Litcius/Paper detail

Terminal differentiation and persistence of effector regulatory T cells essential for preventing intestinal inflammation

Stanislav Dikiy, Aazam P. Ghelani, Andrew G. Levine, Stephen Martis, Paolo Giovanelli, Zhong-Min Wang, Giorgi Beroshvili, Yuri Pritykin, Chirag Krishna, Xiao Jun Huang, Ariella Glasner, Benjamin D. Greenbaum, Christina S. Leslie, Alexander Y. Rudensky

2025Nature Immunology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Regulatory T (T reg ) cells are a specialized CD4 + T cell lineage with essential anti-inflammatory functions. Analysis of T reg cell adaptations to non-lymphoid tissues that enable their specialized immunosuppressive and tissue-supportive functions raises questions about the underlying mechanisms of these adaptations and whether they represent stable differentiation or reversible activation states. Here, we characterize distinct colonic effector T reg cell transcriptional programs. Attenuated T cell receptor (TCR) signaling and acquisition of substantial TCR-independent functionality seems to facilitate the terminal differentiation of a population of colonic effector T reg cells that are distinguished by stable expression of the immunomodulatory cytokine IL-10. Functional studies show that this subset of effector T reg cells, but not their expression of IL-10, is indispensable for colonic health. These findings identify core features of the terminal differentiation of effector T reg cells in non-lymphoid tissues and their function.

Topics & Concepts

EffectorBiologyCell biologyCellular differentiationImmunologyT-cell receptorInnate lymphoid cellPopulationInflammationT cellCytokineAntigenImmune systemAcquired immune systemMedicineGeneticsGeneEnvironmental healthImmune Cell Function and InteractionT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmunotherapy and Immune Responses