4.7 Article

Zebrafish Regulatory T Cells Mediate Organ-Specific Regenerative Programs

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL CELL
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 659-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2017.11.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NHMRC [APP1046469, APP1130247]
  2. JDRF (T1DCRN Innovation Award)

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The attenuation of ancestral pro-regenerative pathways may explain why humans do not efficiently regenerate damaged organs. Vertebrate lineages that exhibit robust regeneration, including the teleost zebrafish, provide insights into the maintenance of adult regenerative capacity. Using established models of spinal cord, heart, and retina regeneration, we discovered that zebrafish T-reg-like (zT(reg)) cells rapidly homed to damaged organs. Conditional ablation of zT(reg) cells blocked organ regeneration by impairing precursor cell proliferation. In addition to modulating inflammation, infiltrating zT(reg) cells stimulated regeneration through interleukin-10-independent secretion of organ-specific regenerative factors (Ntf3: spinal cord; Nrg1: heart; Igf1: retina). Recombinant regeneration factors rescued the regeneration defects associated with zT(reg) cell depletion, whereas Foxp3a-deficient zTreg cells infiltrated damaged organs but failed to express regenerative factors. Our data delineate organ-specific roles for T-reg cells in maintaining pro-regenerative capacity that could potentially be harnessed for diverse regenerative therapies.

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