학술논문

Rapid and Efficient Generation of Regulatory T Cells to Commensal Antigens in the Periphery
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 206-220 (2016)
Subject
peripheral regulatory T cells
pTreg
commensal microbiota
TGFβ
CNS1 Foxp3
Notch2-dependent dendritic cells
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Language
English
ISSN
2211-1247
Abstract
Commensal bacteria shape the colonic regulatory T (Treg) cell population required for intestinal tolerance. However, little is known about this process. Here, we use the transfer of naive commensal-reactive transgenic T cells expressing colonic Treg T cell receptors (TCRs) to study peripheral Treg (pTreg) cell development in normal hosts. We found that T cells were activated primarily in the distal mesenteric lymph node. Treg cell induction was rapid, generating >40% Foxp3+ cells 1 week after transfer. Contrary to prior reports, Foxp3+ cells underwent the most cell divisions, demonstrating that pTreg cell generation can be the dominant outcome from naive T cell activation. Moreover, Notch2-dependent, but not Batf3-dependent, dendritic cells were involved in Treg cell selection. Finally, neither deletion of the conserved nucleotide sequence 1 (CNS1) region in Foxp3 nor blockade of TGF-β (transforming growth factor-β)-receptor signaling completely abrogated Foxp3 induction. Thus, these data show that pTreg cell selection to commensal bacteria is rapid, is robust, and may be specified by TGF-β-independent signals.