학술논문

Adaptive Immune Regulation of Mammary Postnatal Organogenesis
Document Type
article
Source
Developmental Cell. 34(5)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Pediatric
Cancer
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Aetiology
Underpinning research
Inflammatory and immune system
Adaptive Immunity
Animals
Antigen-Presenting Cells
Breast
Epithelial Cells
Epithelium
Female
Humans
Immunity
Innate
Interferon-gamma
Mice
Organogenesis
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
Postnatal organogenesis occurs in an immune competent environment and is tightly controlled by interplay between positive and negative regulators. Innate immune cells have beneficial roles in postnatal tissue remodeling, but roles for the adaptive immune system are currently unexplored. Here we show that adaptive immune responses participate in the normal postnatal development of a non-lymphoid epithelial tissue. Since the mammary gland (MG) is the only organ developing predominantly after birth, we utilized it as a powerful system to study adaptive immune regulation of organogenesis. We found that antigen-mediated interactions between mammary antigen-presenting cells and interferon-γ (IFNγ)-producing CD4+ T helper 1 cells participate in MG postnatal organogenesis as negative regulators, locally orchestrating epithelial rearrangement. IFNγ then affects luminal lineage differentiation. This function of adaptive immune responses, regulating normal development, changes the paradigm for studying players of postnatal organogenesis and provides insights into immune surveillance and cancer transformation.