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Publication : IKK2 controls the inflammatory potential of tissue-resident regulatory T cells in a murine gain of function model.

First Author  Cardinez C Year  2024
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  15
Issue  1 Pages  2345
PubMed ID  38528069 Mgi Jnum  J:346733
Mgi Id  MGI:7617828 Doi  10.1038/s41467-024-45870-3
Citation  Cardinez C, et al. (2024) IKK2 controls the inflammatory potential of tissue-resident regulatory T cells in a murine gain of function model. Nat Commun 15(1):2345
abstractText  Loss-of-function mutations have provided crucial insights into the immunoregulatory actions of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs). By contrast, we know very little about the consequences of defects that amplify aspects of Treg function or differentiation. Here we show that mice heterozygous for an Ikbkb gain-of-function mutation develop psoriasis. Doubling the gene dose (Ikbkb(GoF/GoF)) results in dactylitis, spondylitis, and characteristic nail changes, which are features of psoriatic arthritis. Ikbkb(GoF) mice exhibit a selective expansion of Foxp3 + CD25+ Tregs of which a subset express IL-17. These modified Tregs are enriched in both inflamed tissues, blood and spleen, and their transfer is sufficient to induce disease without conventional T cells. Single-cell transcriptional and phenotyping analyses of isolated Tregs reveal expansion of non-lymphoid tissue (tissue-resident) Tregs expressing Th17-related genes, Helios, tissue-resident markers including CD103 and CD69, and a prominent NF-kappaB transcriptome. Thus, IKK2 regulates tissue-resident Treg differentiation, and overactivity drives dose-dependent skin and systemic inflammation.
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