The TAM family receptor tyrosine kinase TYRO3 is a negative regulator of type 2 immunity

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Abstract

Host responses against metazoan parasites or an array of environmental substances elicit type 2 immunity. Despite its protective function, type 2 immunity also drives allergic diseases. The mechanisms that regulate the magnitude of the type 2 response remain largely unknown. Here, we show that genetic ablation of a receptor tyrosine kinase encoded by Tyro3 in mice or the functional neutralization of its ortholog in human dendritic cells resulted in enhanced type 2 immunity. Furthermore, the TYRO3 agonist PROS1 was induced in T cells by the quintessential type 2 cytokine, interleukin-4. T cell-specific Pros1 knockouts phenocopied the loss of Tyro3. Thus, a PROS1-mediated feedback from adaptive immunity engages a rheostat, TYRO3, on innate immune cells to limit the intensity of type 2 responses.

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Chan, P. Y., Carrera Silva, E. A., De Kouchkovsky, D., Joannas, L. D., Hao, L., Hu, D., … Rothlin, C. V. (2016). The TAM family receptor tyrosine kinase TYRO3 is a negative regulator of type 2 immunity. Science, 352(6281), 99–103. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaf1358

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