학술논문

In Situ Maturation and Tissue Adaptation of Type 2 Innate Lymphoid Cell Progenitors
Document Type
article
Source
Immunity. 53(4)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Stem Cell Research
Genetics
Animals
Cell Differentiation
Cells
Cultured
Female
Humans
Immunity
Innate
Interleukin-18 Receptor alpha Subunit
Lung
Lymphocytes
Lymphoid Progenitor Cells
Mice
Mice
Inbred C57BL
Promyelocytic Leukemia Zinc Finger Protein
Signal Transduction
Single-Cell Analysis
T Cell Transcription Factor 1
Transcription Factors
ILC2
ILCP
Innate lymphoid cells
Nippostrongylus Brasiliensis
bone marrow
immune system development
progenitors
single cell atlas
single-cell RNA-seq
tissue immunity
Language
Abstract
Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are generated early during ontogeny and persist predominantly as tissue-resident cells. Here, we examined how ILCs are maintained and renewed within tissues. We generated a single cell atlas of lung ILC2s and found that Il18r1+ ILCs comprise circulating and tissue-resident ILC progenitors (ILCP) and effector-cells with heterogeneous expression of the transcription factors Tcf7 and Zbtb16, and CD103. Our analyses revealed a continuous differentiation trajectory from Il18r1+ ST2- ILCPs to Il18r- ST2+ ILC2s, which was experimentally validated. Upon helminth infection, recruited and BM-derived cells generated the entire spectrum of ILC2s in parabiotic and shield chimeric mice, consistent with their potential role in the renewal of tissue ILC2s. Our findings identify local ILCPs and reveal ILCP in situ differentiation and tissue adaptation as a mechanism of ILC maintenance and phenotypic diversification. Local niches, rather than progenitor origin, or the developmental window during ontogeny, may dominantly imprint ILC phenotypes in adult tissues.