Publication | Open Access
Individual intestinal symbionts induce a distinct population of RORγ <sup>+</sup> regulatory T cells
857
Citations
48
References
2015
Year
Gut microbes regulate gut immune cell populations, with species such as Clostridium inducing regulatory T cells that promote tolerance and maintain homeostasis. Mice lacking these transcription factors show increased colonic inflammation and higher levels of allergy‑associated proinflammatory molecules. Ohnmacht et al.
Gut microbes make T cells keep the peace Our guts harbor trillions of microbial inhabitants, some of which regulate the types of immune cells that are present in the gut. For instance, Clostridium species of bacteria induce a type of T cell that promotes tolerance between the host and its microbial contents. Ohnmacht et al. and Sefik et al. characterized a population of gut regulatory T cells in mice, which required gut microbiota to survive. Multiple bacterial species of the microbiota could induce transcription factor–expressing regulatory T cells that helped maintain immune homeostasis. Mice engineered to lack these transcription factors exhibited enhanced susceptibility to colonic inflammation and had elevated amounts of proinflammatory molecules associated with allergies (see the Perspective by Hegazy and Powrie). Science , this issue pp. 989 and 993
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1