4.8 Article

Liver-specific T regulatory type-1 cells program local neutrophils to suppress hepatic autoimmunity via CRAMP

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CELL REPORTS
卷 34, 期 13, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.108919

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资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Crohn's and Colitis Canada
  3. ISCIII
  4. FEDER
  5. Praespero Foundation
  6. MINECO [RTI2018-093964-B-I00]
  7. SGR
  8. CERCA
  9. CIHR
  10. Alberta Innovates Health Solutions
  11. Banting-CIHR
  12. FPU studentship
  13. JDRF Career Development Award
  14. Diabetes Canada

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Research shows that in models of liver autoimmunity, antigen-specific regulatory T cells can coordinate the recruitment and programming of neutrophils to generate regulatory neutrophils. These regulatory neutrophils in the liver provide disease protection, transfer disease protection to immunocompromised hosts, and inhibit antigen presentation and autoimmune responses through CRAMP.
Neutrophils with immunoregulatory properties, also referred to as type-2 neutrophils (N2), myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), or tumor-associated neutrophils (TANs), comprise a heterogeneous subset of cells that arise from unknown precursors in response to poorly understood cues. Here, we find that, in several models of liver autoimmunity, pharmacologically induced, autoantigen-specific T regulatory type-1 (TR1) cells and TR1-cell-induced B regulatory (Breg) cells use five immunoregulatory cytokines to coordinately recruit neutrophils into the liver and program their transcriptome to generate regulatory neutrophils. The liver-associated neutrophils from the treated mice, unlike their circulating counterparts or the liver neutrophils of sick mice lacking antigen-specific TR1 cells, are proliferative, can transfer disease protection to immunocompromised hosts engrafted with pathogenic effectors, and blunt antigen-presentation and local autoimmune responses via cathelin-related anti-microbial peptide (CRAMP), a cathelicidin, in aCRAMP-receptor-dependent manner. These results, thus, identify antigen-specific regulatory T cells as drivers of tissue-restricted regulatory neutrophil formation and CRAMP as an effector of regulatory neutrophil-mediated immunoregulation.

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