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Circulation Research. 2009;104:488-495
Published online before print January 15, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.108.185777
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(Circulation Research. 2009;104:488.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.


Molecular Medicine

Toll-Like Receptors 4 and 5 Induce Distinct Types of Vasculitis

Jiusheng Deng*, Wei Ma-Krupa*, Andrew T. Gewirtz, Brian R. Younge, Jörg J. Goronzy, Cornelia M. Weyand

From the Lowance Center for Human Immunology and Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, 101 Woodruff Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322.

Correspondence to Cornelia M. Weyand, MD, PhD, Lowance Center for Human Immunology, WMRB #1003, 101 Woodruff Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322. E-mail cweyand{at}emory.edu


*    Abstract
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*Abstract
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Large vessel vasculitides, such as Takayasu arteritis and giant cell arteritis, affect vital arteries and cause clinical complications by either luminal occlusion or vessel wall destruction. Inflammatory infiltrates, often with granulomatous arrangements, are distributed as a panarteritis throughout all of the artery’s wall layers or cluster in the adventitia as a perivasculitis. Factors determining the architecture and compartmentalization of vasculitis are unknown. Human macrovessels are populated by indigenous dendritic cells (DCs) positioned in the adventitia. Herein, we report that these vascular DCs sense bacterial pathogens and regulate the patterning of the emerging arteritis. In human temporal artery–SCID chimeras, lipopolysaccharides stimulating Toll-like receptor (TLR)4 and flagellin stimulating TLR5 trigger vascular DCs and induce T-cell recruitment and activation. However, the architecture of the evolving inflammation is ligand-specific; TLR4 ligands cause transmural panarteritis and TLR5 ligands promote adventitial perivasculitis. Underlying mechanisms involve selective recruitment of functional T cell subsets. Specifically, TLR4-mediated DC stimulation markedly enhances production of the chemokine CCL20, biasing recruitment toward CCL20-responsive CCR6+ T cells. In adoptive transfer experiments, CCR6+ T cells produce an arteritis pattern with media-invasive T cells damaging vascular smooth muscle cells. Also, CCR6+ T cells dominate the vasculitic infiltrates in patients with panarteritic giant cell arteritis. Thus, depending on the original danger signal, vascular DCs edit the emerging immune response by differentially recruiting specialized T effector cells and direct the disease process toward distinct types of vasculitis.


Key Words: T cell • Toll-like receptor • inflammation • vascular inflammation


*    Introduction
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up arrowAbstract
*Introduction
down arrowMaterials and Methods
down arrowResults
down arrowDiscussion
down arrowReferences
 
Inflammatory vasculopathies targeting human medium and large arteries are debilitating and life-threatening diseases as they damage vital arteries and cause aortic aneurysms, cerebral ischemia, and aortic arch syndrome.1 Takayasu arteritis (TA) typically manifests in the aorta and its primary branches of young women, and giant cell arteritis (GCA) affects the aorta and its more distal branches in older individuals. The underlying process is a granulomatous inflammation accumulating within the vessel wall with typical granulomas and multinucleated giant cells or a diffuse lymphomonocytic infiltrate.2 Inflammatory cells access the artery through adventitial vasa vasorum, not the macrolumen.3 In a patient subset, the arteritis histomorphology is that of perivasculitis, also called vasa vasoritis, with smaller arterial branches in the adventitia as the primary target.4–6 How immune responses are compartmentalized to cause adventitial arteritis or transmural arteritis is not understood. Whether inflammatory effectors causing either of these disease architectures are identical or distinct is unknown. In both TA and GCA, CD4 T cells are the dominant lymphocyte population, accompanied by few CD8 T cells and rare NK cells and {gamma}{delta}-T cells.7 In GCA arteries, local immune responses are strongly biased toward interferon-{gamma} production, with interleukin-4 essentially absent.3 Mechanisms through which the vessel wall edits the cytokine milieu are unidentified; possibilities include differential priming of T effectors or selective recruitment of committed effector populations. In GCA-affected arteries, T-cell populations are selected for specificity, with identical clonotypes isolated from anatomically distinct arteries.8,9 Priming of these clonotypes may occur in the lymph node. Alternatively, the local tissue site dictates which T cells are primed or recruited. In macrophages, functional commitment and topographical location in the vessel wall are closely correlated, emphasizing the potential impact of the microenvironment.10

