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Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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Original paper

Occurrence of IL-1, IL-10, CD25, CD40, and CD69 in the tissue of palatine tonsils

Przemysław Bant
1
,
Witold Owczarek
2
,
Kornel Szczygielski
1
,
Szczepan Cierniak
3
,
Joanna Kania
3
,
Dariusz Jurkiewicz
1

1.
Department of Otolaryngology with Division of Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery, Military Institute of Medicine, Warsaw, Poland
2.
Department of Dermatology, Military Institute of Medicine, Warsaw, Poland
3.
Department of Pathomorphology, Military Institute of Medicine, Warsaw, Poland
Adv Dermatol Allergol 2022; XXXIX (1): 182-188
Online publish date: 2021/10/25
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Introduction

Palatine tonsils are secondary lymphatic organs containing aggregates of lymphoid cells, and they belong to the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT). The pharyngeal mucosa is equipped with a complex secretory immune system. B cells are stimulated by an antigen initially in the MALT regions, and thus formed stimulated lymphocytes migrate to the glandular sites, where they differentiate into Ig-producing cells [1]. White blood cells, mainly lymphocytes, are in all histological locations in the palatine tonsils, including the covering epithelium (they are called intraepithelial leukocytes – IEL). The IEL count in patients with tonsillitis is significantly higher than in patients with palatine tonsil hypertrophy. This is caused by a selective increase of the T-cell CD8 Vdelta1/Vgamma9 population [2]. CD4+ T cells account for smaller share of IEL in the palatine tonsils than CD8+ cells; the former occur with B cells in the crypt epithelium [3]. B cells occur mainly in 3 locations in the palatine tonsils: in the mantle zone of a lymphatic nodule, in the follicular centres, and as intraepithelial cells [4]. The epithelium that lines the crypts contains dendritic cells that can transport exogenous antigens to the extracellular areas of T cells and to the B-cell vesicles [5]. Close association between the crypt epithelium and the lymphoid component persists throughout human life. Immune stimulation begins shortly after birth, at approximately 2 weeks of age, in response to exogenous antigens [6]. Multiple publications have shown that tonsillitis can induce or coexist with dermatological diseases and that tonsillectomy results in the disease remission. In 1935 Andrews and Machecek were the first to show that tonsillectomy was effective in the treatment of palmoplantar pustulosis (PPP) [7]. In the conducted study 9/24 PPP patients were cured after tonsillectomy. Another publication reported investigation of 124 PPP patients. The investigators showed that patients who underwent tonsillectomy exhibited a much higher cure rate than patients who received other therapies [8]. Yamakita et al. found that a group of patients who underwent tonsillectomy exhibited higher improvement rate of PPP skin lesions that the group who did not receive such a procedure. These results were further supported by a randomized prospective comparative study [9, 10]. In another publication the authors demonstrated similar correlations: 109 (94%) of 116 patients and 52 (88%) of 59 patients, who were assessed using a subjective self-assessment and the objective PPP Area and Severity Index (PPPASI), exhibited improvement of the PPP-induced skin lesions after tonsillectomy [11]. These data clearly show that palatine tonsil diseases may affect dermatological diseases and tonsillectomy results in reduction or complete resolution of skin lesions. Another authors [12] exhibited a positive correlation between the palatine tonsil disease and psoriasis. They showed that the risk of tonsillitis was higher in paediatric patients with psoriasis. The publication [13] reported Immunochip genotyping and their analysis. The investigations revealed that HLA-C*06: 02 is an allele of risk for both palatine tonsillitis and psoriasis. The same 2 association peaks for ~30–31.5 Mb were associated with both these diseases. The authors of another study showed that tonsillectomy reduces signs and symptoms of Behcet’s disease [14].
It seems that an increased activity of pro-inflammatory factors may take place in the affected palatine tonsils. CD25, coded by IL2RA, is one of them [15]. It is a transmembrane protein present in the activated lymphocytes, especially in Treg cells [16]. There are multiple mechanisms responsible for increased CD25 expression in T cells. Binding of a mitogen or alloantigen by T cells activates their receptors, causing inflow of the calcium ions, resulting in phosphorylation of protein kinase C and triggering of a cascade of reactions resulting in an increased CD25 level (by 5- to 20-fold) [17]. CD25 expression by T cells is additionally stimulated by IL-2 that induces a positive feedback loop through STAT5 [18]. A study enrolling patients with chronic tonsillitis qualified to tonsillectomy found CD25 cells in all patients [19]. Another study assessed activation of T cells in the palatine tonsils in PPP patients. Analysis of flow cytometry showed that the CD25+ cell count in the tonsils of PPP patients was significantly higher than in patients without the inflammatory process in their tonsils [20]. CD40 is another characteristic marker that is present on B cells when they engage a specific ligand – CD154, present on activated T cells; it provides a signal required to initiate a humoral response. A cascade of immune response is triggered, resulting in activation of B cells and their maturation, differentiation and antibody production [21]. Palatine tonsils are an easily accessible and abundant source of human B cells from the secondary lymphatic tissue. They contain a heterogeneous mixture of B cells including several different phenotypes, such as naïve B cells, eGC, GC, and memory cells as well as plasmablasts [22]. CD69 may play an important role in chronic tonsillitis.
Persistence in a tissue environment depends on the ability of T cells to overwhelm exit signals. It can be achieved through expression of receptors that strengthen cellular interactions in the tissue and facilitate survival in a specific environment. The exit signal for T cells largely depends on S1P1 on T cells [23]. CD69 – a transmembrane type C lectin – promotes persistence of lymphocytes in the tissues through binding to S1P1 receptor on their surface and its negative regulation [24, 25]. Another pathway that affects T cell exit from the lymphatic system is CCR7 stimulation [26]. Its production is positively regulated by KLF2 and thus KLF2 blockade may affect CCR7-dependent lymphocyte migration [27]. The choice of CD69 as one of the pattern markers of the palatine tonsils is furthermore supported by a study that showed that CD69 expression was minimal on the circulating T cells and accounted for 25–75% of CD8+ T cells in the spleen and tonsils [28].
Interleukin-1 (IL-1) also plays an important role. The IL-1 family plays a major role in modulating innate immunity and induction of inflammatory response [29]. This combination of 2 functions became obvious after the discovery that the cytoplasmic domain of IL-1 type I receptor is highly homologous with cytoplasmic domains of all Toll-like receptors (TLR) on the immune cells. Thus, developing inflammatory responses are induced both by activation of IL-1 ligands as well as TLR. While transduction of a signal of pro-inflammatory response induced by interleukin occurs through formation of a complex of type 1 IL-1 receptor (IL-1R1) and IL-1RAcP co-receptor [30], TLR induces inflammation through bacteria, microorganism products, viruses, nucleic acids, and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMP) [31].
It must be emphasized that IL-10, known as a “cytokine synthesis inhibiting factor” (CSIF), is a potent cytokine with anti-inflammatory activity, produced mostly by subsets T cell lines (Treg, Th2). It can inhibit cytokine expression through effects on Th1 cell lines and can limit inflammatory response through effects on various immune cells [32]. IL-10 binds to a receptor (IL-10R) that is composed of two chains: IL-10R1 and IL-10R2. Association of IL-10 with IL-10R results in signal transduction through its main mediator – STAT3 – and regulation of inflammatory response [33]. It must be emphasized that a T-cell population producing large amounts of IL-10 and potently inhibiting immune response was identified in human palatine tonsils [34]. Two recent papers have also described the existence of IL-10 (a product of Tfh cells): one in which the cells appear during chronic viral infection in mice [35] and another in which they were found in human tonsils [36].

Aim

As the above-mentioned data indicate, diagnosis of a disease of palatine tonsils is of utmost importance. Unfortunately, the proper clinical diagnosis is not always obvious, and its correct identification requires detailed, multifactorial investigations. Thus, the aim of the study was to assess the relationship between the clinical presentation and an immunohistochemistry phenotype of selected markers (including their histological locations) in the palatine tonsils resected due to tonsillitis and hypertrophy. We selected immunohistochemistry markers, the following titres of which are typical for inflammation: CD25, CD40, CD69, IL-1, and IL-10.

Material and methods

We analysed 50 palatine tonsils from tonsillectomy performed due to tonsillitis (30 cases) and palatine tonsil hypertrophy (20 cases) at the Department of Otolaryngology and Laryngological Oncology with Division of Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery, Military Institute of Medicine, Warsaw, Poland. The patients were assigned to a specific group based on the previously reported qualification process [37]. Subsequently the collected material underwent immunohistochemistry testing. The exclusion criteria included patients with suspected neoplasm of the palatine tonsil and patients under 18 years of age. Slides with immunohistochemistry reactions were scanned on a Pannoramic 250 FLASH 3DHISTECH scanner and evaluated under an Olympus BH63 light microscope, and subsequently the planned measurements were performed using 3DHISTECH CaseCenter ver. 2.7 software. Immunochemistry colour reaction was evaluated in 4 tonsillar regions, i.e. in the lymphatic follicles, crypt epithelium, interfollicular region, and subepithelial region. To report the phenotypic expression of immunohistochemistry reactions a specific assessment scale was used that included both staining intensity and percentage of stained cells; intensity of the immunohistochemistry reaction was assessed on a scale from 0 to 3 (none, weak, moderate, potent reaction), and the extent of the stained areas was assessed as follows: < 1% of cells = 0; 1 = 1; > 1–10 = 2; 11–33 = 3; 34–66 = 4; and 67–100 = 5. Subsequently both values were added and thus the final score was achieved.

Statistical analysis

The data was analysed using GNU pspp 1.4.1 software. The significance of mean values was assessed based on a single sample t test. Significance of differences between parameters for 2 groups was determined based on a t test for independent samples. Significance of differences between parameters for more than two groups was assessed using ANOVA with a post-hoc LSD Fisher test.

Results

Palatine tonsils were tested for 2 different cytokines and 3 lymphoid markers: IL-1, IL-10, CD25, CD40, and CD69 in each of the tested groups, including subdivision to specific histological locations in the palatine tonsils. Table 1 presents the results. Concurrent production of CD25, CD40, CD69, IL-1, and IL-10 was found in the palatine tonsillitis and hypertrophy. The measured average parameters were higher in the material obtained from the patients with tonsillitis than from the patients with palatine tonsil hypertrophy. When data for all the locations were summarized, significant (p < 0.05) differences were found for all reactions except for CD-40. The covering epithelium was the region exhibiting the most statistically significant differences between the tested markers, while no statistically significant differences were found between the tested groups in the follicular region. Furthermore, comparison of specific markers in the tonsillectomy group with regard to histological location in the tested palatine tonsils revealed that the most statistically significant differences were found for IL-1 and CD69, and the least for IL-10. On the other hand, the hypertrophy group exhibited statistically significant differences for the tested markers with the highest titres also for IL-1 and CD69, and the lowest for IL-10, for which no statistically significant correlation was found for this marker. Both the highest and lowest measured values for a specific marker for each compartment of the palatine tonsil tissue were higher in the tonsillitis than in the hypertrophy group. Tables 2 and 3 present the results.

