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Publication : Chronic stress physically spares but functionally impairs innate-like invariant T cells.

First Author  Rudak PT Year  2021
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  35
Issue  2 Pages  108979
PubMed ID  33852855 Mgi Jnum  J:324670
Mgi Id  MGI:6716740 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2021.108979
Citation  Rudak PT, et al. (2021) Chronic stress physically spares but functionally impairs innate-like invariant T cells. Cell Rep 35(2):108979
abstractText  The deleterious effects of psychological stress on mainstream T lymphocytes are well documented. However, how stress impacts innate-like T cells is unclear. We report that long-term stress surprisingly abrogates both T helper 1 (TH1)- and TH2-type responses orchestrated by invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells. This is not due to iNKT cell death because these cells are unusually refractory to stress-inflicted apoptosis. Activated iNKT cells in stressed mice exhibit a "split" inflammatory signature and trigger sudden serum interleukin-10 (IL-10), IL-23, and IL-27 spikes. iNKT cell dysregulation is mediated by cell-autonomous glucocorticoid receptor signaling and corrected upon habituation to predictable stressors. Importantly, under stress, iNKT cells fail to potentiate cytotoxicity against lymphoma or to reduce the burden of metastatic melanoma. Finally, stress physically spares mouse mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells but hinders their TH1-/TH2-type responses. The above findings are corroborated in human peripheral blood and hepatic iNKT/MAIT cell cultures. Our work uncovers a mechanism of stress-induced immunosuppression.
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