NFIL3 is a transcription factor that regulates multiple immunologic functions. In myeloid cells, NFIL3 is IL-10 inducible and has a key role as a repressor of IL-12p40 transcription. NFIL3 is a susceptibility gene for the human inflammatory bowel diseases. In this article, we describe spontaneous colitis in Nfil3−/− mice. Mice lacking both Nfil3 and Il10 had severe early-onset colitis, suggesting that NFIL3 and IL-10 independently regulate mucosal homeostasis. Lymphocytes were necessary for colitis, because Nfil3/Rag1 double-knockout mice were protected from disease. However, Nfil3/Rag1 double-knockout mice adoptively transferred with wild-type CD4+ T cells developed severe colitis compared with Rag1−/− recipients, suggesting that colitis was linked to defects in innate immune cells. Colitis was abrogated in Nfil3/Il12b double-deficient mice, identifying Il12b dysregulation as a central pathogenic event. Finally, germ-free Nfil3−/− mice do not develop colonic inflammation. Thus, NFIL3 is a microbiota-dependent, IL-10–independent regulator of mucosal homeostasis via IL-12p40.
CITATION STYLE
Kobayashi, T., Steinbach, E. C., Russo, S. M., Matsuoka, K., Nochi, T., Maharshak, N., … Plevy, S. E. (2014). NFIL3-Deficient Mice Develop Microbiota-Dependent, IL-12/23–Driven Spontaneous Colitis. The Journal of Immunology, 192(4), 1918–1927. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1301819
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