Discussion

The study by Mikola et al. [38] found IL-10 in the palatine tonsil tissue affected by inflammation. Its average value was lower than in the hypertrophic palatine tonsil. We found the opposite relation in our study. We obtained higher value for the tonsillitis than for the hypertrophy. However, unlike our study, the authors of that paper did not identify a region of the palatine tonsil with the highest concentration of this cytokine. Moreover, the revealed differences did not reach statistical significance. We performed such a subdivision in our study and found the highest concentration of this cytokine in the subepithelial inflammatory infiltrate for 2 groups of palatine tonsils equal to 1.13 for the tonsillitis tissue and 0.1 for the hypertrophic palatine tonsils. As the authors emphasize, among the tested cytokines only the newly discovered anti-inflammatory cytokine, IL-37, was independently associated with the palatine tonsil hypertrophy, exhibiting slightly more potent anti-inflammatory response in these patients. Furthermore, the authors suggest that the palatine tonsil hypertrophy may be a consequence of chronic tonsillitis, suggesting blurring of the borders between the cytokine levels (e.g. IL-10) in both these conditions.
Huang et al. [39] found IL-1 and IL-10 in the hypertrophic palatine tonsil tissue as well as in hypertrophy with coexisting tonsillitis. The researchers demonstrated higher expression levels of the tested cytokines in the group with isolated hypertrophy. In our study we found higher expression of both IL-1 and IL-10 in the tonsillitis compared to hypertrophy tissue. Therefore, we obtained opposite relations in our study. As the authors of this publication emphasize, the aetiology of hypertrophy of the tonsillar lymphatic tissues remains unknown. They found high expression of VP1 in the hypertrophic palatine tonsils, indicating that the hypertrophy of the palatine tonsils could have been caused by a viral infection. Furthermore, the authors analysed immune mechanisms involved in the response triggered by the virus. The available literature proved that TLR recognizes the virus and initiates a series of cellular antiviral responses through intracellular signalling pathways [40, 41]. The results obtained by these authors indicated that TLR4 and TLR7 were involved in the innate immune response triggered by viruses in isolated hypertrophic palatine tonsils. The different results obtained by us and authors of the above-mentioned publication may result from the lack of a homogeneous tonsillitis group. We believe that comparing cytokine profiles in 2 groups, one of which has the same component as the other, is imprecise and carries a high risk of error. We identified 2 independent groups in our study, achieving statistically significant results.
Geißler et al. [42] investigated the ability of T cells in tonsillitis to exhibit continuous high basic expression level of the surface CD25, CD69, and CD154 (CD40) in freshly isolated T cells from the palatine tonsils. The results obtained in patients with tonsillitis indicated higher CD25, CD69, and CD154 (CD40) expression versus patients with peritonsillar abscess and palatine tonsil hypertrophy. We obtained compatible results, but statistically significant differences were obtained for all except the CD40 titre. CD25, CD40, and CD69 titres for the palatine tonsillitis group were 2.37, 0.84, and 1.78, respectively, while CD25, CD40, and CD69 titres for the palatine tonsil hypertrophy group were 1.28, 0.53, and 1.26, respectively. We also identified regions of the palatine tonsil characterized by expression of the above-mentioned markers. The highest values were obtained in the subepithelial region for CD25 and CD69 in both study groups and for CD40 in the subepithelial region in the tonsillitis group and the follicular centre for the hypertrophy group. As the authors of this publication emphasize, T cells in the tonsillitis exhibit signs of elevated basal activation status, mirroring high basal surface expression of, among others, CD69. This is compatible with the view that T cells in the tonsils are exposed to chronic stimulation. However, chronic exposure to an antigen, initially favouring accumulation of pathogen-specific effector T cells, may eventually result in exhaustion of effector T cells [43–46]. Finally, this results in high basal CD69 expression, associated with exhausted T cell phenotype [47–49].
Chen et al. [50] compared 2 groups of children: one group with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) syndrome without tonsillitis (OSAS group) and a control group that included children with tonsillitis without an accompanying OSA. They found higher IL-1 expression in the control group than in the palatine tonsil hypertrophy group. Moreover, IL-1 expression in the palatine tonsil tissue was higher in the core than in the cortex. We found the following IL-1 levels in the tonsillitis group in the specific palatine tonsil zones (epithelial – 3.2, subepithelial – 4.43, follicular – 0.13, follicular center –2.27, interfollicular – 3.4). In our analysis its level was also higher in the tonsillitis group. The authors of the publication compared IL-10 concentrations between the study groups. The OSAS group exhibited higher IL-10 levels than the control group. Our analysis provided the opposite results. Agren et al. [51] also assessed cytokines in the hypertrophic palatine tonsils with severe OSAS without an accompanying infection and palatine tonsils with recurrent infections. The IL-1 level was significantly higher in the tonsillitis group than in the hypertrophy group. This supports our results. The discussed study [50] and our study included palatine tonsils, excluding the adenoid, which also played an important role in the OSA pathophysiology and was associated with inflammatory markers related to sleep disorders. Moreover, the authors examined only a paediatric population aged from 3 to 12 years. Furthermore, the study enrolled only 34 patients. Our study group was more varied with regard to age and number of cases. This could contribute to different results for IL-10 between the study groups.
In another study [52] the authors analysed effects of adenotonsillectomy on the evolution of inflammatory markers in patients with palatine tonsillitis, palatine tonsil hypertrophy, and the 2 combined. They found reduction of IL-1 and IL-10 levels after tonsillectomy and higher levels of these cytokines in the tonsillectomy group versus the control group. In the performed study the authors achieved higher IL-10 levels in the inflammation group versus the hypertrophy group (OSAS). These relations are compatible with our results. Nevertheless, IL-1 values obtained by the investigators were higher in the OSAS group versus the tonsillectomy group. These results contradict ours. According to the authors of this publication, the higher IL-10 titre in the tonsillitis group might have resulted from pathophysiological changes induced by the palatine tonsil infection. This has a 2-pronged effect on the inflammation of the palatine tonsil, both through production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and through increased levels of the anti-inflammatory proteins that counteract it. The reversibility of this process with tonsillectomy supports the concept of restoration of balance that is lacking.

Conclusions

The current results indicate similarities and differences in the cytokine pattern and distribution of the lymphoid cells in the palatine tonsil tissue in the 2 defined diseases. Moreover, highly compartmentalized cytokine production and the presence of lymphoid cells can be found. The highest concentrations of IL-1, IL-10, CD25, and CD69 were found in both palatine tonsil groups in the region of the subepithelial inflammatory infiltrate, while CD40 was found in the tonsillitis group in the region of the subepithelial inflammatory infiltrate and in the hypertrophy group in the follicular centre. Increased activity of these factors favours persistence of chronic palatine tonsillitis, which may affect local and systemic diseases, including dermatological disorders. The investigated markers and cytokines CD25, CD69, IL-1, and IL-10 are more abundant in the palatine tonsillitis than in hypertrophy. The obtained results are statistically significant (p < 0.05). Thus, tonsillitis potentially underlies systemic changes and should preferably be eliminated. The presence of the investigated markers and cytokines in all parts of the palatine tonsils must be emphasized. This indicates the requirement for resection of the whole palatine tonsil rather than its partial resection.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interests.

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