A local regulatory T cell feedback circuit maintains immune homeostasis by pruning self-activated T cells

局部调节性 T 细胞反馈回路通过修剪自激活 T 细胞来维持免疫稳态

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作者:Harikesh S Wong, Kyemyung Park, Anita Gola, Antonio P Baptista, Christine H Miller, Deeksha Deep, Meng Lou, Lisa F Boyd, Alexander Y Rudensky, Peter A Savage, Grégoire Altan-Bonnet, John S Tsang, Ronald N Germain

Abstract

A fraction of mature T cells can be activated by peripheral self-antigens, potentially eliciting host autoimmunity. We investigated homeostatic control of self-activated T cells within unperturbed tissue environments by combining high-resolution multiplexed and volumetric imaging with computational modeling. In lymph nodes, self-activated T cells produced interleukin (IL)-2, which enhanced local regulatory T cell (Treg) proliferation and inhibitory functionality. The resulting micro-domains reciprocally constrained inputs required for damaging effector responses, including CD28 co-stimulation and IL-2 signaling, constituting a negative feedback circuit. Due to these local constraints, self-activated T cells underwent transient clonal expansion, followed by rapid death ("pruning"). Computational simulations and experimental manipulations revealed the feedback machinery's quantitative limits: modest reductions in Treg micro-domain density or functionality produced non-linear breakdowns in control, enabling self-activated T cells to subvert pruning. This fine-tuned, paracrine feedback process not only enforces immune homeostasis but also establishes a sharp boundary between autoimmune and host-protective T cell responses.

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