Restricted Microbiota and Absence of Cognate TCR Antigen Leads to an Unbalanced Generation of Th17 Cells

  • Lochner M
  • Bérard M
  • Sawa S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Retinoic acid-related orphan receptor (ROR)γt+ TCRαβ+ cells expressing IL-17, termed Th17 cells, are most abundant in the intestinal lamina propria. Symbiotic microbiota are required for the generation of Th17 cells, but the requirement for microbiota-derived Ag is not documented. In this study, we show that normal numbers of Th17 cells develop in the intestine of mice that express a single TCR in the absence of cognate Ag, whereas the microbiota remains essential for their development. However, such mice, or mice monocolonized with the Th17-inducing segmented filamentous bacteria, fail to induce normal numbers of Foxp3+ RORγt+ T cells, the regulatory counterpart of IL-17+RORγt+ T cells. These results demonstrate that a complex microbiota and cognate Ag are required to generate a properly regulated set of RORγt+ T cells and Th17 cells.

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APA

Lochner, M., Bérard, M., Sawa, S., Hauer, S., Gaboriau-Routhiau, V., Fernandez, T. D., … Eberl, G. (2011). Restricted Microbiota and Absence of Cognate TCR Antigen Leads to an Unbalanced Generation of Th17 Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 186(3), 1531–1537. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1001723

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