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[Preprint]. 2023 Sep 28:2023.09.26.559434. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.09.26.559434

IL-2–induced Stat3 Signaling is Critical for Effector Treg Cell Programming

Emma C Dean, Daniel F Ditoro, Duy Pham, Min Gao, Carlene L Zindl, Blake Frey, Stacey N Harbour, David A Figge, Aidan T Miller, Caleb R Glassman, K Christopher Garcia, Robin D Hatton, Casey T Weaver
PMCID: PMC10557704  PMID: 37808649

Abstract

Maintenance of immune homeostasis to the intestinal mictrobiota is dependent on a population of effector regulatory T (eTreg) cells that develop from microbiota-reactive induced (i)Treg cells. A cardinal feature of eTreg cells is their production of IL-10, which plays a non-redundant role in immune tolerance of commensal microbes. Here, we identify an unexpected role for IL-2-induced Stat3 signaling to program iTreg cells for eTreg cell differentiation and Il10 transcriptional competency. IL-2 proved to be both necessary and sufficient for eTreg cell development – contingent on Stat3 output of the IL-2 receptor coordinate with IL-2 signaling during early Treg cell commitment. Induction of iTreg cell programming in absence of IL-2-induced Stat3 signaling resulted in impaired eTreg cell differentiation and a failure to produce IL-10. An IL-2 mutein with reduced affinity for the IL-2Rγ (γ c ) chain was found to have blunted IL-2R Stat3 output, resulting in a deficiency of Il10 transcriptional programming that could not be fully rescued by Stat3 signaling subsequent to an initial window of iTreg cell differentiation. These findings expose a heretofore unappreciated role of IL-2 signaling that acts early to program subsequent production of IL-10 by developing eTreg cells, with broad implications for IL-2–based therapeutic interventions in immune-mediated diseases.

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