Publication | Open Access
Regulatory T cells promote innate inflammation after skin barrier breach via TGF-β activation
48
Citations
39
References
2021
Year
Regulatory T cells (T<sub>regs</sub>) use multiple mechanisms to attenuate inflammation and prevent autoimmunity. T<sub>regs</sub> residing in peripheral (i.e., nonlymphoid) tissues have specialized functions; specifically, skin T<sub>regs</sub> promote wound healing, suppress dermal fibrosis, facilitate epidermal regeneration, and augment hair follicle cycling. Here, we demonstrated that skin T<sub>regs</sub> were transcriptionally attuned to interact with their tissue environment through increased expression of integrin and TGF-β pathway genes that influence epithelial cell biology. We identified a molecular pathway where skin T<sub>regs</sub> license keratinocytes to promote innate inflammation after skin barrier breach. Using a single-cell discovery approach, we identified preferential expression of the integrin αvβ8 on skin T<sub>regs</sub> Upon skin injury, T<sub>regs</sub> used this integrin to activate latent TGF-β, which acted directly on epithelial cells to promote CXCL5 production and neutrophil recruitment. Induction of this circuit delayed epidermal regeneration but provided protection from <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> infection across a compromised barrier. Thus, αvβ8-expressing T<sub>regs</sub> in the skin, somewhat paradoxical to their canonical immunosuppressive functions, facilitated inflammation acutely after loss of barrier integrity to promote host defense against infection.
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