Antigen-presenting Cells As Specialized Drivers of Intestinal T cell Functions
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The immune system recognizes a multitude of innocuous antigens from food and intestinal commensal microbes toward which it orchestrates appropriate, non-inflammatory responses. This process requires antigen-presenting cells (APCs) that induce T cells with either regulatory or effector functions. Compromised APC function disrupts the T cell balance, leading to inflammation and dysbiosis. Although their precise identities continue to be debated, it has become clear that multiple APC lineages direct the differentiation of distinct microbiota-specific CD4 T cell programs. Here, we review how unique APC subsets instruct T cell differentiation and function in response to microbiota and dietary antigens. These discoveries provide new opportunities to investigate T cell-APC regulatory networks controlling immune homeostasis and perturbations associated with inflammatory and allergic diseases.
Leon B Trends Immunol. 2025; 46(2):104-120.
PMID: 39843310 PMC: 11835539. DOI: 10.1016/j.it.2024.12.005.