Innate immune recognition is critical for the induction of adaptive immune responses; however the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that T cell-specific deletion of the IL-6 receptor a chain (IL-6Ra) results in impaired Th1 and Th17 T cell responses in vivo, and a defect in the Tfh function. Depletion of Tregs in these mice rescued the Th1 but not the Th17 response. Our data suggest that IL-6 signaling in effector T cells is required to overcome Treg-mediated suppression in vivo. We show that IL-6 cooperates with IL-1|3 to block the suppressive effect of Tregs on CD4+ T cells, at least in part by controlling their responsiveness to IL-2. In addition, although IL-6Ra-deficient T cells mount normal primary Th1 responses in the absence of Tregs, they fail to mature into functional memory cells, demonstrating a key role for IL-6 in CD4+ T cell memory formation.
CITATION STYLE
Nish, S. A., Schenten, D., Wunderlich, T., Pope, S. D., Gao, Y., Hoshi, N., … Medzhitov, R. (2014). T cell-intrinsic role of IL-6 signaling in primary and memory responses. ELife, 2014(3). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01949
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