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Adaptive immunity to retroelements promotes barrier integrity.

Alexandria C WellsDjalma Souza Lima-JuniorVerena M LinkMargery SmelkinsonSiddharth R KrishnamurthyLiang ChiElisha SegristClaudia A RiveraAna TeijeiroNicolas BouladouxYasmine Belkaid
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Maintenance of tissue integrity is a requirement of host survival. This mandate is of prime importance at barrier sites that are constitutively exposed to the environment. Here, we show that exposure of the skin to non-inflammatory xenobiotics promotes tissue repair; more specifically, mild detergent exposure promotes the reactivation of defined retroelements leading to the induction of retroelement-specific CD8 + T cells. These T cell responses are Langerhans cell dependent and establish tissue residency within the skin. Upon injury, retroelement-specific CD8 + T cells significantly accelerate wound repair via IL-17A. Collectively, this work demonstrates that tonic environmental exposures and associated adaptive responses to retroelements can be coopted to preemptively set the tissue for maximal resilience to injury.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • climate change
  • stem cells
  • soft tissue
  • single cell
  • blood pressure
  • risk assessment
  • depressive symptoms
  • social support
  • resistance training
  • emergency medicine