Commensal myeloid crosstalk in neonatal skin regulates long-term cutaneous type 17 inflammation

Early life microbe-immune interactions at barrier surfaces have lasting impacts on the trajectory towards health versus disease. Monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells are primary sentinels in barrier tissues, yet the salient contributions of commensal-myeloid crosstalk during tissue development...

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Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors Dhariwala, Miqdad O, DeRogatis, Andrea M, Okoro, Joy N, Weckel, Antonin, Tran, Victoria M, Habrylo, Irek, Ojewumi, Oluwasunmisola T, Tammen, Allison E, Leech, John M, Merana, Geil R, Carale, Ricardo O, Barrere-Cain, Rio, Hiam-Galvez, Kamir J, Spitzer, Matthew H, Scharschmidt, Tiffany C
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 02.10.2023
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Summary:Early life microbe-immune interactions at barrier surfaces have lasting impacts on the trajectory towards health versus disease. Monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells are primary sentinels in barrier tissues, yet the salient contributions of commensal-myeloid crosstalk during tissue development remain poorly understood. Here, we identify that commensal microbes facilitate accumulation of a population of monocytes in neonatal skin. Transient postnatal depletion of these monocytes resulted in heightened IL-17A production by skin T cells, which was particularly sustained among CD4 T cells into adulthood and sufficient to exacerbate inflammatory skin pathologies. Neonatal skin monocytes were enriched in expression of negative regulators of the IL-1 pathway. Functional in vivo experiments confirmed a key role for excessive IL-1R1 signaling in T cells as contributing to the dysregulated type 17 response in neonatal monocyte-depleted mice. Thus, a commensal-driven wave of monocytes into neonatal skin critically facilitates long-term immune homeostasis in this prominent barrier tissue.
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ObjectType-Working Paper/Pre-Print-1
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ISSN:2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI:10.1101/2023.09.29.560039