4.8 Article

Non-cytotoxic Cardiac Innate Lymphoid Cells Are a Resident and Quiescent Type 2-Commited Population

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00634

Keywords

innate lymphoid cells; IL-33; heart; myocarditis; myocardial infarction; fibrobiasts

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01HL118183, R01HL136586, R01HL113008, 5R01-HL-61483]
  2. American Heart Association AWRP Winter 2017 [17GRNT33700274]
  3. American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship [16POST31330012]
  4. American Autoimmune Related Disease Association Young Investigator Award 2016
  5. Johns Hopkins Catalyst Award
  6. Matthew Poyner MVP Memorial Myocarditis Research Fund
  7. Johns Hopkins Autoimmune Disease Research Center O'Leary-Wilson Fellowship
  8. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Richard J and Margaret Conn Himelfarb Student Support fund
  9. Katherine E. Welsh Fellowship
  10. Myocarditis Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship [90072351]
  11. American Heart Association 2016 Predoctoral Fellowship

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Innate lymphoid cells (ILC) are a subset of leukocytes with lymphoid properties that lack antigen specific receptors. They can be stimulated by and exert their effect via specific cytokine axes, whereas Natural Killers (NK) cells are the only known cytotoxic member of this family. ILCs are considered key in linking the innate and adaptive response in physiologic and pathologic environments. In this study, we investigated the properties of non-cytotoxic cardiac ILCs in physiologic, inflammatory, and ischemic conditions. We found that in healthy humans and mice, non-cytotoxic cardiac ILCs are predominantly a type 2-committed population with progenitor-like features, such as an absence of type-specific immunophenotype, intermediate GATA3 expression, and capacity to transiently express Pro-myelocytic Leukemia Zinc Finger protein (PLZF) upon activation. During myocarditis and ischemia, in both human and mice, cardiac ILCs differentiated into conventional ILC2s. We found that cardiac ILCs lack IL-25 receptor and cannot become inflammatory ILC2s. We found a strong correlation between IL-33 production in the heart and the ability of cardiac ILCs to become conventional ILC2s. The main producer of IL-33 was a subset of CD29+Sca-1+ cardiac fibroblasts. ILC2 expansion and fibroblast-derived IL-33 production were significantly increased in the heart in mouse models of infarction and myocarditis. Despite its progenitor-like status in healthy hearts, cardiac ILCs were unable to become ILC1 or ILC3 in vivo and in vitro. Using adoptive transfer and parabiosis, we demonstrated that the heart, unlike other organs such as lung, cannot be infiltrated by circulating ILCs in adulthood even during cardiac inflammation or ischemia. Thus, the ILC2s present during inflammatory conditions are derived from the heart-resident and quiescent steady-state population. Non-cytotoxic cardiac ILCs are a resident population of ILC2-commited cells, with undifferentiated progenitor-like features in steady-state conditions and an ability to expand and develop pro-inflammatory type 2 features during inflammation or ischemia.

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