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Tissue adaptation

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Commensals and commensal-reactive lymphocytes coexist at barrier tissues. In Science, Belkaid and colleagues show that skin-resident commensal-specific T cells express a type 17 program associated with a poised type 2… Click to show full abstract

Commensals and commensal-reactive lymphocytes coexist at barrier tissues. In Science, Belkaid and colleagues show that skin-resident commensal-specific T cells express a type 17 program associated with a poised type 2 program. Staphylococcus epidermis–colonized mice develop longlived, tissue-resident, S. epidermis–specific CD8+ memory T cells. S. epidermis–elicited RORγ t+CD4+ TH17 cells and RORγ t+CD8+ Tc17 cells produce the type 2 cytokines IL-5 and IL-13 after intradermal injection of chitin, sand fly bites or skin-specific deletion of regulatory T cells. During homeostasis, S. epidermis–specific Tc17 cells co-express the transcription factors RORγ t and GATA-3 and express a broad GATA-3-dependent type 2 transcriptome (Il5, Il13 and Ccr8, but not Il10 or Il4), without protein translation. Exposure to IL-18 in the context of TCR stimulation triggers production of IL-5 and IL-13 in S. epidermis–specific Tc17 cells and TH17 cells, regardless of whether they expressed IL-17A previously or not. These results highlight the plasticity and adaptability of tissue-resident commensal-specific T cells. IV

Keywords: tc17 cells; tissue adaptation; tissue; epidermis specific; resident

Journal Title: Nature Immunology
Year Published: 2019

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