结肠炎
T细胞
细胞生物学
自身免疫
炎症
免疫
生物
炎症性肠病
细胞分化
医学
免疫学
化学
免疫系统
内科学
疾病
生物化学
基因
作者
Ningbo Wu,Dong‐Ping Chen,Hongxiang Sun,Jianmei Tan,Yao Zhang,Tianyu Zhang,Yijie Han,Hongzhi Liu,Xinxing Ouyang,Xiaodong Yang,Xiaoyin Niu,Jie Zhong,Zhengting Wang,Bing Su
标识
DOI:10.1007/s11427-020-1720-9
摘要
T cell-mediated immunity in the intestine is stringently controlled to ensure proper immunity against pathogenic microbes and to prevent autoimmunity, a known cause of inflammatory bowel disease. However, precisely how T cells regulate intestine immunity remains to be fully understood. In this study, we found that mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 2 (MAP3K2) is required for the CD4+ T cell-mediated inflammation in the intestine. Using a T cell transfer colitis model, we found that MAP3K2-deficient naive CD4 T cells had a dramatically reduced ability to induce colitis compared to wild type T cells. In addition, significantly fewer IFN-γ- but more IL-17A-producing CD4+ T cells in the intestines of mice receiving MAP3K2-deficient T cells than in those from mice receiving wild type T cells was observed. Interestingly, under well-defined in vitro differentiation conditions, MAP3K2-deficient naive T cells were not impaired in their ability to differentiate into Th1, Th17 and Treg. Furthermore, the MAP3K2-regulated colitis severity was mediated by Th1 but not Th17 cells in the intestine. At the molecular level, we showed that MAP3K2-mediated Th1 cell differentiation in the intestine was regulated by IL-18 and required specific JNK activation. Together, our study reveals a novel regulatory role of MAP3K2 in intestinal T cell immunity via the IL-18-MAP3K2-JNK axis and may provide a novel target for intervention in T cell-mediated colitis.
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