4.6 Article

CISH constrains the tuft-ILC2 circuit to set epithelial and immune tone

Journal

MUCOSAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages 1295-1305

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/s41385-021-00430-6

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Funding

  1. NIH [AI026918, F32HL140868, T32HL007185, T32AI007334]
  2. HHMI
  3. A.P. Giannini Foundation
  4. SABRE Center at UCSF
  5. UCSF Diabetes Research Center
  6. Peter Hans Hofschneider Professorship for Molecular Medicine

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The study demonstrates that CISH, a suppressor of cytokine signaling highly and constitutively expressed in ILC2s, plays a regulatory role in controlling the activity of ILC2s and contributes to intestinal immunity. Lack of CISH in ILC2s results in increased expansion and activation, with reduced expression of related genes, affecting the number of intestinal tuft cells and parasite clearance.
Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are tissue-resident effectors poised to activate rapidly in response to local signals such as cytokines. To preserve homeostasis, ILCs must employ multiple pathways, including tonic suppressive mechanisms, to regulate their primed state and prevent inappropriate activation and immunopathology. Such mechanisms remain incompletely characterized. Here we show that cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein (CISH), a suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) family member, is highly and constitutively expressed in type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s). Mice that lack CISH either globally or conditionally in ILC2s show increased ILC2 expansion and activation, in association with reduced expression of genes inhibiting cell-cycle progression. Augmented proliferation and activation of CISH-deficient ILC2s increases basal and inflammation-induced numbers of intestinal tuft cells and accelerates clearance of the model helminth, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis, but compromises innate control of Salmonella typhimurium. Thus, CISH constrains ILC2 activity both tonically and after perturbation, and contributes to the regulation of immunity in mucosal tissue.

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