A type 1 immunity-restricted promoter of the IL−33 receptor gene directs antiviral T-cell responses

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Abstract

The pleiotropic alarmin interleukin-33 (IL-33) drives type 1, type 2 and regulatory T-cell responses via its receptor ST2. Subset-specific differences in ST2 expression intensity and dynamics suggest that transcriptional regulation is key in orchestrating the context-dependent activity of IL-33–ST2 signaling in T-cell immunity. Here, we identify a previously unrecognized alternative promoter in mice and humans that is located far upstream of the curated ST2-coding gene and drives ST2 expression in type 1 immunity. Mice lacking this promoter exhibit a selective loss of ST2 expression in type 1- but not type 2-biased T cells, resulting in impaired expansion of cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) and T-helper 1 cells upon viral infection. T-cell-intrinsic IL-33 signaling via type 1 promoter-driven ST2 is critical to generate a clonally diverse population of antiviral short-lived effector CTLs. Thus, lineage-specific alternative promoter usage directs alarmin responsiveness in T-cell subsets and offers opportunities for immune cell-specific targeting of the IL-33–ST2 axis in infections and inflammatory diseases.

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Brunner, T. M., Serve, S., Marx, A. F., Fadejeva, J., Saikali, P., Dzamukova, M., … Löhning, M. (2024). A type 1 immunity-restricted promoter of the IL−33 receptor gene directs antiviral T-cell responses. Nature Immunology, 25(2), 256–267. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-023-01697-6

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