Organs exposed to the outside world, such as the skin and the mucosal surfaces, have tissue-specific innate immune systems,11 with dendritic cells (DCs) functioning as potent immunosensors screening for local danger signals. Surprisingly, human macrovessels share with these tissues pathogen-sensing ability.12 Equipped with DC populations positioned at the media–adventitia border, medium and large arteries recognize pathogen-derived motifs.13,14 DCs are the principal antigen-presenting cells in ongoing GCA.15 In bioengineered human macrovessels, wall-embedded DCs (but not monocytes and macrophages) have antigen-presenting cell function and trigger intramural adaptive immune responses.16

Human macrovessels express a broad spectrum of Toll-like receptors (TLR), overall biased toward receptors recognizing bacterial products.12 Remarkably, each vascular territory has a unique TLR profile, suggesting specialization in immunosensing functions. It is unknown whether recognition of different TLR ligands induces similar or distinct biological effects. The present study has explored this question in human temporal arteries, the preferred target of GCA, and has examined whether bacterial products binding to different TLR induce distinct types of vessel wall inflammation. Dependent on the initial danger signal, vascular DCs adapted their chemokine profile and selectively recruited specialized T-cell effectors. Whereas TLR4 agonists induced CCL20 favoring the recruitment of media-invasive CCR6+ T cells, TLR5 ligands facilitated adventitial immune responses. Wall infiltration by CCR6+ cells resulted in vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) injury, a typical component of vasculitis. In GCA patients, CCR6+ T cells dominate the wall infiltrate. Separating patients with large-vessel vasculitis into those with transmural panarteritis and those with vasa vasoritis will allow searching for selective disease instigators.


*    Materials and Methods
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*Materials and Methods
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Human Temporal Arteries, Lymph Nodes, and Skin
Thirty-eight temporal artery specimens were collected by diagnostic temporal artery biopsy or harvested at postmortem examination. Normal arteries derived from patients with no clinical evidence for polymyalgia rheumatica or any other vasculitic syndrome, lacked inflammatory infiltrates, and had no changes indicating atherosclerosis. Vessels were cut into 5-mm pieces and used immediately for culture in vitro or engrafted into immunodeficient mice. For RNA extraction, arteries were immediately shock frozen and for immunohistochemical staining, specimens were embedded in OCT compound (Sikura Fine-Tek, Torrance, Calif). Human lymph nodes and skin were collected from surgical waste tissues and processed immediately after removal. All protocols were approved by the Institutional Review Boards, and appropriate consent was obtained.

Reagents
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (Escherichia coli, 0127:B8), poly(I:C) (polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid), lipoteichoic acid (LTA), and CpG were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, Mo). Flagellin was purified as described previously17 or obtained from InvivoGen (San, Diego, Calif).

Isolation of Cells
Human peripheral blood was obtained from healthy donors and mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated by Ficoll–Paque (Mediatech, Manassas, Va). CD14+ cells were purified with anti-human CD14 MicroBeads using the AutoMACS system (Miltenyi Biotec, Auburn, Calif). Monocyte-derived DCs were generated from CD14+ precursors at 37°C for 5 to 6 days in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 1600 U/mL recombinant human GM-CSF and 1000 U/mL recombinant human interleukin-4. CD4 T cells were purified with anti-human CD4 MicroBeads (Miltenyi Biotec) for T-cell migration assays or for T-cell adoptive transfers. CCR6+ cells were depleted from PBMCs with phycoerythrin (PE)-conjugated mouse anti-human CCR6 antibodies (BD Pharmingen) and anti-PE microbeads.

In Vitro Organ Culture
Intact human lymph nodes, skin, or temporal arteries were cultured in RPMI 1640 (10% FCS) in 48-well flat-bottom plates and stimulated with different TLR ligands for 14 hours at 37°C: LTA (500 µg/mL), poly(I:C) (100 µg/mL), LPS (3 µg/mL), flagellin (3 µg/mL), or CpG (50 µg/mL). Tissues were then harvested and used for RNA isolation. For kinetic CD83 gene induction assays, tissues were stimulated with LPS (3 µg/mL) or flagellin (3 µg/mL) for 12, 24, or 48 hours. In selected experiments, temporal arteries were cultured with 1x106 human CD4 T cells for 3 days after stimulation with TLR ligands.

Quantitative Real-Time PCR
RNA transcripts were quantified by real-time PCR as described and adjusted to 2x105 copies of the housekeeping gene β-actin.15 Specific PCR primers are listed in Table I in the online data supplement, available at http://circres.ahajournals.org.

Immunostaining of Tissue Sections
OCT-embedded arteries were sectioned at 7-µm intervals and immunostained as described15 using the following primary antibodies: mouse anti-human CD3 (1:200, Dako, Carpinteria, Calif), mouse anti-human TLR4 (1:100; Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, Calif), mouse anti-human TLR5 (1:100; Imgenex, San Diego, Calif), or mouse anti-human CCR6 (1:100; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, Minn). Isotype-matched primary antibodies served as control. Antibody binding was visualized with biotin-conjugated goat antimouse IgG (BD Pharmingen, San Diego, Calif). Tissue sections were stained with propidium iodine (Sigma) and examined by fluorescence microscopy. Sections from paraffin-embedded temporal arteries were dewaxed before being treated with mouse anti-human CCR6 antibody at 4°C overnight. To quantify tissue-invasive capability, T cells were stained with anti-CD3 antibodies, and their distance to the tissue surface was measured using Image J1.36b software (NIH).

Human Temporal Artery–SCID Mouse Chimeras
Human temporal artery–SCID mouse chimeras were generated by subcutaneous implantation of temporal artery sections into NOD.CB17 Prkdc (SCID) mice (The Jackson Laboratory, Harbor, Me) as previously described.15 Three mice implanted with temporal artery tissues from the same donor were assigned to 2 treatment arms and a control arm. On day 7 after implantation, mice were injected with LPS (3 µg/mouse), flagellin (3 µg/mouse), or PBS. On day 8, PBMCs or PBMCs depleted of CCR6+ T cells (3x107 cells/mouse) or CD4 T cells (107 cells/mouse) were adoptively transferred into the chimeras by IV injection. On day 15, arterial grafts were harvested for RNA extraction or embedded into OCT compound for immunostaining. The protocol was approved by the Emory University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.

Statistical Data Analysis
Results were analyzed using the 2-sided Students t test. Data are shown as means±SEM.


*    Results
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up arrowAbstract
up arrowIntroduction
up arrowMaterials and Methods
*Results
down arrowDiscussion
down arrowReferences
 
TLR4 and TLR5 Ligands Activate Resident DCs in Temporal Arteries
To explore whether human arteries respond to different pathogen-associated patterns with distinct biological outcomes, human temporal arteries were stimulated with a panel of TLR ligands (Figure 1A). Based on previous studies establishing TLR expression patterns in human macrovessels,12 LTA (TLR2/6 ligand), poly(I:C) (TLR3 ligand), LPS (TLR4 ligand), flagellin (TLR5 ligand), and CpG (TLR9 ligand) were chosen as stimulatory agonists. Response patterns were quantified by the induction of CD83 transcripts, a sensitive measure of DC activation. In pilot experiments, optimal stimulatory concentrations for each ligand were determined. Response patterns of temporal arteries were compared to that of 2 DC-rich tissues, human lymph nodes and skin (Figure 1A and supplemental Table II). LPS and flagellin emerged as the 2 strongest stimulators of arterial tissues with a 16- and 30-fold upregulation of CD83 transcripts, respectively (Figure 1A). Transcript induction translated into surface expression of CD83 protein (Figure 1C). LPS-mediated activation was maximal after 12 hours and rapidly declined at 24 and 48 hours. TLR5 ligation resulted in prolonged DC activation with CD83 transcripts at a plateau between 12 and 24 hours (supplemental Figure I). TLR3 and TLR9 ligands barely elicited a temporal artery response; both were efficiently detected by lymph nodes (supplemental Table II). The 3 tissues each displayed a unique TLR response profile. Skin was explicitly sensitive to TLR4 ligands, unresponsive to TLR5 agonists, reactive to TLR3, and minimally affected by CpG. Lymph nodes sensed each of the pathogen-derived patterns; however, CD83 induction varied widely among different agonists. Notably, the 3 tissues appeared to recognize each TLR ligand with differential efficiency. These experiments established selectivity in the TLR responsiveness of human organs and indicated that temporal arteries were particularly sensitive to TLR4 and TLR5 ligands.


Figure 1
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Figure 1. Specific activation of vascular DCs by TLR4 and TLR5 ligands. A, Normal human temporal arteries were cultured in the presence of a panel of TLR ligands, and CD83 expression was analyzed by quantitative PCR in tissue extracts. Results are expressed as fold induction compared to arteries cultured in the absence of any stimulator. B, Expression of the macrophage marker CD11b and the DC markers CD11c and CD209 (DC-SIGN) were analyzed by quantitative PCR in tissue extracts of normal human temporal arteries. Transcripts specific for TLR4 and TLR5 were abundant and present in comparable concentrations. Results are presented as means±SEM. C, Induction of CD83 protein by TLR4 stimulation as detected by immunostaining. D through G, Immunohistochemistry identified TLR4-expressing (D and F) and TLR5-expressing (E and G) DCs at the media–adventitia border. These cells expressed the DC marker CD209 as demonstrated by staining serial tissue sections (insets in F and G) (TLR protein brown, CD209 green). H, Antibody isotype control. Magnification, x400. Adv indicates adventitia; Med, media.

Because arterial walls are complex structures, we examined which cells in temporal arteries carried TLR4 and TLR5 receptors. Tissue extracts contained high and comparable transcript levels for the DC markers CD11c and CD209 (DC-SIGN) but lacked the macrophage marker CD11b (Figure 1B). TLR4 and TLR5 transcripts were abundant and present in similar concentrations. Endothelial cells and VSMCs in vitro have been described as positive for TLR4 but immunohistochemical stains of normal arteries localized TLR4 proteins on spindly cells at the media–adventitia border (Figure 1D and 1F). von Willebrand factor–positive macroluminal endothelial cells had minimal TLR4 reactivity and the microendothelial cells of the vasa vasorum were consistently negative. Staining of serial tissue sections with anti-TLR4 and anti-CD209 or anti-TLR5 and anti-CD209 provided unequivocal evidence that the TLR-expressing cells were DCs (Figure 1F and 1G, insets).

TLR4 and TLR5 Ligands Induce Differential Patterns of Adaptive Immune Responses in the Vessel Wall
To determine whether the mode of activation affected evolving immune responses in the vascular wall, the effects of TLR4 and TLR5 ligands on T-cell immunity were compared. Temporal arteries from the same donor were engrafted into multiple SCID mice, and T-cell responses were probed by adoptive transfer of allogeneic CD4 T cells. LPS or flagellin pretreatment resulted in prompt and comparable T-cell recruitment and in situ activation (Figure 2A and supplemental Figure II). Similarly, stimulation of human temporal arteries in organ culture demonstrated that both TLR4 and TLR5 agonists initiated adaptive immune responses and facilitated recruitment of human T cells into the vessel wall. In the chimera system, concentrations of interferon-{gamma} transcripts indicated similar efficiency of TLR4- and TLR5-sensing DCs in stimulating T cells (supplemental Figure II). However, spatial analysis of tissue-infiltrating lymphocytes in the arteries revealed fundamental differences in the immune responses initiated by TLR4 or TLR5 ligands. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated tissue-invading T cells in the media of LPS-stimulated vessels (Figure 2B and 2E) whereas the smooth muscle cell layer remained essentially T cell–free in TLR5-triggered arteries (Figure 2B). Conversely, CD3+ T cells accumulated in the adventitia of arteries exposed to flagellin (Figure 2C and 2F). In essence, tissue inflammation patterns were closely correlated with the pathogen-derived motif initially recognized by the vascular DCs. LPS, but not flagellin, endowed vascular DCs with the ability to recruit and/or instruct T cells to generate wall-penetrating infiltrates. Conversely, flagellin produced T-cell recruitment and activation patterns resembling perivasculitis.


Figure 2
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Figure 2. TLR4 and TLR5 stimulation initiates distinct types of vessel wall inflammation. Temporal arteries from 4 different donors were engrafted into SCID mice. On day 7, chimeras were treated with LPS (3 µg/mouse) or flagellin (3 µg/mouse) or sham injected with PBS. Twenty-four hours later, allogenic CD4 T cells were adoptively transferred by IV injection. One week later, artery grafts were harvested. Human T cells were identified by staining tissue sections with anti-CD3 antibodies (brown), and the density of T-cell infiltrates were assessed by counting T cells in the entire cross-section (A), the media (B), and adventitia (C). Results from 4 independent experiments are shown as means±SEM for arteries retrieved from PBS-injected (D), LPS-treated (E), and flagellin-treated (F) chimeras. CD3-positive cells (brown) are indicated by arrows; the media–adventitia border is marked by a dotted line. Original magnification, x200.

