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Immunofibroblasts regulate LTα3 expression in tertiary lymphoid structures in a pathway dependent on ICOS/ICOSL interaction.

Saba NayarElena PontariniJoana CamposOnorina BerardicurtiCharlotte G SmithSaba AsamDavid H GardnerSerena ColafrancescoDavide LucchesiRachel ColebyMing-May ChungValentina IannizzottoKelly HunterSimon J BowmanGianluca CarlessoRonald HerbstHelen Michelle McGettrickJeffrey L BrowningChristopher Dominic BuckleyBenjamin A FisherMichele BombardieriFrancesca Barone
Published in: Communications biology (2022)
Immunofibroblasts have been described within tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) that regulate lymphocyte aggregation at sites of chronic inflammation. Here we report, for the first time, an immunoregulatory property of this population, dependent on inducible T-cell co-stimulator ligand and its ligand (ICOS/ICOS-L). During inflammation, immunofibroblasts, alongside other antigen presenting cells, like dendritic cells (DCs), upregulate ICOSL, binding incoming ICOS + T cells and inducing LTα3 production that, in turn, drives the chemokine production required for TLS assembly via TNFRI/II engagement. Pharmacological or genetic blocking of ICOS/ICOS-L interaction results in defective LTα expression, abrogating both lymphoid chemokine production and TLS formation. These data provide evidence of a previously unknown function for ICOSL-ICOS interaction, unveil a novel immunomodulatory function for immunofibroblasts, and reveal a key regulatory function of LTα3, both as biomarker of TLS establishment and as first driver of TLS formation and maintenance in mice and humans.
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