Abstract
Homeostasis in the ileum, which is commonly disrupted in patients with Crohn's disease, involves ongoing immune responses. To study how homeostatic processes of the ileum impact CD4+T cell responses, we used TCR transgenic tools to breed mice that spontaneously produced CD4+T cells reactive to an antigen expressed in the ileum. At an early age, the ilea of these mice exhibit crypt hyperplasia and accumulate increased numbers of TH17 cells bearing non-transgenic clonotypes. Half of these mice subsequently developed colitis linked to broad mucosal infiltration by TH17 and TH1 cells expressing non-transgenic clonotypes, chronic wasting disease and loss of ileal crypt hyperplasia. By contrast, adult mice with normal growth continued to exhibit TH17-associated ileal crypt hyperplasia and additionally accumulated ileal-reactive Treg cells. Both IL-17A and IFNγ were protective, as their deficiency precluded ileal-reactive Treg accumulation and exacerbated colitic disease. IL-23R blockade prevented progression to colitis, whereas nTreg cell transfers prevented colitic disease, ileal crypt hyperplasia and ileal-reactive Treg accumulation. Thus, our studies identify an IL-17A and IFNγ-dependent homeostatic process that mobilizes ileal-reactive Treg cells and is disrupted by IL-23.
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CITATION STYLE
Jeschke, J. C., Mayne, C. G., Ziegelbauer, J., Deciantis, C. L., Singh, S., Kumar, S. N., … Williams, C. B. (2018). A model of TH17-associated ileal hyperplasia that requires both IL-17A and IFNγ to generate self-tolerance and prevent colitis article. Mucosal Immunology, 11(4), 1127–1137. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41385-018-0023-6
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