A local regulatory T cell feedback circuit maintains immune homeostasis by pruning self-activated T cells
Author(s) -
Harikesh S. Wong,
Kyemyung Park,
Anita Gola,
António P. Baptista,
Christine H. Miller,
Deeksha Deep,
Meng Lou,
Lisa F. Boyd,
Alexander Y. Rudensky,
Peter A. Savage,
Grégoire AltanBonnet,
John S. Tsang,
Ronald N. Germain
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.2021.05.028
Subject(s) - biology , homeostasis , immune system , microbiology and biotechnology , pruning , cell , immunology , biochemistry , botany
A fraction of mature T cells can be activated by peripheral self-antigens, potentially eliciting host autoimmunity. We investigated homeostatic control of self-activated T cells within unperturbed tissue environments by combining high-resolution multiplexed and volumetric imaging with computational modeling. In lymph nodes, self-activated T cells produced interleukin (IL)-2, which enhanced local regulatory T cell (Treg) proliferation and inhibitory functionality. The resulting micro-domains reciprocally constrained inputs required for damaging effector responses, including CD28 co-stimulation and IL-2 signaling, constituting a negative feedback circuit. Due to these local constraints, self-activated T cells underwent transient clonal expansion, followed by rapid death ("pruning"). Computational simulations and experimental manipulations revealed the feedback machinery's quantitative limits: modest reductions in Treg micro-domain density or functionality produced non-linear breakdowns in control, enabling self-activated T cells to subvert pruning. This fine-tuned, paracrine feedback process not only enforces immune homeostasis but also establishes a sharp boundary between autoimmune and host-protective T cell responses.
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