免疫系统
血清素
生物
肠道菌群
代谢组
细菌
微生物学
免疫学
细胞生物学
内分泌学
生物化学
受体
代谢物
遗传学
作者
Katherine Z. Sanidad,Stephanie L. Rager,Hannah C. Carrow,Aparna Ananthanarayanan,Ryann Callaghan,Lucy R. Hart,Tingting Li,Purnima Ravisankar,Julia A. Brown,Mohammed Amir,Jenny C. Jin,Alexandria R. Savage,Ryan Luo,Florencia Madorsky Rowdo,María Laura Martin,Randi B. Silver,Chun‐Jun Guo,Jan Krumsiek,Naohiro Inohara,Melody Y. Zeng
出处
期刊:Science immunology
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2024-03-15
卷期号:9 (93)
被引量:13
标识
DOI:10.1126/sciimmunol.adj4775
摘要
The gut microbiota promotes immune system development in early life, but the interactions between the gut metabolome and immune cells in the neonatal gut remain largely undefined. Here, we demonstrate that the neonatal gut is uniquely enriched with neurotransmitters, including serotonin, and that specific gut bacteria directly produce serotonin while down-regulating monoamine oxidase A to limit serotonin breakdown. We found that serotonin directly signals to T cells to increase intracellular indole-3-acetaldehdye and inhibit mTOR activation, thereby promoting the differentiation of regulatory T cells, both ex vivo and in vivo in the neonatal intestine. Oral gavage of serotonin into neonatal mice resulted in long-term T cell–mediated antigen-specific immune tolerance toward both dietary antigens and commensal bacteria. Together, our study has uncovered an important role for specific gut bacteria to increase serotonin availability in the neonatal gut and identified a function of gut serotonin in shaping T cell response to dietary antigens and commensal bacteria to promote immune tolerance in early life.
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