Microbiota-dependent expression of CTLA-4 by innate lymphoid cells restrains IFNγ dependent colitis

Author:

Lo Jonathan1ORCID,Schroeder Jan-Hendrik2ORCID,Beattie Gordon3,Roberts Luke2,Cozzetto Domenico1ORCID,Omer Omer2,Ross Ellen3,Heuts Frank4,Jowett Geraldine5ORCID,Read Emily2ORCID,Liu Zhigang1ORCID,Ibraheim Hajir1,Seoane Rocio Castro6,Mohamed Rami2,Korcsmaros Tamas7ORCID,Cope Andrew8ORCID,Papa Sophie2ORCID,Neves Joana2ORCID,Walker Lucy4ORCID,Jenner Richard3ORCID,Powell Nick1,Lord Graham9

Affiliation:

1. Imperial College London

2. King's College London

3. University College London

4. Institute of Immunity & Transplantation

5. Wellcome Trust Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge

6. Department of Immunology and Inflammation, Imperial College London

7. Earlham Institute

8. King's College London, Biomedical Research Centre

9. University of Manchester

Abstract

Abstract The maintenance of intestinal homeostasis is a fundamental process critical for organismal integrity. Sitting at the interface of the gut microbiome and mucosal immunity, adaptive and innate lymphoid populations regulate the balance between commensal micro-organisms and pathogens. Checkpoint inhibitors (CPI), particularly those targeting the CTLA-4 pathway, disrupt this fine balance and can lead to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and immune checkpoint colitis (CPI-C). Here, we show that CTLA-4 is expressed by innate lymphoid cells (ILC) and that its expression is regulated by ILC subset-specific cytokine cues in a microbiota-dependent manner. Genetic deletion or antibody blockade of CTLA-4 demonstrates that this pathway plays a key role in intestinal homeostasis and is conserved in human IBD and CPI-induced colitis (CPI-C). We propose that this population of CTLA-4-positive ILC may serve as an important target for the treatment of idiopathic and iatrogenic intestinal inflammation.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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