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Commensal-specific T cell plasticity promotes rapid tissue adaptation to injury.

Oliver J HarrisonJonathan L LinehanHan-Yu ShihNicolas BouladouxSeong-Ji HanMargery G SmelkinsonShurjo K SenAllyson L ByrdMichel EnamoradoChen YaoSamira TamoutounourFrancois Van LaethemCharlotte HurabielleNicholas CollinsAndrea PaunRosalba SalcedoJohn J O'SheaYasmine Belkaid
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Barrier tissues are primary targets of environmental stressors and are home to the largest number of antigen-experienced lymphocytes in the body, including commensal-specific T cells. We found that skin-resident commensal-specific T cells harbor a paradoxical program characterized by a type 17 program associated with a poised type 2 state. Thus, in the context of injury and exposure to inflammatory mediators such as interleukin-18, these cells rapidly release type 2 cytokines, thereby acquiring contextual functions. Such acquisition of a type 2 effector program promotes tissue repair. Aberrant type 2 responses can also be unleashed in the context of local defects in immunoregulation. Thus, commensal-specific T cells co-opt tissue residency and cell-intrinsic flexibility as a means to promote both local immunity and tissue adaptation to injury.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • gene expression
  • healthcare
  • induced apoptosis
  • stem cells
  • oxidative stress
  • patient safety
  • single cell
  • dendritic cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress