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The balance of interleukin-12 and interleukin-23 determines the bias of MAIT1 versus MAIT17 responses during bacterial infection.

Huimeng WangAdam G NelsonBingjie WangZhe ZhaoXin Yi LimMai ShiLucy J MeehanXiaoxiao JiaKatherine KedzierskaBronwyn S MeehanSidonia Bg EckleMichael Nt SouterTroi J PediongcoJeffrey Yw MakDavid P FairlieJames McCluskeyZhongfang WangAlexandra J CorbettZhenjun Chen
Published in: Immunology and cell biology (2022)
Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are a major subset of innate-like T cells mediating protection against bacterial infection through recognition of microbial metabolites derived from riboflavin biosynthesis. Mouse MAIT cells egress from the thymus as two main subpopulations with distinct functions, namely, T-bet-expressing MAIT1 and RORγt-expressing MAIT17 cells. Previously, we reported that inducible T-cell costimulator and interleukin (IL)-23 provide essential signals for optimal MHC-related protein 1 (MR1)-dependent activation and expansion of MAIT17 cells in vivo. Here, in a model of tularemia, in which MAIT1 responses predominate, we demonstrate that IL-12 and IL-23 promote MAIT1 cell expansion during acute infection and that IL-12 is indispensable for MAIT1 phenotype and function. Furthermore, we showed that the bias toward MAIT1 or MAIT17 responses we observed during different bacterial infections was determined and modulated by the balance between IL-12 and IL-23 and that these responses could be recapitulated by cytokine coadministration with antigen. Our results indicate a potential for tailored immunotherapeutic interventions via MAIT cell manipulation.
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