[PDF][PDF] Systemic but not local infections elicit immunosuppressive IL-10 production by natural killer cells

G Perona-Wright, K Mohrs, FM Szaba, LW Kummer… - Cell host & …, 2009 - cell.com
G Perona-Wright, K Mohrs, FM Szaba, LW Kummer, R Madan, CL Karp, LL Johnson…
Cell host & microbe, 2009cell.com
Surviving infection represents a balance between the proinflammatory responses needed to
eliminate the pathogen, and anti-inflammatory signals limiting damage to the host. IL-10 is a
potent immunosuppressive cytokine whose impact is determined by the timing and
localization of release. We show that NK cells rapidly express IL-10 during acute infection
with diverse rapidly disseminating pathogens. The proinflammatory cytokine IL-12 was
necessary and sufficient for NK cell induction of IL-10. NK cells from mice with systemic …
Summary
Surviving infection represents a balance between the proinflammatory responses needed to eliminate the pathogen, and anti-inflammatory signals limiting damage to the host. IL-10 is a potent immunosuppressive cytokine whose impact is determined by the timing and localization of release. We show that NK cells rapidly express IL-10 during acute infection with diverse rapidly disseminating pathogens. The proinflammatory cytokine IL-12 was necessary and sufficient for NK cell induction of IL-10. NK cells from mice with systemic parasitic infection inhibited dendritic cell release of IL-12 in an IL-10-dependent manner, and NK cell depletion resulted in elevated serum IL-12. These data suggest an innate, negative feedback loop in which IL-12 limits its own production by eliciting IL-10 from NK cells. In contrast to disseminating pathogens, locally restricted infections did not elicit NK cell IL-10. Thus systemic infections uniquely engage NK cells in an IL-10-mediated immunoregulatory circuit that functions to alleviate inflammation.
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