Interleukin-6 produced by enteric neurons regulates the number and phenotype of microbe-responsive regulatory T cells in the gut

Citation:

Yiqing Yan, Deepshika Ramanan, Milena Rozenberg, Kelly McGovern, Daniella Rastelli, Brinda Vijaykumar, Omar Yaghi, Tiphaine Voisin, Munir Mosaheb, Isaac Chiu, Shalev Itzkovitz, Meenakshi Rao, Diane Mathis, and Christophe Benoist. 2021. “Interleukin-6 produced by enteric neurons regulates the number and phenotype of microbe-responsive regulatory T cells in the gut.” Immunity, 54, 3, Pp. 499-513.e5. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/yfut4pne
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Abstract:

The immune and enteric nervous (ENS) systems monitor the frontier with commensal and pathogenic microbes in the colon. We investigated whether FoxP3 regulatory T (Treg) cells functionally interact with the ENS. Indeed, microbe-responsive RORγ and Helios subsets localized in close apposition to nitrergic and peptidergic nerve fibers in the colon lamina propria (LP). Enteric neurons inhibited in vitro Treg (iTreg) differentiation in a cell-contact-independent manner. A screen of neuron-secreted factors revealed a role for interleukin-6 (IL-6) in modulating iTreg formation and their RORγ proportion. Colonization of germfree mice with commensals, especially RORγ Treg inducers, broadly diminished colon neuronal density. Closing the triangle, conditional ablation of IL-6 in neurons increased total Treg cells but decreased the RORγ subset, as did depletion of two ENS neurotransmitters. Our findings suggest a regulatory circuit wherein microbial signals condition neuronal density and activation, thus tuning Treg cell generation and immunological tolerance in the gut.
Last updated on 04/12/2021