At the center of fibrosing diseases is the aberrant activation of tissue fibroblasts. The cellular and molecular mechanisms of how the immune system augments fibroblast activation have been described; however, little is known about how the immune system controls fibroblast function in tissues. Here, we identify regulatory T cells (T) as important regulators of fibroblast activation in skin. Bulk cell and single-cell analysis of T in murine skin and lungs revealed that T in skin are transcriptionally distinct and skewed toward T helper 2 (T2) differentiation. When compared with T in lung, skin T preferentially expressed high levels of GATA3, the master T2 transcription factor. Genes regulated by GATA3 were highly enriched in skin "T2 T" subsets. In functional experiments, T depletion resulted in a preferential increase in T2 cytokine production in skin. Both acute depletion and chronic reduction of T resulted in spontaneous skin fibroblast activation, profibrotic gene expression, and dermal fibrosis, all of which were exacerbated in a bleomycin-induced murine model of skin sclerosis. Lineage-specific deletion of in T resulted in an exacerbation of T2 cytokine secretion that was preferential to skin, resulting in enhanced fibroblast activation and dermal fibrosis. Together, we demonstrate that T play a critical role in regulating fibroblast activation in skin and do so by expressing a unique tissue-restricted transcriptional program that is mediated, at least in part, by GATA3.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6848056 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aaw2910 | DOI Listing |
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