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Publication : Meningeal γδ T cells regulate anxiety-like behavior via IL-17a signaling in neurons.

First Author  Alves de Lima K Year  2020
Journal  Nat Immunol Volume  21
Issue  11 Pages  1421-1429
PubMed ID  32929273 Mgi Jnum  J:305304
Mgi Id  MGI:6706381 Doi  10.1038/s41590-020-0776-4
Citation  Alves de Lima K, et al. (2020) Meningeal gammadelta T cells regulate anxiety-like behavior via IL-17a signaling in neurons. Nat Immunol 21(11):1421-1429
abstractText  Interleukin (IL)-17a has been highly conserved during evolution of the vertebrate immune system and widely studied in contexts of infection and autoimmunity. Studies suggest that IL-17a promotes behavioral changes in experimental models of autism and aggregation behavior in worms. Here, through a cellular and molecular characterization of meningeal gammadelta17 T cells, we defined the nearest central nervous system-associated source of IL-17a under homeostasis. Meningeal gammadelta T cells express high levels of the chemokine receptor CXCR6 and seed meninges shortly after birth. Physiological release of IL-17a by these cells was correlated with anxiety-like behavior in mice and was partially dependent on T cell receptor engagement and commensal-derived signals. IL-17a receptor was expressed in cortical glutamatergic neurons under steady state and its genetic deletion decreased anxiety-like behavior in mice. Our findings suggest that IL-17a production by meningeal gammadelta17 T cells represents an evolutionary bridge between this conserved anti-pathogen molecule and survival behavioral traits in vertebrates.
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