CD4+ Regulatory T Cells Control TH17 Responses in a Stat3-Dependent Manner

Outfoxing Immune Excess Immune responses are kept in check by Foxp3-expressing CD4+-regulatory T cells (Tregs) through a variety of mechanisms. Expression of specific transcription factors directs Treg responses into distinct T helper cell lineages; however, the transcription factors that regulate particular helper lineages have not been completely characterized. Chaudhry et al. (p. 986, published online 1 October) show that the transcription factor Stat3, that is required for the initial differentiation of TH17-effector T cells, is also required for Treg cell-mediated suppression of TH17-mediated immune responses. Mice carrying a Treg cellspecific deletion in Stat3 succumb to an intestinal inflammatory disease driven by uncontrolled TH17 responses. Thus, different classes of immune responses can result from the expression of helper lineage–specific transcription factors. Suppressor T cells regulate different classes of immune responses through induction of specific transcription factors. Distinct classes of protective immunity are guided by activation of STAT transcription factor family members in response to environmental cues. CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress excessive immune responses, and their deficiency results in a lethal, multi-organ autoimmune syndrome characterized by T helper 1 (TH1) and T helper 2 (TH2) CD4+ T cell–dominated lesions. Here we show that pathogenic TH17 responses in mice are also restrained by Tregs. This suppression was lost upon Treg-specific ablation of Stat3, a transcription factor critical for TH17 differentiation, and resulted in the development of a fatal intestinal inflammation. These findings suggest that Tregs adapt to their environment by engaging distinct effector response–specific suppression modalities upon activation of STAT proteins that direct the corresponding class of the immune response.

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