| Literature DB >> 31171863 |
Mingyang Li1, Weijia Zhao1, Yifan Wang1, Lixue Jin1, Gaowen Jin1, Xiuyuan Sun1, Wei Wang1, Ke Wang1, Xi Xu2, Jie Hao1, Rong Jin1, Wenxian Fu3, Ying Sun4, Yingjun Chang5, Xiaojun Huang5, Xuyu Zhou6, Hounan Wu7, Kunshan Zhang8, Qing Ge9,10.
Abstract
Newborn animals require tightly regulated local and systemic immune environments to govern the development and maturation of multiple organs/tissues even though the immune system itself is far from mature during the neonatal period. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are essential for maintaining immune tolerance/homeostasis and modulating inflammatory responses. The features of Tregs in the neonatal liver under steady-state conditions are not well understood. The present study aimed to investigate the phenotype, functions, and significance of neonatal Tregs in the liver. We found a wave of thymus-derived Treg influx into the liver during 1-2 weeks of age. Depletion of these Tregs between days 7 and 11 after birth rapidly resulted in Th1-type liver inflammation and metabolic disorder. More Tregs in the neonatal liver than in the spleen underwent MHC II-dependent activation and proliferation, and the liver Tregs acquired stronger suppressive functions. The transcriptomic profile of these neonatal liver Tregs showed elevated expression of PPARγ and T-bet and features of Tregs that utilize lipid metabolic machinery and are capable of regulating Th1 responses. The accumulation of Tregs with unique features in the neonatal liver is critical to ensure self-tolerance and liver maturation.Entities:
Keywords: Foxp3; Neonatal period,; Th1-type inflammation; Treg cells; liver
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31171863 PMCID: PMC7193579 DOI: 10.1038/s41423-019-0246-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Immunol ISSN: 1672-7681 Impact factor: 11.530