Cutting Edge: Innate Lymphoid Cells Suppress Homeostatic T Cell Expansion in Neonatal Mice

  • Bank U
  • Deiser K
  • Finke D
  • et al.
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Abstract

In adult mice, lymphopenia-induced proliferation (LIP) leads to T cell activation, memory differentiation, tissue destruction, and a loss of TCR diversity. Neonatal mice are lymphopenic within the first week of life. This enables some recent thymic emigrants to undergo LIP and convert into long-lived memory T cells. Surprisingly, however, most neonatal T cells do not undergo LIP. We therefore asked whether neonate-specific mechanisms prevent lymphopenia-driven T cell activation. In this study, we show that IL-7R–dependent innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) block LIP of CD8+ T cells in neonatal but not adult mice. Importantly, CD8+ T cell responses against a foreign Ag are not inhibited by neonatal ILCs. This ILC-based inhibition of LIP ensures the generation of a diverse naive T cell pool in lymphopenic neonates that is mandatory for the maintenance of T cell homeostasis and immunological self-tolerance later in life.

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APA

Bank, U., Deiser, K., Finke, D., Hämmerling, G. J., Arnold, B., & Schüler, T. (2016). Cutting Edge: Innate Lymphoid Cells Suppress Homeostatic T Cell Expansion in Neonatal Mice. The Journal of Immunology, 196(9), 3532–3536. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1501643

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