T Giese, CD Langhans, JM Fuentes, P Kropf, I Mueller…
Blood, 2006ashpublications.org
Chronic inflammation is accompanied by impaired T-cell immunity. In the mouse, myeloid
cell-associated arginase accounts for the suppression of immune reactivity in various
models of tumor growth and chronic infections. Here we show that arginase I is liberated
from human granulocytes, and very high activities accumulate extracellularly during purulent
inflammatory reactions. Human granulocyte arginase induces a profound suppression of T-
cell proliferation and cytokine synthesis. This T-cell phenotype is due to arginase-mediated …
Chronic inflammation is accompanied by impaired T-cell immunity. In the mouse, myeloid cell-associated arginase accounts for the suppression of immune reactivity in various models of tumor growth and chronic infections. Here we show that arginase I is liberated from human granulocytes, and very high activities accumulate extracellularly during purulent inflammatory reactions. Human granulocyte arginase induces a profound suppression of T-cell proliferation and cytokine synthesis. This T-cell phenotype is due to arginase-mediated depletion of arginine in the T-cell environment, which leads to CD3ζ chain down-regulation but does not alter T-cell viability. Our study therefore demonstrates that human granulocytes possess a previously unanticipated immunosuppressive effector function. Human granulocyte arginase is a promising pharmacologic target to reverse unwanted immunosuppression.
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