Cell
Volume 174, Issue 2, 12 July 2018, Pages 271-284.e14
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Article
A Metabolite-Triggered Tuft Cell-ILC2 Circuit Drives Small Intestinal Remodeling

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2018.05.014Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Tuft cell IL-25 and IL-25R+ ILC2s drive A20-regulated small bowel adaptability

  • Circuit activation and small bowel hypertrophy maintain systemic energy balance

  • Succinate, a Tritrichomonas metabolite, triggers tuft cell chemosensation and IL-25

  • Circuit activation impedes new helminth infection and enables concomitant immunity

Summary

The small intestinal tuft cell-ILC2 circuit mediates epithelial responses to intestinal helminths and protists by tuft cell chemosensory-like sensing and IL-25-mediated activation of lamina propria ILC2s. Small intestine ILC2s constitutively express the IL-25 receptor, which is negatively regulated by A20 (Tnfaip3). A20 deficiency in ILC2s spontaneously triggers the circuit and, unexpectedly, promotes adaptive small-intestinal lengthening and remodeling. Circuit activation occurs upon weaning and is enabled by dietary polysaccharides that render mice permissive for Tritrichomonas colonization, resulting in luminal accumulation of acetate and succinate, metabolites of the protist hydrogenosome. Tuft cells express GPR91, the succinate receptor, and dietary succinate, but not acetate, activates ILC2s via a tuft-, TRPM5-, and IL-25-dependent pathway. Also induced by parasitic helminths, circuit activation and small intestinal remodeling impairs infestation by new helminths, consistent with the phenomenon of concomitant immunity. We describe a metabolic sensing circuit that may have evolved to facilitate mutualistic responses to luminal pathosymbionts.

Keywords

tuft cells
ILC2s
A20
IL-25
TRPM5
succinate
succinate receptor
Tritrichomonas
helminths
concomitant immunity

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5

Present address: University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98109, USA

6

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