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Publication : Detection of Succinate by Intestinal Tuft Cells Triggers a Type 2 Innate Immune Circuit.

First Author  Nadjsombati MS Year  2018
Journal  Immunity Volume  49
Issue  1 Pages  33-41.e7
PubMed ID  30021144 Mgi Jnum  J:266443
Mgi Id  MGI:6202179 Doi  10.1016/j.immuni.2018.06.016
Citation  Nadjsombati MS, et al. (2018) Detection of Succinate by Intestinal Tuft Cells Triggers a Type 2 Innate Immune Circuit. Immunity 49(1):33-41.e7
abstractText  In the small intestine, type 2 responses are regulated by a signaling circuit that involves tuft cells and group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s). Here, we identified the microbial metabolite succinate as an activating ligand for small intestinal (SI) tuft cells. Sequencing analyses of tuft cells isolated from the small intestine, gall bladder, colon, thymus, and trachea revealed that expression of tuft cell chemosensory receptors is tissue specific. SI tuft cells expressed the succinate receptor (SUCNR1), and providing succinate in drinking water was sufficient to induce a multifaceted type 2 immune response via the tuft-ILC2 circuit. The helminth Nippostrongylus brasiliensis and a tritrichomonad protist both secreted succinate as a metabolite. In vivo sensing of the tritrichomonad required SUCNR1, whereas N. brasiliensis was SUCNR1 independent. These findings define a paradigm wherein tuft cells monitor microbial metabolites to initiate type 2 immunity and suggest the existence of other sensing pathways triggering the response to helminths.
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