Distal colonocytes targeted by C. rodentium recruit T-cell help for barrier defence

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Abstract

Interleukin 22 (IL-22) has a non-redundant role in immune defence of the intestinal barrier1–3. T cells, but not innate lymphoid cells, have an indispensable role in sustaining the IL-22 signalling that is required for the protection of colonic crypts against invasion during infection by the enteropathogen Citrobacter rodentium4 (Cr). However, the intestinal epithelial cell (IEC) subsets targeted by T cell-derived IL-22, and how T cell-derived IL-22 sustains activation in IECs, remain undefined. Here we identify a subset of absorptive IECs in the mid–distal colon that are specifically targeted by Cr and are differentially responsive to IL-22 signalling. Major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) expression by these colonocytes was required to elicit sustained IL-22 signalling from Cr-specific T cells, which was required to restrain Cr invasion. Our findings explain the basis for the regionalization of the host response to Cr and demonstrate that epithelial cells must elicit MHCII-dependent help from IL-22–producing T cells to orchestrate immune protection in the intestine.

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Zindl, C. L., Wilson, C. G., Chadha, A. S., Duck, L. W., Cai, B., Harbour, S. N., … Weaver, C. T. (2024). Distal colonocytes targeted by C. rodentium recruit T-cell help for barrier defence. Nature, 629(8012), 669–678. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07288-1

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