Publication | Open Access
Tryptophan hydroxylase-1 regulates immune tolerance and inflammation
122
Citations
27
References
2012
Year
Chronic Inflammatory DiseasesImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunologic MechanismImmunotherapyInflammationDownstream Product SerotoninNutrient DeprivationNeuroimmunologyAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyChronic InflammationAutoimmunityImmune FunctionTolerance InductionCell BiologyInflammatory DiseaseExhausts TryptophanImmunomodulationMedicine
Nutrient deprivation based on the loss of essential amino acids by catabolic enzymes in the microenvironment is a critical means to control inflammatory responses and immune tolerance. Here we report the novel finding that Tph-1 (tryptophan hydroxylase-1), a synthase which catalyses the conversion of tryptophan to serotonin and exhausts tryptophan, is a potent regulator of immunity. In models of skin allograft tolerance, tumor growth, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, Tph-1 deficiency breaks allograft tolerance, induces tumor remission, and intensifies neuroinflammation, respectively. All of these effects of Tph-1 deficiency are independent of its downstream product serotonin. Because mast cells (MCs) appear to be the major source of Tph-1 and restoration of Tph-1 in the MC compartment in vivo compensates for the defect, these experiments introduce a fundamentally new mechanism of MC-mediated immune suppression that broadly impacts multiple arms of immunity.
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