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Modulation of autoimmune pathogenesis by T cell-triggered inflammatory cell death

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Listed:
  • Katsuhiro Sasaki

    (Kyoto University)

  • Ai Himeno

    (Kyoto University)

  • Tomoko Nakagawa

    (Kyoto University)

  • Yoshiteru Sasaki

    (Kyoto University)

  • Hiroshi Kiyonari

    (RIKEN Center for Life Science Technologies)

  • Kazuhiro Iwai

    (Kyoto University)

Abstract

T cell-mediated autoimmunity encompasses diverse immunopathological outcomes; however, the mechanisms underlying this diversity are largely unknown. Dysfunction of the tripartite linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) is associated with distinct autonomous immune-related diseases. Cpdm mice lacking Sharpin, an accessory subunit of LUBAC, have innate immune cell-predominant dermatitis triggered by death of LUBAC-compromised keratinocytes. Here we show that specific gene ablation of Sharpin in mouse Treg causes phenotypes mimicking cpdm-like inflammation. Mechanistic analyses find that multiple types of programmed cell death triggered by TNF from tissue-oriented T cells initiate proinflammatory responses to implicate innate immune-mediated pathogenesis in this T cell-mediated inflammation. Moreover, additional disruption of the Hoip locus encoding the catalytic subunit of LUBAC converts cpdm-like dermatitis to T cell-predominant autoimmune lesions; however, innate immune-mediated pathogenesis still remains. These findings show that T cell-mediated killing and sequential autoinflammation are common and crucial for pathogenic diversity during T cell-mediated autoimmune responses.

Suggested Citation

  • Katsuhiro Sasaki & Ai Himeno & Tomoko Nakagawa & Yoshiteru Sasaki & Hiroshi Kiyonari & Kazuhiro Iwai, 2019. "Modulation of autoimmune pathogenesis by T cell-triggered inflammatory cell death," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-16, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-11858-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11858-7
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