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Iron capture through CD71 drives perinatal and tumor-associated Treg expansion
Ilenia Pacella, Alessandra Pinzon Grimaldos, Alessandra Rossi, Gloria Tucci, Marta Zagaglioni, Elena Potenza, Valeria Pinna, Ivano Rotella, Ilenia Cammarata, Valeria Cancila, Beatrice Belmonte, Claudio Tripodo, Giuseppe Pietropaolo, Chiara Di Censo, Giuseppe Sciumè, Valerio Licursi, Giovanna Peruzzi, Ylenia Antonucci, Silvia Campello, Francesca Guerrieri, Valerio Iebba, Rita Prota, Maria Di Chiara, Gianluca Terrin, Valerio De Peppo, Gian Luca Grazi, Vincenzo Barnaba, Silvia Piconese
Ilenia Pacella, Alessandra Pinzon Grimaldos, Alessandra Rossi, Gloria Tucci, Marta Zagaglioni, Elena Potenza, Valeria Pinna, Ivano Rotella, Ilenia Cammarata, Valeria Cancila, Beatrice Belmonte, Claudio Tripodo, Giuseppe Pietropaolo, Chiara Di Censo, Giuseppe Sciumè, Valerio Licursi, Giovanna Peruzzi, Ylenia Antonucci, Silvia Campello, Francesca Guerrieri, Valerio Iebba, Rita Prota, Maria Di Chiara, Gianluca Terrin, Valerio De Peppo, Gian Luca Grazi, Vincenzo Barnaba, Silvia Piconese
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Research Article Immunology Metabolism

Iron capture through CD71 drives perinatal and tumor-associated Treg expansion

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Abstract

Besides suppressing immune responses, regulatory T cells (Tregs) maintain tissue homeostasis and control systemic metabolism. Whether iron is involved in Treg-mediated tolerance is completely unknown. Here, we showed that the transferrin receptor CD71 was upregulated on activated Tregs infiltrating human liver cancer. Mice with a Treg-restricted CD71 deficiency spontaneously developed a scurfy-like disease, caused by impaired perinatal Treg expansion. CD71-null Tregs displayed decreased proliferation and tissue-Treg signature loss. In perinatal life, CD71 deficiency in Tregs triggered hepatic iron overload response, characterized by increased hepcidin transcription and iron accumulation in macrophages. Lower bacterial diversity, and reduction of beneficial species, were detected in the fecal microbiota of CD71 conditional knockout neonates. Our findings indicate that CD71-mediated iron absorption is required for Treg perinatal expansion and is related to systemic iron homeostasis and bacterial gut colonization. Therefore, we hypothesize that Tregs establish nutritional tolerance through competition for iron during bacterial colonization after birth.

Authors

Ilenia Pacella, Alessandra Pinzon Grimaldos, Alessandra Rossi, Gloria Tucci, Marta Zagaglioni, Elena Potenza, Valeria Pinna, Ivano Rotella, Ilenia Cammarata, Valeria Cancila, Beatrice Belmonte, Claudio Tripodo, Giuseppe Pietropaolo, Chiara Di Censo, Giuseppe Sciumè, Valerio Licursi, Giovanna Peruzzi, Ylenia Antonucci, Silvia Campello, Francesca Guerrieri, Valerio Iebba, Rita Prota, Maria Di Chiara, Gianluca Terrin, Valerio De Peppo, Gian Luca Grazi, Vincenzo Barnaba, Silvia Piconese

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Figure 6

Treg-intrinsic CD71 deficiency affects systemic iron status and gut microbial colonization.

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Treg-intrinsic CD71 deficiency affects systemic iron status and gut micr...
(A) Systemic iron concentration in the serum of Foxp3Cre/Y Tfrcfl/fl (fl/fl, red), and Foxp3Cre/Y Tfrc+/+ (+/+, gray) male littermates, at 8–10 days or 3–4 weeks of age. (B) Hamp gene expression by real-time reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) in whole liver extracts. Data are from 4–24 samples/group, pooled from 3 independent experiments. Bars indicate means ± SD. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.005, by Mann-Whitney test. (C) Spearman’s correlation between serum iron and hepatic Hamp expression. (D) Perls Prussian blue staining in liver specimens of Foxp3Cre/Y Tfrcfl/fl or Tfrc+/+ males at 8–10 days or 3–4 weeks of age. Representative images of 2–4 mice/group are shown. Original magnification, 10×. Insets, 40×. (E–G) α Diversity measurements of biodiversity (Shannon, E) and richness (observed operational taxonomic units, F) and partial least-squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) (G), of the microbial species identified through 16s rRNA gene sequencing of DNA extracted from stools of Foxp3Cre/Y Tfrcfl/fl (red) or Tfrc+/+ (gray) males at 8–10 days or 3–4 weeks of age (n = 4–5 mice/group). Box plots show the interquartile range, median (line), and minimum and maximum (whiskers). (H) Variable importance plot (VIP) describing the most discriminant species in descending order of importance. Each bar reports the following information: (i) length, VIP score; (ii) bar color, cohort in which the species has the highest average relative abundance (high); (iii) thickness, fold ratio (FR) among the 2 groups considered; (iv) significance of Mann-Whitney U test between high and low (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01).

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