TLR4 Ligation Selectively Upregulates CCL20 Expression and Induces CCR6+ CD4 T-Cell Recruitment In Vitro and In Vivo
As site-specific T-cell accumulation was determined by the initial mode of DC activation, we explored how TLR4 and TLR5 ligands differentially affected DC function. Using a gene array tailored for activated DCs, we compared a series of 58 gene transcripts following LPS or flagellin stimulation in vitro. In 4 independent experiments, the induction of 47 genes, including DC markers CD83 and CD86, was very similar under both activation conditions. A set of genes, including the chemokine CCL20, was differentially induced (Figure 3A). Compared to unstimulated DCs, LPS upregulated CCL20 expression 6.5-fold, whereas flagellin enhanced CCL20 transcripts only by 2.8-fold. Quantification of CCL20 transcripts by real-time PCR in LPS- or flagellin-treated DCs corroborated the gene array data (Figure 3B). CCL20 exclusively binds to CCR6, a receptor expressed on a specialized T-effector cell subset. To prove functional relevance, chemoattraction of CD4 T-cell subsets was evaluated in migration assays using modified Boyden chambers. In vitro–generated DCs placed in the lower chamber remained untreated or were stimulated with LPS or flagellin. T cells positioned in the upper chamber were allowed to migrate toward the chemokine-producing DCs. After 2 hours, T cells attracted by untreated DCs included only 10% of CCR6+ CD4 T cells. Flagellin triggering of the DCs did not affect the representation of CCR6+ CD4 T cells. However, after LPS stimulation, DCs selectively attracted CCR6+ CD4 T cells enriching them to 32% (Figure 3C).


Figure 3
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Figure 3. Differential induction of the T cell–attracting chemokine CCL20 in DCs stimulated by TLR4 and TLR5 ligands. A, DCs generated from CD14+ precursors were stimulated with LPS (1 µg/mL), flagellin (1 µg/mL), or PBS for 14 hours. Total RNA was isolated, and gene expression was profiled with GEArray Q and S Series Kits (SuperArray Bioscience Corp, Frederick, Md). Expression levels for selected genes in LPS- or flagellin-stimulated DCs as compared to control DCs are presented as a heat-map pattern. B, CCL20-specific transcripts were quantified by quantitative PCR in DCs treated with LPS, flagellin, or PBS. Data are means±SEM from 6 experiments. C, Monocyte-derived DCs triggered with PBS, LPS, or flagellin were tested for their T cell–attracting capacity in a Transwell assay system. Purified CD4 T cells (105) were placed into the upper Transwell inserts, and the insert was removed 2 hours later. The number of CCR6+ CD4 T cells in the lower chamber was analyzed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) with fluorescein isothiocyanate–conjugated (FITC) mouse anti-human CD4 and PE-conjugated mouse anti-human CCR6 antibodies. Data are means±SEM from 8 independent experiments.

To determine whether LPS treatment in vivo was associated with preferential recruitment of CCR6+ T cells and infiltration of T cells into the deep wall layers, temporal artery–SCID chimeras were injected with LPS or flagellin before human CD4 T cells were infused. Artery explants were analyzed for CCL20 and CCR6 transcripts; tissue sections were examined for CCR6+ T cells invading into the wall layers. CCL20 and CCR6 expressions were significantly higher in the grafts of LPS-treated chimeras, whereas flagellin failed to upregulate CCL20 and enhanced CCR6 transcripts slightly (supplemental Figure III and Figure 4A). Numeric analysis of CCR6+ and CCR6 T cells in the medial and the adventitial compartment clearly demonstrated the preference of CCR6+ cells for the medial layer. Adventitial infiltrates contained more CCR6 T cells (Figure 4B). Thus, positioning and retention of T cells in distinct regions of the vessel is closely correlated with T-cell phenotype and function.


Figure 4
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Figure 4. TLR4 stimulation induces transmural vascular inflammation by recruiting CCR6+ CD4 T cells. Artery–SCID chimeras were treated with LPS (3 µg/mouse), flagellin (3 µg/mouse), or PBS on day 7 after engraftment. Human CD4 T cells (107 cells/mouse) were adoptively transferred on day 8. One week later, artery grafts were explanted. A, CCR6 transcripts in the tissue were quantified by real-time PCR. Data are representative of 5 independent experiments and are shown as means±SEM. B and C, Tissue sections from LPS-treated arteries were stained with anti-CCR6 antibodies or with isotype control antibodies. B, CCR6+ and CCR6 T cells were quantified in the medial and in the adventitial layer of LPS-pretreated grafts. C, CCR6+ T cells (marked with arrows) infiltrated into the smooth muscle cell layer. D, Isotype control. E and F, Cross-sections of temporal artery specimens with typical findings of GCA were stained with anti-CCR6 antibodies. CCR6+ cells (brown stain) accumulate within the granulomatous infiltrates. F, Abundant CCR6+ mononuclear cells intermingle with multinucleated giant cells at the media-intima junction.

