The CXCL10/CXCR3 Axis and Cardiac Inflammation: Implications for Immunotherapy to Treat Infectious and Noninfectious Diseases of the Heart

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Hindawi Limited

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Accumulating evidence reveals involvement of T lymphocytes and adaptive immunity in the chronic inflammation associated with infectious and noninfectious diseases of the heart, including coronary artery disease, Kawasaki disease, myocarditis, dilated cardiomyopathies, Chagas, hypertensive left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, and nonischemic heart failure. Chemokine CXCL10 is elevated in cardiovascular diseases, along with increased cardiac infiltration of proinflammatory Th1 and cytotoxic T cells. CXCL10 is a chemoattractant for these T cells and polarizing factor for the proinflammatory phenotype. Thus, targeting the CXCL10 receptor CXCR3 is a promising therapeutic approach to treating cardiac inflammation. Due to biased signaling CXCR3 also couples to anti-inflammatory signaling and immunosuppressive regulatory T cell formation when activated by CXCL11. Numbers and functionality of regulatory T cells are reduced in patients with cardiac inflammation, supporting the utility of biased agonists or biologicals to simultaneously block the pro-inflammatory and activate the anti-inflammatory actions of CXCR3. Other immunotherapy strategies to boost regulatory T cell actions include intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) therapy, adoptive transfer, immunoadsorption, and low-dose interleukin-2/interleukin-2 antibody complexes. Pharmacological approaches include sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor 1 agonists and vitamin D supplementation. A combined strategy of switching CXCR3 signaling from pro- to anti-inflammatory and improving Treg functionality is predicted to synergistically lessen adverse cardiac remodeling. © 2016 Raffaele Altara et al.

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Animals, Cardiovascular diseases, Chemokine cxcl10, Chemokine cxcl11, Humans, Immunoglobulins, intravenous, Immunotherapy, Inflammation, Interleukin-2, Receptors, cxcr3, Receptors, lysosphingolipid, Signal transduction, T-lymphocytes, regulatory, Vitamin d, Chemokine receptor cxcr3, Gamma interferon inducible protein 10, Immunoglobulin, Interleukin 2, Cxcl11 chemokine, Cxcl11 protein, human, Cxcr3 protein, human, Sphingosine 1 phosphate receptor, Adaptive immunity, Adoptive transfer, Carditis, Chagas disease, Chronic inflammation, Congestive cardiomyopathy, Coronary artery disease, Cytotoxic t lymphocyte, Heart failure, Heart left ventricle hypertrophy, Human, Hypertension, Immunoadsorption, Immunosuppressive treatment, Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome, Myocarditis, Nonhuman, Regulatory t lymphocyte, Review, T lymphocyte, Th1 cell, Animal, Immunology, Metabolism, Pathophysiology

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