Interleukin-2 gene variation impairs regulatory T cell function and causes autoimmunity

J Yamanouchi, D Rainbow, P Serra, S Howlett… - Nature …, 2007 - nature.com
J Yamanouchi, D Rainbow, P Serra, S Howlett, K Hunter, VES Garner, A Gonzalez-Munoz…
Nature genetics, 2007nature.com
Autoimmune diseases are thought to result from imbalances in normal immune physiology
and regulation. Here, we show that autoimmune disease susceptibility and resistance
alleles on mouse chromosome 3 (Idd3) correlate with differential expression of the key
immunoregulatory cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2). In order to test directly that an approximately
twofold reduction in IL-2 underpins the Idd3-linked destabilization of immune homeostasis,
we show that engineered haplodeficiency of Il2 gene expression not only reduces T cell IL-2 …
Abstract
Autoimmune diseases are thought to result from imbalances in normal immune physiology and regulation. Here, we show that autoimmune disease susceptibility and resistance alleles on mouse chromosome 3 (Idd3) correlate with differential expression of the key immunoregulatory cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2). In order to test directly that an approximately twofold reduction in IL-2 underpins the Idd3-linked destabilization of immune homeostasis, we show that engineered haplodeficiency of Il2 gene expression not only reduces T cell IL-2 production by twofold but also mimics the autoimmune dysregulatory effects of the naturally occurring susceptibility alleles of Il2. Reduced IL-2 production achieved by either genetic mechanism correlates with reduced function of CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells, which are critical for maintaining immune homeostasis.
nature.com