Dectin-1 signaling on colonic γδ T cells promotes psychosocial stress responses
The intestinal immune system interacts with commensal microbiota to maintain gut homeostasis. Furthermore, stress alters the microbiome composition, leading to impaired brain function; yet how the intestinal immune system mediates these effects remains elusive. Here we report that colonic γδ T cells...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature immunology 2023-04, Vol.24 (4), p.625-636 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The intestinal immune system interacts with commensal microbiota to maintain gut homeostasis. Furthermore, stress alters the microbiome composition, leading to impaired brain function; yet how the intestinal immune system mediates these effects remains elusive. Here we report that colonic γδ T cells modulate behavioral vulnerability to chronic social stress via dectin-1 signaling. We show that reduction in specific
Lactobacillus
species, which are involved in T cell differentiation to protect the host immune system, contributes to stress-induced social-avoidance behavior, consistent with our observations in patients with depression. Stress-susceptible behaviors derive from increased differentiation in colonic interleukin (IL)-17-producing γδ T cells (γδ17 T cells) and their meningeal accumulation. These stress-susceptible cellular and behavioral phenotypes are causally mediated by dectin-1, an innate immune receptor expressed in γδ T cells. Our results highlight the previously unrecognized role of intestinal γδ17 T cells in the modulation of psychological stress responses and the importance of dectin-1 as a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of stress-induced behaviors.
Kamiya and colleagues examine the effects of chronic social-defeat stress on the intestinal microbiome and show a pathological role played by dectin-1 and interleukin-17 expressed by gut γδ T cells on this behavioral vulnerability. |
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ISSN: | 1529-2908 1529-2916 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41590-023-01447-8 |