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Subsets of ILC3-ILC1-like cells generate a diversity spectrum of innate lymphoid cells in human mucosal tissues.

Marina CellaRamya GaminiCristiane SéccaPatrick L CollinsShanrong ZhaoVincent PengMichelle L RobinetteJorge SchettiniKonstantin ZaitsevWilliam GordonJennifer K BandoKentaro YomogidaVictor CortezCatrina FronickRobert FultonLih-Ling LinSusan GilfillanRichard A FlavellLiang ShanMaxim N ArtyomovMichael BowmanEugene M OltzScott A JelinskyMarco Colonna
Published in: Nature immunology (2019)
Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are tissue-resident lymphocytes categorized on the basis of their core regulatory programs and the expression of signature cytokines. Human ILC3s that produce the cytokine interleukin-22 convert into ILC1-like cells that produce interferon-γ in vitro, but whether this conversion occurs in vivo remains unclear. In the present study we found that ILC3s and ILC1s in human tonsils represented the ends of a spectrum that included additional discrete subsets. RNA velocity analysis identified an intermediate ILC3-ILC1 cluster, which had strong directionality toward ILC1s. In humanized mice, the acquisition of ILC1 features by ILC3s showed tissue dependency. Chromatin studies indicated that the transcription factors Aiolos and T-bet cooperated to repress regulatory elements active in ILC3s. A transitional ILC3-ILC1 population was also detected in the human intestine. We conclude that ILC3s undergo conversion into ILC1-like cells in human tissues in vivo, and that tissue factors and Aiolos were required for this process.
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