Cardiac myosin-Th17 responses promote heart failure in human myocarditis.

JCI INSIGHT(2016)

引用 143|浏览23
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摘要
In human myocarditis and its sequela dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), the mechanisms and immune phenotype governing disease and subsequent heart failure are not known. Here, we identified a Th17 cell immunophenotype of human myocarditis/DCM with elevated CD4(+) IL17(+) T cells and Th17-promoting cytokines IL-6, TGF-beta, and IL-23 as well as GM-CSF-secreting CD4(+) T cells. The Th17 phenotype was linked with the effects of cardiac myosin on CD14(+) monocytes, TLR2, and heart failure. Persistent heart failure was associated with high percentages of IL-17-producing T cells and IL-17-promoting cytokines, and the myocarditis/DCM phenotype included significantly low percentages of FOXP3(+) Tregs, which may contribute to disease severity. We demonstrate a potentially novel mechanism in human myocarditis/DCM in which TLR2 peptide ligands from human cardiac myosin stimulated exaggerated Th17-related cytokines including TGF-beta, IL-6, and IL-23 from myocarditic CD14(+) monocytes in vitro, and an anti-TLR2 antibody abrogated the cytokine response. Our translational study explains how an immune phenotype may be initiated by cardiac myosin TLR ligand stimulation of monocytes to generate Th17-promoting cytokines and development of pathogenic Th17 cells in human myocarditis and heart failure, and provides a rationale for targeting IL-17A as a therapeutic option.
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