26–30 Interestingly, despite the increasingly established importance of
Treg cells in SCH727965 order Plasmodium infection, the experimental ablation of Treg cells from baseline levels using Foxp3-specific reagents did not significantly impact infection susceptibility.25,31 These findings illustrate that the potential importance of Treg cells in host defence for some infections is better appreciated using gain-of-function experimental approaches. Similarly, Treg-cell expansion with IL-2 cytokine antibody complexes also averts the natural collapse in Foxp3+ cells after Toxoplasma gondii infection and rescues mice from fatal immune pathology triggered by this infection.32 Furthermore, Foxp3+ Treg cells also synergize DAPT solubility dmso with T helper type 17 (Th17) effector CD4+ T cells in eradicating Candida albicans after oral infection.33 Taken together, these findings indicate Foxp3+ Treg cells play more generalizable protective roles that extend to host defence against parasitic and
fungal pathogens. On the other hand, using similar gain-of-function and loss-of-function experimental approaches for in vivo manipulation of these cells, Foxp3+ Treg cells have consistently been shown to impede host defence following infection with bacterial pathogens. This is best illustrated in the context of pregnancy-associated infection susceptibility where the physiological expansion of maternal Treg cells required for sustaining tolerance to paternally derived allo-antigens expressed by the developing fetus occurs.34,35 In particular, following allogeneic mating using defined strains of inbred mice that more closely recapitulates the magnitude of maternal Treg-cell expansion found in human pregnancy, mice with expanded maternal Treg cells are markedly more susceptible to infection with intracellular bacterial pathogens like Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella enterica, each with a natural Histamine H2 receptor predisposition
for prenatal infection.36–39 Reciprocally, pregnancy-associated susceptibility to these pathogens was eliminated with maternal Foxp3+ cell ablation when allogeneic pregnancies were established in Foxp3DTR female mice followed by the initiation of DT treatment beginning mid-gestation.36 However, given the necessity for sustained fetal tolerance maintained by expanded maternal Treg cells, the ablation of these cells although beneficial for host defence also triggers fetal resorption and pregnancy loss.34–36 In a similar fashion, the expansion of Foxp3+ Treg cells within the first 3 days after intranasal Francisella tularensis infection has been described to blunt early innate host defence that may represent a unique immune evasion strategy for this pathogen.