作者
Murakami, Akinori,Akamine, Rinko,Tanaka, Shiro,Murata, Koichi,Nishitani, Kohei,Ito, Hiromu,Watanabe, Ryu,Fujii, Takayuki,Iwasaki, Takeshi,Masuo, Yuki,Iri, Osamu,Nakamura, Shinichiro,Kuriyama, Shinichi,Morita, Yugo,Murakawa, Yasuhiro,Terao, Chikashi,Okada, Yukinori,Hashimoto, Motomu,Matsuda, Shuichi,Ueno, Hideki
摘要
Human CD4⁺ T cells play a central role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases, but their immunoregulatory mechanisms driving pathogenesis remain to be elucidated. We show that human T peripheral helper cells (T[PH] cells) regulate peripheral immune responses via insulin-like growth factor–like family member 2 (IGFL2), an inflammatory factor found exclusively in primates. Single-cell RNA sequencing of seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovium showed that IGFL2 is specifically expressed by CD4⁺ T cells, predominantly T[PH] cells. IGFL2 promotes transforming growth factor–β–induced CXCL13 production in CD4⁺ T cells, activates nuclear factor κB signaling, and induces monocyte gene signatures like those of pathogenic macrophages. CRISPR-Cas9 knockout of IGFL2 in synovial T[PH] cells suppressed this gene signature in cocultured monocytes. Blood IGFL2 protein levels correlated with RA disease severity and could be used as a potential biomarker. These findings highlight the involvement of IGFL2 in RA pathogenesis, emphasizing how human T[PH] cells regulate local immune responses via IGFL2.