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  • Interleukin-10 paradox: A p...
    Saxena, Ankit; Khosraviani, Sam; Noel, Sanjeev; Mohan, Divya; Donner, Thomas; Hamad, Abdel Rahim A.

    Cytokine (Philadelphia, Pa.), 07/2015, Letnik: 74, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    •IL-10 is one of the most potent anti-inflammatory cytokine.•IL-10 therapeutic potential have been hard to harness.•Most of the therapeutic strategies are based on provision of exogenous IL-10.•Modifications of delivery modes of IL-10 might yield only incremental advances.•New therapeutic strategies that protect natural IL-10 sources may prove efficacious. Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is arguably the most potent anti-inflammatory cytokine. It is produced by almost all the innate and adaptive immune cells. These cells also serve as its targets, indicating that IL-10 secretion and action is highly regulated and perhaps compartmentalized. Consistent with this notion, various efforts directed at systemic administration of IL-10 to modulate autoimmune diseases (type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis) have produced conflicting and largely inconsequential effects. On the other hand, IL-10 can promote humoral immune responses, enhancing class II expression on B cells and inducing immunoglobulin (Ig) production. Consequently, the high IL-10 level in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients is considered pathogenic and its blockade ameliorates the disease. In this perspective, we review preclinical findings and results of recent clinical studies using exogenous IL-10 to treat the aforementioned autoimmune diseases. In addition, given the limited success of IL-10 supplementation, we suggest that future studies should be expanded beyond modulating the delivery modes to include developing new strategies to protect and replenish the endogenous sources of IL-10. As an example, we provide evidence that aberrant Fas-mediated deletion of IL-10-producing B cells subverts the immunoregulatory role of IL-10 in autoimmune diabetes and that modulation of the Fas pathway preserves the IL-10-producing B cells and completely protects NOD mice from developing the disease.