Individual intestinal symbionts induce a distinct population of RORγ <sup>+</sup> regulatory T cells

Esen Sefik(Harvard University), Naama Geva‐Zatorsky(Harvard University), Sungwhan F. Oh(Harvard University), Liza Konnikova(Brigham and Women's Hospital), David Zemmour(Harvard University), Abigail L. Manson(Broad Institute), Dalia Burzyn(Harvard University), Adriana Ortiz-Lopez(Harvard University), Mercedes Lobera(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Jianfei Yang(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Shomir Ghosh(AVEO Oncology (United States)), Ashlee M. Earl(Broad Institute), Scott B. Snapper(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Ray Jupp(UCB Pharma (United Kingdom)), Dennis L. Kasper(Harvard University), Diane Mathis(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Christophe Benoıst(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
Science
August 13, 2015
Cited by 873Open Access
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Abstract

T regulatory cells that express the transcription factor Foxp3 (Foxp3(+) T(regs)) promote tissue homeostasis in several settings. We now report that symbiotic members of the human gut microbiota induce a distinct T(reg) population in the mouse colon, which constrains immuno-inflammatory responses. This induction—which we find to map to a broad, but specific, array of individual bacterial species—requires the transcription factor Rorγ, paradoxically, in that Rorγ is thought to antagonize FoxP3 and to promote T helper 17 (T(H)17) cell differentiation. Rorγ's transcriptional footprint differs in colonic T(regs) and T(H)17 cells and controls important effector molecules. Rorγ, and the T(regs) that express it, contribute substantially to regulating colonic T(H)1/T(H)17 inflammation. Thus, the marked context-specificity of Rorγ results in very different outcomes even in closely related cell types.


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