CCR6+ T Cells in the Vasculitic Infiltrates of GCA
To test whether CCR6+ T cells populate the panarteritic infiltrates in GCA, we analyzed inflamed temporal arteries from GCA patients and stained circumferential sections with CCR6-specific antibodies. CCR6 receptors were expressed on the majority of mononuclear cells but not giant cells and histiocytes within the inflammatory infiltrates (Figure 4F). Most lymphocytes infiltrating the lumen-occlusive intima stained positive. Adventitial infiltrates included a low frequency of CCR6+ cells (Figure 4E). CCR6+ cells accumulated at the intima–media junction surrounding giant cells and the fragmented elastic lamina (Figure 4F). Overall, the immunohistochemical analysis confirmed strong CCR6+ T-cell enrichment in the vasculitic infiltrates and the relevance of the CCL20-CCR6 axis in large-vessel vasculitis.

CCR6 Blockade Abrogates CD4 T-Cell Invasion and Prevents VSMC Damage
TLR4-mediated CCL20 induction and CCR6+ T-cell accumulation in the GCA lesions suggested a unique role of CCR6+ T cells in transmural arteritis. Human arteries were engrafted into SCID mice; chimeras were injected with LPS or sham treated, and CD4 T cells were adoptively transferred. These CD4 T cells were coadministered with anti-human CCR6 antibodies or isotype control antibodies. TLR4 ligation promoted accumulation of vessel wall infiltrates (Figure 5A). Disrupting the CCL20-CCR6 axis by coadministering anti-CCR6 abrogated the media-invasive phenotype of the developing vasculitis. In chimeras injected with CD4 T cells precoated with anti-CCR6 antibodies, T-cell infiltrates were restricted to the adventitia (Figure 5B and 5D). To quantify media invasion, the migration depths of individual T cells were measured by digital analysis of tissue sections stained for the T-cell marker CD3 (Figure 5D). Without LPS, few T cells were recruited to the arteries, with none migrating deeper than 50 µm. After TLR4 ligation, CD4 T cells invaded deeply into the wall, on average 300 µm, with the most advanced T cells passing almost 1000 µm. After antibody-mediated CCR6 blockade, the migration capacity of activated T cells was markedly impaired; CD4 T cells were retained in the adventitia, and only a few progressed into the smooth muscle cell layer.


Figure 5
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Figure 5. CCR6+ T cells cause transmural vascular inflammation and smooth muscle cell injury. Temporal artery–SCID mouse chimeras were injected with LPS (3 µg/mL) or PBS (control) on day 7 after implantation; 24 hours later, CD4 T cells combined with anti-CCR6 antibodies (50 µg/mL) or isotype control antibody (50 µg/mL) were adoptively transferred. One week later, grafts were harvested and human T cells (brown) were identified by immunohistochemistry for CD3. A, Transmural T-cell infiltrates in grafts explanted from LPS-treated chimeras injected with CD4 T cells and isotype control antibody. B, T cells in grafts from chimeras treated with LPS and adoptively transferred with CD4 T cells plus anti-CCR6 antibodies. C, Minimal inflammatory infiltrates in arteries pretreated with PBS and adoptively transferred with CD4 T cells. Original magnification, x200. D, T-cell tissue invasion was quantified by measuring the distance of infiltrating T cells from the surface of the artery using Image J1.36b software. Invasion distances for individual CD3 T cells were determined in 3 independent experiments. Mean invasion distances are indicated by bars. E and F, VSMC injury was quantified by measuring transcripts of smoothelin, a gene product produced by healthy contractile VSMCs. E, Smoothelin transcripts in GCA-affected (n=5) and noninflamed control temporal arteries (n=5). Results are presented as means±SEM. F, Recovery of smoothelin transcription by CCR6 blockade. Arteries were explanted from chimeras treated with LPS and adoptively transferred with CD4 T cells plus isotype control antibodies or anti-CCR6 antibodies. Smoothelin transcripts were quantified by quantitative PCR and are expressed as percent of transcripts present in sham-treated arteries. Data represent 1 of 4 independent experiments and are given as means±SEM.

To explore whether invading T cells caused VSMC damage, we measured the transcriptional activity for smoothelin, a molecule typically produced by healthy contractile smooth muscle cells. Loss of smoothelin-specific transcripts is a typical finding for arteries affected by GCA (Figure 5E). Adoptive transfer of anti–CCR6-coated CD4 T cells protected smoothelin production, indicating that CCR6 blockade shields the tissue from inflammatory damage (Figure 5F).

