Decoding the proregenerative competence of regulatory T cells through complex tissue regeneration in zebrafish

通过斑马鱼复杂组织再生来解码调节性T细胞的促再生能力

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Abstract

Regulatory T cells (T(regs) ) are specific subtype of T cells that play a central role in sustaining self-antigen tolerance and restricting inflammatory tissue damage. More recently, additional direct functions of T(regs) in mammalian tissue repair have emerged, but the regenerative potential of T(regs) in non-mammalian vertebrates has not been explored despite the latter possessing a highly developed adaptive immune system. Why complex organs such as the caudal fin, heart, brain, spinal cord and retina regenerate in certain non-mammalian vertebrates, but not in mammals, is an interesting but unresolved question in the field of regenerative biology. Inflammation has traditionally been thought to be an impediment to regeneration due to the formation of scars. Regenerative decline in higher organisms has been speculated to be the evolutionary advent of adaptive immunity. Recent studies, however, have shown that the innate inflammatory response in non-mammalian organisms is required for organ regeneration. It has also been found that highly advanced adaptive immunity is no longer incompatible with regeneration and for that, T(regs) are important. Zebrafish regulatory T cells (zT(regs) ) migrate rapidly to the injury site in damaged organs, where they facilitate the proliferation of regeneration precursor cells by generating tissue-specific regenerative factors by a process distinct from the canonical anti-inflammatory pathway. We review both reparative and proregenerative roles of T(regs) in mammals and zebrafish, respectively, and also give an overview of the forkhead box protein 3 (FoxP3) -dependent immunosuppressive function of T(regs) in zebrafish, which makes it a useful model organism for future T(reg) biology and research.

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