研究顯示,免疫細胞在腸道中的位置塑造了它們的抗病角色

內容

New research reveals how location influences how our immune system fights disease

Villi of the small mouse intestine. The dots and lines represent cellular networks. Credit: Elena Lin, UCSD.

The human immune system is like an army of specialized soldiers (immune cells) each with a unique role to play in fighting disease. In a new study published in Nature, led by scientists at the Allen Institute, La Jolla Institute for Immunology, and UC San Diego, researchers reveal how cells known as tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells, play unique and specialized roles based on where they are located within the small intestine.

Tissue-resident memory cells provide a local first line of defense against re-infection and call for "backup" from other immune cells and are also critical for maintaining peace in a tissue exposed to many outside pathogens.

This discovery sheds light on how tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells adapt to their location in the body, ensuring a coordinated and effective immune response and how microenvironments and cellular interactions shape this location-specific adaptation. Ultimately, location matters, and this understanding could also lead to improved immunotherapy and vaccines.

Specialized roles based on location

The study shows that tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells in the small intestine are diverse with distinct responsibilities, and their position inside the gut's architecture dictates what they do.

  1. The frontline: At the villus tips, a subset of tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells with a higher killing capacity are positioned like guards in watchtowers. These cells are designed to attack invading pathogens immediately, preventing infections from spreading further.
  2. Reinforcements: In a pocket of cells called the crypts, a different subset of tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells, which act as reserve forces, stand ready to respond should the body encounter the same pathogen in the future. These cells provide long-lasting immunity.

"What really struck me is that we have been able to see that immune cells in distinct locations have these special functions," said Maximilian Heeg, M.D., one of the study's lead co-authors and investigator at the Allen Institute. "They're strategically positioned in the small intestine to fulfill their function, and this is the key finding from the paper."

These differences ensure the immune system can react quickly to immediate threats while simultaneously maintaining a backup defense for long term protection.

"In response to infection, immune cells stream into tissues to fight infection and help repair damage. Importantly, these cells 'talk to' the tissue cells to coordinate the immune response," said Ananda W. Goldrath, Ph.D., executive vice president of the Allen Institute for Immunology.

"In this study, we can now visualize how the functional state of an immune cell relates to which cells and signals are found in different neighborhoods or regions of the tissues. This new knowledge of how the immune system works in tissues is game changing as we explore how to enhance immune protection while avoiding damaging inflammation."

Understanding microenvironments and cellular interactions

Using advanced transcriptional profiling techniques, the researchers mapped the genetic instructions that instruct the behavior of tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells based on their location.

"I am most excited about the possibilities our new approaches bring: Studying immune cells in their unperturbed natural environments at high plex, throughput and resolution," said Miguel Reina-Campos, Ph.D., study co-author and assistant professor at La Jolla Institute for Immunology.

The findings provide insight for designing better immunotherapies and vaccines. By targeting the mechanisms that direct tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells to specific sites inside a tissue and enhance their capabilities, researchers hope to develop treatments to boost the immune system's effectiveness and keep us healthy.

"One part of this work was discovering causal relationships between well-characterized genes and CD8 T cell spatial and transcriptional phenotypes," said study co-first author Alex Monell, a UC San Diego graduate student working with Goldrath.

"We are expanding our CRISPR pooled spatial screening to profile the impacts of many types of genetic perturbations at once within CD8 T cells with an overarching goal of finding and manipulating modulatory mechanisms of tissue-specific immunity."

Future research goals

This work highlights the importance of anatomical niches in shaping immune responses and establishes a framework for studying how immune cells interact with their environment. It presents new approaches to treating chronic diseases, infections, and inflammatory disorders by leveraging the unique dynamics of tissue-resident memory immune cells in barrier tissues.

Moving forward, the group is focused on understanding how this knowledge can be used to therapeutically target our immune responses.

More information: Ananda Goldrath, Tissue-resident memory CD8 T cell diversity is spatiotemporally imprinted, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08466-x. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08466-x

Journal information: Nature

Citation: Immune cells' location in the gut shapes their disease-fighting roles, study reveals (2025, January 22) retrieved 23 January 2025 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-01-immune-cells-gut-disease-roles.html

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總結
一項新的研究揭示了小鼠小腸內的組織常駐記憶CD8 T細胞如何根據其位置發揮獨特的免疫功能。這些細胞在小腸的不同區域中扮演著不同的角色,前線的細胞位於絨毛尖端,負責立即攻擊入侵病原體,而在隱窩中的細胞則作為後備力量,準備應對未來的相同病原體。研究顯示,這些細胞的功能與其所處的微環境和細胞互動密切相關,這一發現有助於改善免疫療法和疫苗的設計。研究團隊利用先進的轉錄組分析技術,映射了影響這些細胞行為的基因指令,未來將專注於如何利用這些知識來治療慢性疾病和炎症性疾病。