Gut Microbiota Defines Functional Direction of Colonic Regulatory T Cells with Unique TCR Repertoires

Author:

Byun Seohyun1ORCID,Lee Jusung12,Choi Yoon Ha12,Ko Haeun1ORCID,Lee Changhon1,Park John Chulhoon1ORCID,Kim Seung Won1ORCID,Lee Haena1ORCID,Sharma Amit1ORCID,Kim Kwang Soon1,Rudra Dipayan3ORCID,Kim Jong Kyoung124ORCID,Im Sin-Hyeog145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. *Department of Life Sciences, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Pohang, Republic of Korea

2. †Department of New Biology, Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology, Daegu, Republic of Korea

3. ‡School of Life Science and Technology, ShanghaiTech University; Shanghai, People’s Republic of China

4. §Institute for Convergence Research and Education in Advanced Technology, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

5. ¶ImmunoBiome Inc., Pohang, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Abstract Intestinal microbiota and selected strains of commensal bacteria influence regulatory T (Treg) cell functionality in the colon. Nevertheless, whether and how microbiota changes the transcriptome profile and TCR specificities of colonic Tregs remain to be precisely defined. In this study, we have employed single-cell RNA sequencing and comparatively analyzed colonic Tregs from specific pathogen-free and germ-free (GF) mice. We found that microbiota shifts the activation trajectory of colonic Tregs toward a distinct phenotypic subset enriched in specific pathogen-free but not in GF mice. Moreover, microbiota induced the expansion of specific Treg clonotypes with shared transcriptional specificities. The microbiota-induced subset of colonic Tregs, identified as PD-1− CXCR3+ Tregs, displayed enhanced suppressive capabilities compared with colonic Tregs derived from GF mice, enhanced production of IL-10, and were the primary regulators of enteric inflammation in dextran sodium sulfate–induced colitis. These findings identify a hitherto unknown gut microbiota and immune cell interaction module that could contribute to the development of a therapeutic modality for intestinal inflammatory diseases.

Funder

Korean Ministry of Education

National Research Foundation of Korea

Korean Ministry of Science

Publisher

The American Association of Immunologists

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