作者
Julie Stockis,Thomas Wei-Lam Yip,Julia Moreno-Vicente,Oliver T. Burton,Youhani Samarakoon,Martijn J. Schuijs,Shwetha Raghunathan,Céline Garcia,Weike Luo,Sarah K. Whiteside,Shaun Png,Charlotte Simpson,Stela Monk,Ashley Sawle,Kelvin Yin,Johanna Barbieri,Panagiotis Papadopoulos,Hannah Wong,Hans‐Reimer Rodewald,Timothy J. Vyse,Andrew N. J. McKenzie,Mark S. Cragg,Matthew Hoare,David R. Withers,Hans Jörg Fehling,Rahul Roychoudhuri,Adrian Liston,Timotheus Y.F. Halim
摘要
Regulatory T cells (T regs ) control adaptive immunity and restrain type 2 inflammation in allergic disease. Interleukin-33 promotes the expansion of tissue-resident T regs and group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s); however, how T regs locally coordinate their function within the inflammatory niche is not understood. Here, we show that ILC2s are critical orchestrators of T reg function. Using spatial, cellular, and molecular profiling of the type 2 inflamed niche, we found that ILC2s and T regs engage in a direct (OX40L-OX40) and chemotaxis-dependent (CCL1-CCR8) cellular dialogue that enforces the local accumulation of Gata3 high T regs , which are transcriptionally and functionally adapted to the type 2 environment. Genetic interruption of ILC2-T reg communication resulted in uncontrolled type 2 lung inflammation after allergen exposure. Mechanistically, we found that Gata3 high T regs can modulate the local bioavailability of the costimulatory molecule OX40L, which subsequently controlled effector memory T helper 2 cell numbers. Hence, ILC2-T reg interactions represent a critical feedback mechanism to control adaptive type 2 immunity.