CCR6-Positive T Cells Possess Tissue-Invasive Capabilities in Vascular Inflammation
To confirm that a specialized CCR6+ T-cell subset is responsible for causing panarteritis, we compared the vascular inflammation patterns mediated by PBMCs containing the CCR6+ subpopulation or depleted of CCR6+ cells. Normal human arteries were engrafted, and chimeras were LPS-conditioned or sham-treated. PBMCs for adoptive transfer were left unseparated or depleted of CCR6-expressing cells. Recruited cells assumed a characteristic distribution (Figure 6). T-cell recruitment into the vessel wall occurred only if unseparated PBMCs were transferred (Figure 6A). CCR6+ cell depletion essentially abrogated vascular infiltrate formation. Enumeration of media-residing cells demonstrated minimal infiltrates in the grafts of sham-treated chimeras and in grafts of chimeras injected with CCR6-depleted cell preparations. Dense cell infiltrates accumulated among the medial VSMCs if unseparated PBMCs were transferred (Figure 6B). Direct visualization of tissue-invasive cells demonstrated marked differences in the architecture of vasculitic infiltrates. Without LPS pretreatment, cells failed to enter the smooth muscle cell layer (Figure 6C). Crowded cellular infiltrates accumulated between the smooth muscle cell lamellae if vascular DCs were activated through TLR4 ligation and the adoptive transfers provided CCR6+ cells (Figure 6D). Depletion of CCR6+ cells prevented infiltration of adoptively transferred cells into the media (Figure 6E). These experiments supported a selective role of CCR6+ T cells in causing panarteritis.


Figure 6
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Figure 6. CCR6+ T cells infiltrate into the vascular wall to cause panarteritis. Human artery–SCID chimeras engrafted with noninflamed temporal arteries from 5 different donors were injected with LPS (3 µg/mL) or PBS. Allogeneic PBMCs (3x107 cells/mouse), which were unseparated or depleted of CCR6+ cells, were adoptively transferred. Arteries were explanted 1 week later. A, CCR6 gene expression was quantified by real-time PCR. Results are presented as means±SEM. B through E, Fluorescence microscopy for propidium iodine–positive cells to determine positioning of wall-infiltrating inflammatory cells. Media VSMCs were identified through green autofluorescence. Numbers of propidium iodine–positive cells counted in a minimum of 10 high-powered fields in each of 10 independent cross-sections are presented as means±SEM. C through E, Positioning of tissue-infiltrating cells in arterial cross-sections. Green cells are VSMCs; red cells are nuclei of infiltrating cells; nuclei of VSMCs appear yellow because of the overlay of green and red. C, Vascular infiltrate in the absence of TLR stimulation. D, Vascular infiltrate generated by LPS pretreatment and adoptive transfer of unseparated PBMCs. E, Vascular infiltrate after LPS pretreatment and adoptive transfer of CCR6-depleted PBMCs.


*    Discussion
up arrowTop
up arrowAbstract
up arrowIntroduction
up arrowMaterials and Methods
up arrowResults
*Discussion
down arrowReferences
 
Human medium and large arteries are populated by vascular DCs that sense pathogens and induce adaptive and vasculitic immune responses in the vessel wall.12 In the atherosclerotic plaque, wall-residing DCs sustain and amplify inflammation.18 Herein, we show that the role of vascular DCs extends beyond enhancing immunity but that the activation mode determines the architecture of the immune response emerging in the vessel wall. TLR4 ligation leads to transmural panarteritis, with CD4 T cells invading into the proximal wall layers and injuring VSMCs. Conversely, TLR5 triggering mediates the assembly of a perivasculitis with T cells accumulating in the adventitia. Our mechanistic studies show that TLR4-stimulated DCs preferentially produce CCL20, resulting in the recruitment and activation of a specialized CCR6+ T-cell subset. T-cell infiltrates in the medial smooth muscle cell layer are highly enriched for CCR6+ cells which may find optimal survival conditions in this microenvironment. Thus, vessel wall–embedded DCs not only initiate adaptive immune responses; they shape the architecture of inflammation, and different bacterial pathogens induce distinct vasculitis types. Categorizing patients with large-vessel vasculitis according to the patterning of inflammation may provide an important clue in the search for causative agents.

