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Publication : The subunits of IL-12, originating from two distinct cells, can functionally synergize to protect against pathogen dissemination in vivo.

First Author  Gerber AN Year  2021
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  37
Issue  2 Pages  109816
PubMed ID  34644571 Mgi Jnum  J:334267
Mgi Id  MGI:6881787 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109816
Citation  Gerber AN, et al. (2021) The subunits of IL-12, originating from two distinct cells, can functionally synergize to protect against pathogen dissemination in vivo. Cell Rep 37(2):109816
abstractText  Cytokines are typically single gene products, except for the heterodimeric interleukin (IL)-12 family. The two subunits (IL-12p40 and IL-12p35) of the prototype IL-12 are known to be simultaneously co-expressed in activated myeloid cells, which secrete the fully active heterodimer to promote interferon (IFN)gamma production in innate and adaptive cells. We find that chimeric mice containing mixtures of cells that can only express either IL-12p40 or IL-12p35, but not both together, generate functional IL-12. This alternate two-cell pathway requires IL-12p40 from hematopoietic cells to extracellularly associate with IL-12p35 from radiation-resistant cells. The two-cell mechanism is sufficient to propel local T cell differentiation in sites distal to the initial infection and helps control systemic dissemination of a pathogen, although not parasite burden, at the site of infection. Broadly, this suggests that early secretion of IL-12p40 monomers by sentinel cells at the infection site may help prepare distal host tissues for potential pathogen arrival.
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