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Reduced thymic IL-4 impairs negative T cell selection in nonobese diabetic mice
Alexis N. Cattin-Roy, … , Adam G. Schrum, Habib Zaghouani
Alexis N. Cattin-Roy, … , Adam G. Schrum, Habib Zaghouani
Published December 2, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(23):e163417. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI163417.
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Research Article Autoimmunity

Reduced thymic IL-4 impairs negative T cell selection in nonobese diabetic mice

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Abstract

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) develops spontaneously despite functional antigen presentation machinery in the thymus and a perceptible central tolerance process. We found that intrathymic enrichment with IL-4 fine tunes signaling through the IL-4/IL-13 heteroreceptor (HR) in early thymic progenitors (ETPs), augments negative selection of self-reactive T cells, sustains a diverse T cell repertoire devoid of clones expressing disease-associated T cell receptor (TCR) genes, and protects the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse from T1D. Indeed, optimal IL-4 activates STAT transcription factors to program ETP fate decision toward CD11c+CD8α+ dendritic cells (DCs) agile in negative T cell selection and clonal deletion of diabetogenic T cells. However, due to diminished invariant natural killer T (iNKT) 2 cell frequency in the NOD thymus, IL-4 is as suboptimal level, metering STAT activation to program ETP fate decision toward the T cell lineage leading to diminished negative selection, a clonally restricted TCR repertoire, and manifestation of spontaneous T1D. These insights uncover yet another interplay by which IL-4 affects T1D.

Authors

Alexis N. Cattin-Roy, Kimberly G. Laffey, Luan B. Le, Adam G. Schrum, Habib Zaghouani

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