Human macrovessels display a broad spectrum of pattern-recognition receptors, but it is not known whether biological outcomes of recognizing "danger signals" is uniform or is specific for the stimulator. Human temporal arteries responded to a series of pathogen-derived motifs with a tissue-specific response, distinct from that of the skin and the lymph node. Intact arteries appeared to specialize in detecting bacterial products binding TLR4 or -5, yet the biological consequences were ligand-specific. TLR4 ligation resulted in T-cell recruitment into the media, recapitulating the positioning of panarteritic T cells. Flagellin was highly effective in instructing wall-residing DCs to induce interferon-{gamma} in T cells. However, responsive T cells were functionally distinct from those attracted to LPS-sensitized DCs. They failed to display tissue-invasive character, clustered in the adventitia, and produced a perivasculitis. Immunohistochemical studies assigned TLR5 expression exclusively to cells expressing the DC marker CD209. TLR4 has been reported to also be expressed on endothelial cells and VSMCs19,20 in vitro and under inflammatory vessel wall–remodeling conditions. In healthy human arteries, the expression of TLR4 is literally limited to wall-integrated CD209+ cells (Figure 1).12

The TLR9 nonresponsiveness of temporal arteries (Figure 1 and supplemental Table II) is in line with the lack of plasmacytoid DCs in normal arterial walls, whereas that DC subtype is critically involved in amplifying inflammation in the atherosclerotic plaque.18

The present data implicate CCR6+ T cells as particularly relevant in mediating vasculitis, at least in GCA. Several lines of evidence link CCR6+ CD4 T cells to the panarteritic pattern of vasculitis. CCR6+ cells populate the inflammatory infiltrates in GCA-affected arteries (Figure 4). CCR6 antibody blockade abrogates media-penetrating infiltrate formation, and CCR6+ T-cell depletion disrupts transmural infiltrates and restricts T cells to the adventitia (Figures 5 and 6Up).

Here, we propose that CCR6+ T cells are a potential target for therapeutic interventions in large-vessel vasculitis. So far, the CCL20-CCR6 axis has been implicated ensuring protective immune responses.21 CCL20 regulates turnover and positioning of CCR6+ immature DCs in peripheral tissues. In GCA lesions, DCs are greatly enriched and participate in forming the granulomas. Possibly, CCL20 production by wall-residing DCs facilitates further influx of DCs, enhancing their role in granuloma stabilization. Staining of GCA arteries with anti-human CCL20 antibodies ruled out its expression by the medial layer of smooth muscle cells or endothelial cells (data not shown). CCL20-CCR6 interactions shape intestinal immunity and lympho-organogenesis.22 Produced by intestinal epithelial cells, CCL20 orchestrates B-cell recruitment and the formation of lymphoid follicles in the gut. Besides B cells and immature DCs, multiple T-cell subsets express CCR6. CCL20 directs activated T cells into the skin during contact hypersensitivity.23 Asthmatic patients preferentially mobilize CCR6+ T cells during allergic responses.24 Recently, CCR6 has been identified on multiple Th17 cell subsets, as well as other regulatory T-cell subsets, specifically Foxp3+ T cells.25 CCR6 appears on Tr1 cells and on CD8+ effector memory T cells. CD8 T cells as well as Foxp3+ cells are explicitly infrequent in GCA lesions (data not shown), suggesting an unopposed proinflammatory role for CCR6+ CD4 T cells in this vasculitis. Blockade of CCR6 disrupted tissue damage in the artery; precisely, it restored production of smoothelin, a VSMC molecule linked to contractility. This observation identifies VSMCs as a direct target of T cell–mediated wall injury.

Corticosteroids, commonly used to treat GCA and TA, target the proinflammatory transcription factor nuclear factor {kappa}B.26 CCL20 gene transcription and production are controlled by nuclear factor {kappa}B and sensitive to extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors.27 Thus, present treatment may actually target the CCL20-CCR6 axis. With the devastating side effects of steroid therapy, a more sophisticated way of paralyzing CCR6+ T cells could revolutionize the therapy of large-vessel vasculitis.

As yet, the causative agents initiating GCA remain elusive. The data presented here suggest that innate immune reactions, shaped by vascular DCs, are not only inductive for arteritis but also determine the architecture and organization of the pathogenic response. The correlation between the mode of DC activation and the vasculitis pattern may provide useful clues in the identification of disease instigators. Based on biopsy findings, patients should be categorized into those with panarteritis and periarteritis as a means of defining more homogenous subsets for pathogenic and therapeutic studies.


*    Acknowledgments
 
We thank Tamela Yeargin for manuscript editing.

Sources of Funding

This work was supported by NIH grants R01 EY11916, R01 AI44142, R01 AR42527, R01 AG15043, ROI A157266, and ROI AR41974, the Dana Foundation, and the Juanita Waugh Discovery Fund.

Disclosures

None.


*    Footnotes
 
*Both authors contributed equally to this work. Back

Original received August 27, 2008; revision received December 3, 2008; accepted January 6, 2009.


*    References
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up arrowMaterials and Methods
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*References
 
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