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Qianxia Zhang

Guangxi University

ORCID: 0000-0002-2885-2147

Publishes on Immune Cell Function and Interaction, T-cell and B-cell Immunology, Diabetes and associated disorders. 35 papers and 1.9k citations.

35Publications
1.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

PD-1 restraint of regulatory T cell suppressive activity is critical for immune tolerance
Catherine L. Tan, Juhi R. Kuchroo, Peter T. Sage et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|2020
Cited by 257Open Access

Inhibitory signals through the PD-1 pathway regulate T cell activation, T cell tolerance, and T cell exhaustion. Studies of PD-1 function have focused primarily on effector T cells. Far less is known about PD-1 function in regulatory T (T reg) cells. To study the role of PD-1 in T reg cells, we generated mice that selectively lack PD-1 in T reg cells. PD-1-deficient T reg cells exhibit an activated phenotype and enhanced immunosuppressive function. The in vivo significance of the potent suppressive capacity of PD-1-deficient T reg cells is illustrated by ameliorated experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and protection from diabetes in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice lacking PD-1 selectively in T reg cells. We identified reduced signaling through the PI3K-AKT pathway as a mechanism underlying the enhanced suppressive capacity of PD-1-deficient T reg cells. Our findings demonstrate that cell-intrinsic PD-1 restraint of T reg cells is a significant mechanism by which PD-1 inhibitory signals regulate T cell tolerance and autoimmunity.

Treg-Cell-Derived IL-35-Coated Extracellular Vesicles Promote Infectious Tolerance
Cited by 158Open Access

(iTr35) T cells. Furthermore, IL-35 producers, although rare, secrete Ebi3 and p35 on extracellular vesicles (EVs) targeting a 25- to 100-fold higher number of T and B lymphocytes, causing them to acquire surface IL-35. This surface IL-35 is absent when EV production is inhibited or if Ebi3 is genetically deleted in Treg cells. The unique ability of EVs to coat bystander lymphocytes with IL-35, promoting exhaustion in, and secondary suppression by, non-Treg cells identifies a novel mechanism of infectious tolerance.