IRF4 expression by lung dendritic cells drives acute but not Trm cell–dependent memory Th2 responses

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Abstract

Expression of the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) is required for the development of lung conventional DCs type 2 (cDC2s) that elicit Th2 responses, yet how IRF4 functions in lung cDC2s throughout the acute and memory allergic response is not clear. Here, we used a mouse model that loses IRF4 expression after lung cDC2 development to demonstrate that mice with IRF4-deficient DCs display impaired memory responses to allergen. This defect in the memory response was a direct result of ineffective Th2 induction and impaired recruitment of activated effector T cells to the lung after sensitization. IRF4-deficient DCs demonstrated defects in their migration to the draining lymph node and in T cell priming. Finally, T cells primed by IRF4-competent DCs mediated potent memory responses independently of IRF4-expressing DCs, demonstrating that IRF4-expressing DCs are not necessary during the memory response. Thus, IRF4 controlled a program in mature DCs governing Th2 priming and effector responses, but IRF4-expressing DCs were dispensable during tissue-resident memory T cell–dependent memory responses.

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Camacho, D. F., Velez, T. E., Hollinger, M. K., Wang, E., Howard, C. L., Darnell, E. P., … Sperling, A. I. (2022). IRF4 expression by lung dendritic cells drives acute but not Trm cell–dependent memory Th2 responses. JCI Insight, 7(21). https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140384

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