γδ T cells control murine skin inflammation and subcutaneous adipose wasting during chronic Trypanosoma brucei infection

Author:

Quintana Juan F.ORCID,Sinton Matthew C.ORCID,Chandrasegaran PraveenaORCID,Lestari Agatha Nabilla,Heslop RhiannonORCID,Cheaib Bachar,Ogunsola JohnORCID,Ngoyi Dieudonne MumbaORCID,Kuispond Swar Nono-Raymond,Cooper AnneliORCID,Mabbott Neil A.ORCID,Coffelt Seth B.ORCID,MacLeod AnnetteORCID

Abstract

AbstractAfrican trypanosomes colonise the skin to ensure parasite transmission. However, how the skin responds to trypanosome infection remains unresolved. Here, we investigate the local immune response of the skin in a murine model of infection using spatial and single cell transcriptomics. We detect expansion of dermal IL-17A-producing Vγ6+ cells during infection, which occurs in the subcutaneous adipose tissue. In silico cell-cell communication analysis suggests that subcutaneous interstitial preadipocytes trigger T cell activation via Cd40 and Tnfsf18 signalling, amongst others. In vivo, we observe that female mice deficient for IL-17A-producing Vγ6+ cells show extensive inflammation and limit subcutaneous adipose tissue wasting, independently of parasite burden. Based on these observations, we propose that subcutaneous adipocytes and Vγ6+ cells act in concert to limit skin inflammation and adipose tissue wasting. These studies provide new insights into the role of γδ T cell and subcutaneous adipocytes as homeostatic regulators of skin immunity during chronic infection.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

University of Glasgow Lord Kelvin Adam Smith Leadership Fellowship

Breast Cancer Now

Cancer Research UK

RCUK | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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