EMBO Molecular Medicine (Sep 2024)

Trained immunity of intestinal tuft cells during infancy enhances host defense against enteroviral infections in mice

  • Deyan Chen,
  • Jing Wu,
  • Fang Zhang,
  • Ruining Lyu,
  • Qiao You,
  • Yajie Qian,
  • Yurong Cai,
  • Xiaoyan Tian,
  • Hongji Tao,
  • Yating He,
  • Waqas Nawaz,
  • Zhiwei Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44321-024-00128-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
pp. 2516 – 2538

Abstract

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Abstract Innate immune cells have been acknowledged as trainable in recent years. While intestinal tuft cells are recognized for their crucial roles in the host defense against intestinal pathogens, there remains uncertainty regarding their trainability. Enterovirus 71 (EV71), a prevalent enterovirus that primarily infects children but rarely infects adults. At present, there is a significant expansion of intestinal tuft cells in the EV71-infected mouse model, which is associated with EV71-induced interleukin-25 (IL-25) production. Further, we found that IL-25 pre-treatment at 2 weeks old mouse enabled tuft cells to acquire immune memory. This was evidenced by the rapid expansion and stronger response of IL-25-trained tuft cells in response to EV71 infection at 6 weeks old, surpassing the reactivity of naïve tuft cells in mice without IL-25-trained progress. Interestingly, IL-25-trained intestinal tuft cells exhibit anti-enteroviral effect via producing a higher level of IL-25. Mechanically, IL-25 treatment upregulates spermidine/spermine acetyl-transferase enzyme (SAT1) expression, mediates intracellular polyamine deficiency, further inhibits enterovirus replication. In summary, tuft cells can be trained by IL-25, which supports faster and higher level IL-25 production in response to EV71 infection and further exhibits anti-enteroviral effect via SAT1-mediated intracellular polyamine deficiency. Given that IL-25 can be induced by multiple gut microbes during human growth and development, including shifts in gut flora abundance, which may partially explain the different susceptibility to enteroviral infections between adults and children.

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