1. B.theta-specific T cells when transferred into #antibiotic-treated and B.theta #colonized T cell-deficient mice (#RAG1-KO) develop into #Foxp3+ #Tregs as well as effector T cells. It is not clear if donor tg T cells were on RAG1-KO background as well. Host mice stay healthy. pic.twitter.com/TD0pnnxgAR— David Usharauli (@3DiMMUNE) February 9, 2019
3. The authors were able to identify a #specific #epitope in B.theta recognized by B.theta-specific T cells. The #sequence, EEFNLPTTNGGHAT, were mapped in BT4295 predicted to be a SusE/SusF #lipoprotein in outer #membrane (OM). pic.twitter.com/rH5cQHQcVN— David Usharauli (@3DiMMUNE) February 9, 2019
In #summary, this study showed that certain gut #commensal #microbiota species, in this case, #Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (B. theta) are recognized by #Tregs and even induce #effector T cell differentiation though the host stays healthy because Tregs regulate effector T cells.— David Usharauli (@3DiMMUNE) February 9, 2019
Another point is whether #microbiota-specific Tregs are #denovo induced or #amplified from existing ones. I personally think it is a latter. Most #Tregs develop from #CD25-negative #precursors poised for Foxp3 expression & such precursors are all #thymus derived, in my opinion.— David Usharauli (@3DiMMUNE) February 9, 2019
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