Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Cyclosporin A Enhances IL-12 Production by CpG Motifs in Bacterial DNA and Synthetic Oligodeoxynucleotides

1998; American Association of Immunologists; Volume: 161; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4049/jimmunol.161.8.3930

ISSN

1550-6606

Autores

Thomas W. Redford, Ae‐Kyung Yi, Courtney T. Ward, Arthur Μ. Krieg,

Tópico(s)

Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research

Resumo

Certain sequences of nucleotides (CpG motifs) in bacterial DNA or synthetic oligonucleotides (CpG DNA) promote the production of proinflammatory cytokines, including TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, IL-6, and IL-12. Here we demonstrate that the immunosuppressant cyclosporin A (CsA) unexpectedly enhanced CpG DNA-induced IL-12 production in murine splenocytes. CsA did not inhibit CpG DNA-induced TNF-alpha or IL-6 production, but decreased the production of IFN-gamma by CpG DNA. Upon examining mechanisms by which CsA increases IL-12 production, we found that CpG DNA can also induce IL-10 production in B cells and that this production was sensitive to CsA. IL-10 has anti-inflammatory effects and can reduce the production of IL-12. To determine the possible role of CsA-modulated IL-10 production in mediating the increased IL-12 levels, splenocytes from IL-10 gene-disrupted mice (IL-10 -/-) and splenocytes cultured in anti-IL-10 Ab were studied. CpG DNA-stimulated IL-10 (-/-) splenocytes demonstrated no increase in IL-12 levels in the presence of CsA. Anti-IL-10 Ab treatment of normal splenocytes increased the magnitude of CpG DNA-induced IL-12 production to that seen with CsA. These results suggest that CpG DNA induces CsA-sensitive IL-10 production in B cells and that IL-10 acts as a negative feedback regulator of CpG DNA-induced IL-12 production.

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