MAIT cells are imprinted by the microbiota in early life and promote tissue repair

MAIT 细胞在生命早期受到微生物群的印记,并促进组织修复

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作者:Michael G Constantinides, Verena M Link, Samira Tamoutounour, Andrea C Wong, P Juliana Perez-Chaparro, Seong-Ji Han, Y Erin Chen, Kelin Li, Sepideh Farhat, Antonin Weckel, Siddharth R Krishnamurthy, Ivan Vujkovic-Cvijin, Jonathan L Linehan, Nicolas Bouladoux, E Dean Merrill, Sobhan Roy, Daniel J Cua

Abstract

How early-life colonization and subsequent exposure to the microbiota affect long-term tissue immunity remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the development of mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells relies on a specific temporal window, after which MAIT cell development is permanently impaired. This imprinting depends on early-life exposure to defined microbes that synthesize riboflavin-derived antigens. In adults, cutaneous MAIT cells are a dominant population of interleukin-17A (IL-17A)-producing lymphocytes, which display a distinct transcriptional signature and can subsequently respond to skin commensals in an IL-1-, IL-18-, and antigen-dependent manner. Consequently, local activation of cutaneous MAIT cells promotes wound healing. Together, our work uncovers a privileged interaction between defined members of the microbiota and MAIT cells, which sequentially controls both tissue-imprinting and subsequent responses to injury.

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