4.7 Article

Aim2-mediated IFN-β-independent regulation of gastric metaplastic lesions via CD8+ T cells

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.94035

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Gastroenterological Association/Gastric Cancer Foundation [N017489]
  2. Department of Defense Peer Reviewed Cancer Research Program [CA160431]
  3. NIH [NIDDK R01 DK087708-01, 5P30DK034933]

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Development of gastric cancer is often preceded by chronic inflammation, but the immune cellular mechanisms underlying this process are unclear. Here we demonstrated that an inflammasome molecule, absent in melanoma 2 (Aim2), was upregulated in patients with gastric cancer and in spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia of chronically Helicobacter felis-infected stomachs in mice. However, we found that Aim2 was not necessary for inflammasome function during gastritis. In contrast, Aim2 deficiency led to an increase in gastric CD8(+) T cell frequency, which exacerbated metaplasia. These gastric CD8(+) T cells from Aim2(-/-) mice were found to have lost their homing receptor expression (sphingosinel-phosphate receptor 1 [S1PR1] and CD62L), a feature of tissue-resident memory T cells, The process was not mediated by Aim2-dependent regulation of IFN-beta or by dendritic cell-intrinsic Aim2. Rather, Aim2 deficiency contributed to an increased production of CXCL16 by B cells, which could suppress S1PR1 and CD62L in CD8(+) T cells. This study describes a potentially novel function of Aim2 that regulates CD8(+) T cell infiltration and retention within chronically inflamed solid organ tissue. This function operates independent of the inflammasome, IFN-beta, or dendritic cells. We provide evidence that B cells can contribute to this mechanism via CXCL16.

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