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Nature 442, 997-1002 (20 August 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature05010;

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Mast cells are essential intermediaries in regulatory T-cell tolerance

Contrary to the proinflammatory role of mast cells in allergic disorders, the results obtained in this study establish that mast cells are essential in CD4|[plus]|CD25|[plus]|Foxp3|[plus]| regulatory T (TReg)-cell-dependent peripheral tolerance. Here we confirm that tolerant allografts, which are sustained owing to the immunosuppressive effects of TReg cells, acquire a unique genetic signature dominated by the expression of mast-cell-gene products. We also show that mast cells are crucial for allograft tolerance, through the inability to induce tolerance in mast-cell-deficient mice. High levels of interleukin (IL)-9—a mast cell growth and activation factor—are produced by activated TReg cells, and IL-9 production seems important in mast cell recruitment to, and activation in, tolerant tissue. Our data indicate that IL-9 represents the functional link through which activated TReg cells recruit and activate mast cells to mediate regional immune suppression, because neutralization of IL-9 greatly accelerates allograft rejection in tolerant mice. Finally, immunohistochemical analysis clearly demonstrates the existence of this novel TReg–IL-9–mast cell relationship within tolerant allografts.

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