| Literature DB >> 27656354 |
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Microbiota; mechanisms; regulatory T cells; tolerance; type 2 immune response
Year: 2016 PMID: 27656354 PMCID: PMC5016534 DOI: 10.1007/s40629-016-0118-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergo J Int ISSN: 2197-0378
Fig. 1Source of intestinal regulatory T cell subsets. Positive and negative selection in the thymus leads to an output of naïve T helper cells and Tregs. Naive T cells can still differentiate into Tregs in the gut or associated lymphoid tissues and mostly co-express ROR(γt). Gata3+ Tregs can develop in the absence of a symbiotic microbiota and may therefore be rather of thymic origin at steady state conditions. Gata3+ Tregs may still differentiate from naïve T cells under inflammatory conditions or conditions leading to a failure in the differentiation of ROR(γt)+ Tregs. Thus, both thymic and peripherally induced Tregs may contribute to the total Treg pool in the gut to maintain intestinal immune homeostasis
Fig. 2Suppression of type 2 immune responses through type 3 regulatory T cells. Possible mechanism for the relation between microbiota, ROR(γt)+ Tregs, and prevention of pro-allergic Th2 immune responses. Unwanted Th2 differentiation in response to harmless foreign antigens such as allergens is suppressed through the induction of ROR(γt)+ Tregs under healthy conditions. Th2 differentiation may be favored through an “altered” microbiota at mucosal sites.