Neuropilin 1 is expressed on thymus-derived natural regulatory T cells, but not mucosa-generated induced Foxp3+ T reg cells

Jonathan M. Weiss(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Angelina M. Bilate(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Michael Gobert(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yi Ding(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Maria A. Curotto de Lafaille(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Christopher N. Parkhurst(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Huizhong Xiong(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jayashree Dolpady(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Alan B. Frey(NYU Langone Health), Maria Grazia Ruocco(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yi Yang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Stefan Floess(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Jochen Huehn(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Soyoung Oh(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Ming O. Li(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Rachel Niec(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Alexander Y. Rudensky(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Michael L. Dustin(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Dan R. Littman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Juan J. Lafaille(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
September 10, 2012
Cited by 597Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Foxp3 activity is essential for the normal function of the immune system. Two types of regulatory T (T reg) cells express Foxp3, thymus-generated natural T reg (nT reg) cells, and peripherally generated adaptive T reg (iT reg) cells. These cell types have complementary functions. Until now, it has not been possible to distinguish iT reg from nT reg cells in vivo based solely on surface markers. We report here that Neuropilin 1 (Nrp1) is expressed at high levels by most nT reg cells; in contrast, mucosa-generated iT reg and other noninflammatory iT reg cells express low levels of Nrp1. We found that Nrp1 expression is under the control of TGF-β. By tracing nT reg and iT reg cells, we could establish that some tumors have a very large proportion of infiltrating iT reg cells. iT reg cells obtained from highly inflammatory environments, such as the spinal cords of mice with spontaneous autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and the lungs of mice with chronic asthma, express Nrp1. In the same animals, iT reg cells in secondary lymphoid organs remain Nrp1(low). We also determined that, in spontaneous EAE, iT reg cells help to establish a chronic phase of the disease.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis