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Nonpeptidergic neurons suppress mast cells via glutamate to maintain skin homeostasis
Author(s) -
Shiqun Zhang,
Tara N. Edwards,
Virendra K. Chaudhri,
Jianing Wu,
Jonathan Cohen,
Toshiro Hirai,
Natalie Rittenhouse,
Elizabeth Schmitz,
Paul Yifan Zhou,
Benjamin D. McNeil,
Yi Yang,
H. Richard Koerber,
Tina L. Sumpter,
Amanda C. Poholek,
Brian M. Davis,
Kathryn M. Albers,
Harinder Singh,
Daniel H. Kaplan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2021.03.002
Subject(s) - biology , degranulation , glutamate receptor , mast cell , microbiology and biotechnology , neuroscience , inflammation , homeostasis , receptor , immunology , biochemistry
Cutaneous mast cells mediate numerous skin inflammatory processes and have anatomical and functional associations with sensory afferent neurons. We reveal that epidermal nerve endings from a subset of sensory nonpeptidergic neurons expressing MrgprD are reduced by the absence of Langerhans cells. Loss of epidermal innervation or ablation of MrgprD-expressing neurons increased expression of a mast cell gene module, including the activating receptor, Mrgprb2, resulting in increased mast cell degranulation and cutaneous inflammation in multiple disease models. Agonism of MrgprD-expressing neurons reduced expression of module genes and suppressed mast cell responses. MrgprD-expressing neurons released glutamate which was increased by MrgprD agonism. Inhibiting glutamate release or glutamate receptor binding yielded hyperresponsive mast cells with a genomic state similar to that in mice lacking MrgprD-expressing neurons. These data demonstrate that MrgprD-expressing neurons suppress mast cell hyperresponsiveness and skin inflammation via glutamate release, thereby revealing an unexpected neuroimmune mechanism maintaining cutaneous immune homeostasis.

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