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Mast cells link immune sensing to antigen-avoidance behaviour

Authors :
Plum, Thomas
Binzberger, Rebecca
Thiele, Robin
Shang, Fuwei
Postrach, Daniel
Fung, Candice
Fortea, Marina
Stakenborg, Nathalie
Wang, Zheng
Tappe-Theodor, Anke
Poth, Tanja
MacLaren, Duncan A. A.
Boeckxstaens, Guy
Kuner, Rohini
Pitzer, Claudia
Monyer, Hannah
Xin, Cuiyan
Bonventre, Joseph V.
Tanaka, Satoshi
Voehringer, David
Vanden Berghe, Pieter
Strid, Jessica
Feyerabend, Thorsten B.
Rodewald, Hans-Reimer
Source :
Nature; 20230101, Issue: Preprints p1-9, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The physiological functions of mast cells remain largely an enigma. In the context of barrier damage, mast cells are integrated in type 2 immunity and, together with immunoglobulin E (IgE), promote allergic diseases. Allergic symptoms may, however, facilitate expulsion of allergens, toxins and parasites and trigger future antigen avoidance1–3. Here, we show that antigen-specific avoidance behaviour in inbred mice4,5is critically dependent on mast cells; hence, we identify the immunological sensor cell linking antigen recognition to avoidance behaviour. Avoidance prevented antigen-driven adaptive, innate and mucosal immune activation and inflammation in the stomach and small intestine. Avoidance was IgE dependent, promoted by Th2 cytokines in the immunization phase and by IgE in the execution phase. Mucosal mast cells lining the stomach and small intestine rapidly sensed antigen ingestion. We interrogated potential signalling routes between mast cells and the brain using mutant mice, pharmacological inhibition, neural activity recordings and vagotomy. Inhibition of leukotriene synthesis impaired avoidance, but overall no single pathway interruption completely abrogated avoidance, indicating complex regulation. Collectively, the stage for antigen avoidance is set when adaptive immunity equips mast cells with IgE as a telltale of past immune responses. On subsequent antigen ingestion, mast cells signal termination of antigen intake. Prevention of immunopathology-causing, continuous and futile responses against per se innocuous antigens or of repeated ingestion of toxins through mast-cell-mediated antigen-avoidance behaviour may be an important arm of immunity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63529998
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06188-0