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Selective IL-27 production by intestinal regulatory T cells permits gut-specific regulation of T H 17 cell immunity.

Chia-Hao LinCheng-Jang WuSunglim ChoRasika PatkarWilliam J HuthLing-Li LinMei-Chi ChenElisabeth IsraelssonJoanne BettsMagdalena NiedzielskaShefali A PatelHan G DuongRomana R GernerChia-Yun HsuMatthew CatleyRose A MaciewiczHiutung ChuManuela RaffatelluJohn T ChangLi-Fan Lu
Published in: Nature immunology (2023)
Regulatory T cells (T reg cells) are instrumental in establishing immunological tolerance. However, the precise effector mechanisms by which T reg cells control a specific type of immune response in a given tissue remains unresolved. By simultaneously studying T reg cells from different tissue origins under systemic autoimmunity, in the present study we show that interleukin (IL)-27 is specifically produced by intestinal T reg cells to regulate helper T17 cell (T H 17 cell) immunity. Selectively increased intestinal T H 17 cell responses in mice with T reg cell-specific IL-27 ablation led to exacerbated intestinal inflammation and colitis-associated cancer, but also helped protect against enteric bacterial infection. Furthermore, single-cell transcriptomic analysis has identified a CD83 + CD62L lo T reg cell subset that is distinct from previously characterized intestinal T reg cell populations as the main IL-27 producers. Collectively, our study uncovers a new T reg cell suppression mechanism crucial for controlling a specific type of immune response in a particular tissue and provides further mechanistic insights into tissue-specific T reg cell-mediated immune regulation.
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