1. Ptpn2 and KLRG1 regulate the generation and in skin
- Author
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Hochheiser, K, Wiede, F, Wagner, T, Freestone, D, Enders, MH, Olshansky, M, Russ, B, Nussing, S, Bawden, E, Braun, A, Bachem, A, Gressier, E, McConville, R, Park, SL, Jones, CM, Davey, GM, Gyorki, DE, Tscharke, D, Parish, IA, Turner, S, Herold, MJ, Tiganis, T, Bedoui, S, Gebhardt, T, Hochheiser, K, Wiede, F, Wagner, T, Freestone, D, Enders, MH, Olshansky, M, Russ, B, Nussing, S, Bawden, E, Braun, A, Bachem, A, Gressier, E, McConville, R, Park, SL, Jones, CM, Davey, GM, Gyorki, DE, Tscharke, D, Parish, IA, Turner, S, Herold, MJ, Tiganis, T, Bedoui, S, and Gebhardt, T
- Abstract
Tissue-resident memory T cells (TRM cells) are key elements of tissue immunity. Here, we investigated the role of the regulator of T cell receptor and cytokine signaling, Ptpn2, in the formation and function of TRM cells in skin. Ptpn2-deficient CD8+ T cells displayed a marked defect in generating CD69+ CD103+ TRM cells in response to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) skin infection. This was accompanied by a reduction in the proportion of KLRG1- memory precursor cells and a transcriptional bias toward terminal differentiation. Of note, forced expression of KLRG1 was sufficient to impede TRM cell formation. Normalizing memory precursor frequencies by transferring equal numbers of KLRG1- cells restored TRM generation, demonstrating that Ptpn2 impacted skin seeding with precursors rather than downstream TRM cell differentiation. Importantly, Ptpn2-deficient TRM cells augmented skin autoimmunity but also afforded superior protection from HSV-1 infection. Our results emphasize that KLRG1 repression is required for optimal TRM cell formation in skin and reveal an important role of Ptpn2 in regulating TRM cell functionality.
- Published
- 2021