Epithelia Use Butyrophilin-like Molecules to Shape Organ-Specific γδ T Cell Compartments

Rafael Di Marco Barros(King's College London), Natalie Roberts(The Francis Crick Institute), Robin Dart(King's College London), Pierre Vantourout(King's College London), Anett Jandke(The Francis Crick Institute), Oliver Nussbaumer(King's College London), Livija Deban(The Francis Crick Institute), Sara Cipolat(The Francis Crick Institute), Rosie Hart(The Francis Crick Institute), Maria Luisa Iannitto(King's College London), Adam Laing(King's College London), Bradley Spencer‐Dene(The Francis Crick Institute), Philip East(The Francis Crick Institute), Deena L. Gibbons(King's College London), Peter M. Irving(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Pablo Pereira(Institut Pasteur), Ulrich Steinhoff(Philipps University of Marburg), Adrian Hayday(King's College London)
Cell
September 1, 2016
Cited by 361Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Many body surfaces harbor organ-specific γδ T cell compartments that contribute to tissue integrity. Thus, murine dendritic epidermal T cells (DETCs) uniquely expressing T cell receptor (TCR)-Vγ5 chains protect from cutaneous carcinogens. The DETC repertoire is shaped by Skint1, a butyrophilin-like (Btnl) gene expressed specifically by thymic epithelial cells and suprabasal keratinocytes. However, the generality of this mechanism has remained opaque, since neither Skint1 nor DETCs are evolutionarily conserved. Here, Btnl1 expressed by murine enterocytes is shown to shape the local TCR-Vγ7(+) γδ compartment. Uninfluenced by microbial or food antigens, this activity evokes the developmental selection of TCRαβ(+) repertoires. Indeed, Btnl1 and Btnl6 jointly induce TCR-dependent responses specifically in intestinal Vγ7(+) cells. Likewise, human gut epithelial cells express BTNL3 and BTNL8 that jointly induce selective TCR-dependent responses of human colonic Vγ4(+) cells. Hence, a conserved mechanism emerges whereby epithelia use organ-specific BTNL/Btnl genes to shape local T cell compartments.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis