Login / Signup

A γδ T cell-IL-3 axis controls allergic responses through sensory neurons.

Cameron H FlayerIsabela J KerninPeri R MatatiaXiangsunze ZengDavid A YarmolinskyCai HanParth R NaikDean R ButtaciPamela A AderholdRyan B CamireXueping ZhuAlice J TirardJohn T McGuireNeal P SmithClive S McKimmieCameron S McAlpineFilip K SwirskiClifford J WoolfAlexandra-Chloé VillaniCaroline L Sokol
Published in: Nature (2024)
In naive individuals, sensory neurons directly detect and respond to allergens, leading to both the sensation of itch and the activation of local innate immune cells, which initiate the allergic immune response 1,2 . In the setting of chronic allergic inflammation, immune factors prime sensory neurons, causing pathologic itch 3-7 . Although these bidirectional neuroimmune circuits drive responses to allergens, whether immune cells regulate the set-point for neuronal activation by allergens in the naive state is unknown. Here we describe a γδ T cell-IL-3 signalling axis that controls the allergen responsiveness of cutaneous sensory neurons. We define a poorly characterized epidermal γδ T cell subset 8 , termed GD3 cells, that produces its hallmark cytokine IL-3 to promote allergic itch and the initiation of the allergic immune response. Mechanistically, IL-3 acts on Il3ra-expressing sensory neurons in a JAK2-dependent manner to lower their threshold for allergen activation without independently eliciting itch. This γδ T cell-IL-3 signalling axis further acts by means of STAT5 to promote neuropeptide production and the initiation of allergic immunity. These results reveal an endogenous immune rheostat that sits upstream of and governs sensory neuronal responses to allergens on first exposure. This pathway may explain individual differences in allergic susceptibility and opens new therapeutic avenues for treating allergic diseases.
Keyphrases