Two functionally distinct subsets of IL-17 producing γδ T cells.
Rebecca L O'BrienWilli K BornPublished in: Immunological reviews (2020)
The γδ T cells play an important role in both mice and humans as a source of the cytokine IL-17, which is key for immune resistance to certain pathogens. In mice, most of these IL-17 producers, termed γδT-17 cells, actually comprise two distinct types: those expressing an invariant Vγ6Vδ1+ TCR and those expressing a Vγ4+ TCR. Murine γδT-17 cells acquire an inherent bias to produce IL-17 and other "type 17" cytokines during thymic development. The similarities and differences between the two mouse γδT-17 types are reviewed here, and the potential implications of their differences are discussed. There is some evidence that two distinct TCR-defined IL-17-producing γδ T cell subsets also exist in humans, but unlike the mouse γδT-17 cells, these cells are probably not imprinted with an IL-17 bias during thymic development, but rather acquire an IL-17 bias in the periphery.