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Title: | Re-programming mouse liver-resident invariant natural killer T cells for suppressing hepatic and diabetogenic autoimmunity |
Author: | Umeshappa CS Solé P Yamanouchi J Mohapatra S Surewaard BGJ Garnica J Singha S Mondal D Cortés-Vicente E D'Mello C Mason A Kubes P Serra P Yang Y Santamaria P |
Keywords: | Adult Animal Animal Cell Animal Experiment Animal Tissue Animals Antigen Expression Antigens, CD1d Article Autoantigen Autoimmunity B Lymphocyte B-Lymphocytes, Regulatory CD1d antigen Cell cell component Controlled Study Cytokine Production Diabetogenesis Female galactosylceramide Galactosylceramides Human Human Cell Immunoregulation In Vivo Study Interleukin 10 interleukin 21 interleukin 35 Interleukin-10 Lipid Liver Liver Cell Lymphocyte Differentiation Male Metabolism Mice Middle Aged Mouse Nanoparticle Natural Killer T Cell Natural Killer T-Cells Nonhuman Nuclear Reprogramming Plasticity regulatory B lymphocyte retinoid related orphan receptor gamma Rodent spleen tissue Transcription Factor Gata 3 transcription factor Maf Transcription Factor T Bet zinc finger and BTB domain containing protein 16 |
Abstract: | Invariant NKT (iNKT) cells comprise a heterogeneous group of non-circulating, tissue-resident T lymphocytes that recognize glycolipids, including alpha-galactosylceramide (?GalCer), in the context of CD1d, but whether peripheral iNKT cell subsets are terminally differentiated remains unclear. Here we show that mouse and human liver-resident ?GalCer/CD1d-binding iNKTs largely correspond to a novel Zbtb16+Tbx21+Gata3+MaflowRorc- subset that exhibits profound transcriptional, phenotypic and functional plasticity. Repetitive in vivo encounters of these liver iNKT (LiNKT) cells with intravenously delivered ?GalCer/CD1d-coated nanoparticles (NP) trigger their differentiation into immunoregulatory, IL-10+IL-21-producing Zbtb16highMafhighTbx21+Gata3+Rorc- cells, termed LiNKTR1, expressing a T regulatory type 1 (TR1)-like transcriptional signature. This response is LiNKT-specific, since neither lung nor splenic tissue-resident iNKT cells from ?GalCer/CD1d-NP-treated mice produce IL-10 or IL-21. Additionally, these LiNKTR1 cells suppress autoantigen presentation, and recognize CD1d expressed on conventional B cells to induce IL-10+IL-35-producing regulatory B (Breg) cells, leading to the suppression of liver and pancreas autoimmunity. Our results thus suggest that LiNKT cells are plastic for further functional diversification, with such plasticity potentially targetable for suppressing tissue-specific inflammatory phenomena.© 2022. The Author(s). |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-30759-w |
It is part of: | Nature Communications, 2022, 13, 1, 3279-NA |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/209280 |
Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-30759-w |
ISSN: | Umeshappa CS;Solé P;Yamanouchi J;Mohapatra S;Surewaard BGJ;Garnica J;Singha S;Mondal D;Cortés-Vicente E;D'Mello C;Mason A;Kubes P;Serra P;Yang Y;Santamaria P. Re-programming mouse liver-resident invariant natural killer T cells for suppressing hepatic and diabetogenic autoimmunity. Nature Communications, 2022, 13, 1, 3279-NA |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (IDIBAPS: Institut d'investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer) |
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Re-programming mouse liver-resident invariant natural killer T cells for suppressing hepatic_NatureCommunications.pdf | 5.21 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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