作者
Benjamin Krämer,Ansel P. Nalin,Feiyang Ma,Sarah Eickhoff,Philipp Lutz,Sonia Leonardelli,Felix Goeser,Claudia Finnemann,Gudrun Hack,Jan Raabe,Michael ToVinh,Sarah Ahmad,Christoph Hoffmeister,Kim M Kaiser,Steffen Manekeller,Vittorio Branchi,Tobias Bald,Michael Hölzel,Robert Hüneburg,Hans Dieter Nischalke,Alexander Semaan,Bettina Langhans,Dominik J. Kaczmarek,Brooke Benner,Matthew R. Lordo,Jesse Kowalski,Adam Gerhardt,Jörg Timm,Marieta Toma,Raphael Mohr,Andreas Türler,Arthur Charpentier,Tobias Van Bremen,Georg Feldmann,Arne Sattler,Katja Kotsch,Ali T. Abdallah,Christian P. Strassburg,Ulrich Spengler,William E. Carson,Bethany L. Mundy-Bosse,Matteo Pellegrini,Timothy E. O’Sullivan,Aharon G. Freud,Jacob Nattermann
摘要
Group 1 innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) comprise a heterogeneous family of cytotoxic natural killer (NK) cells and ILC1s. We identify a population of “liver-type” ILC1s with transcriptional, phenotypic, and functional features distinct from those of conventional and liver-resident NK cells as well as from other previously described human ILC1 subsets. LT-ILC1s are CD49a+CD94+CD200R1+, express the transcription factor T-BET, and do not express the activating receptor NKp80 or the transcription factor EOMES. Similar to NK cells, liver-type ILC1s produce IFN-γ, TNF-α, and GM-CSF; however, liver-type ILC1s also produce IL-2 and lack perforin and granzyme-B. Liver-type ILC1s are expanded in cirrhotic liver tissues, and they can be produced from blood-derived ILC precursors in vitro in the presence of TGF-β1 and liver sinusoidal endothelial cells. Cells with similar signature and function can also be found in tonsil and intestinal tissues. Collectively, our study identifies and classifies a population of human cross-tissue ILC1s.