Contextual control of skin immunity and inflammation by Corynebacterium

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Abstract

How defined microbes influence the skin immune system remains poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that Corynebacteria, dominant members of the skin microbiota, promote a dramatic increase in the number and activation of a defined subset of γδ T cells. This effect is long-lasting, occurs independently of other microbes, and is, in part, mediated by interleukin (IL)- 23. Under steady-state conditions, the impact of Corynebacterium is discrete and noninflammatory. However, when applied to the skin of a host fed a high-fat diet, Corynebacterium accolens alone promotes inflammation in an IL-23-dependent manner. Such effect is highly conserved among species of Corynebacterium and dependent on the expression of a dominant component of the cell envelope, mycolic acid. Our data uncover a mode of communication between the immune system and a dominant genus of the skin microbiota and reveal that the functional impact of canonical skin microbial determinants is contextually controlled by the inflammatory and metabolic state of the host.

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Ridaura, V. K., Bouladoux, N., Claesen, J., Erin Chen, Y., Byrd, A. L., Constantinides, M. G., … Belkaid, Y. (2018). Contextual control of skin immunity and inflammation by Corynebacterium. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 215(3), 785–799. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20171079

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