Crucial role for t cell-intrinsic IL-18R-MyD88 signaling in cognate immune response to intracellular parasite infection

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Abstract

MyD88 is the main adaptor molecule for TLR and IL-1R family members. Here, we demonstrated that T-cell intrinsic MyD88 signaling is required for proliferation, protection from apoptosis and expression of activation/memory genes during infection with the intracellular parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, as evidenced by transcriptome and cytometry analyses in mixed bone-marrow (BM) chimeras. The lack of direct IL-18R signaling in T cells, but not of IL-1R, phenocopied the absence of the MyD88 pathway, indicating that IL-18R is a critical MyD88-upstream pathway involved in the establishment of the Th1 response against an in vivo infection, a presently controvert subject. Accordingly, Il18r1-/- mice display lower levels of Th1 cells and are highly susceptible to infection, but can be rescued from mortality by the adoptive transfer of WT CD4+ T cells. Our findings establish the T-cell intrinsic IL-18R/MyD88 pathway as a crucial element for induction of cognate Th1 responses against an important human pathogen.

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Oliveira, A. C., Gomes-Neto, J. F., Barbosa, C. H. D., Granato, A., Reis, B. S., Santos, B. M., … Bellio, M. (2017). Crucial role for t cell-intrinsic IL-18R-MyD88 signaling in cognate immune response to intracellular parasite infection. ELife, 6. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.30883

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