Context-dependent role of group 3 innate lymphoid cells in mucosal protection.
Leandro P AraujoMadeline EdwardsKoichiro IrieYiming HuangYoshinaga KawanoAlexander TranSimona De MicheleGovind BhagatHarris H WangIvaylo I IvanovPublished in: Science immunology (2024)
How group 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3s) regulate mucosal protection in the presence of T cells remains poorly understood. Here, we examined ILC3 function in intestinal immunity using ILC3-deficient mice that maintain endogenous T cells, T helper 17 (T H 17) cells, and secondary lymphoid organs. ILC3s were dispensable for generation of T H 17 and T H 22 cell responses to commensal and pathogenic bacteria, and absence of ILC3s did not affect IL-22 production by CD4 T cells before or during infection. However, despite the presence of IL-22-producing T cells, ILC3s and ILC3-derived IL-22 were required for maintaining homeostatic functions of the intestinal epithelium. T cell-sufficient, ILC3-deficient mice were capable of pathogen clearance and survived infection with a low dose of Citrobacter rodentium . However, ILC3s promoted pathogen tolerance at early time points of infection by activating tissue-protective immune pathways. Consequently, ILC3s were indispensable for survival after high-dose infection. Our results demonstrate a context-dependent role for ILC3s in immune-sufficient animals and provide a blueprint for uncoupling of ILC3 and T H 17 cell functions.