Commensal-derived Trehalose Monocorynomycolate Triggers γδ T Cell-driven Protective Ocular Barrier Immunity
Abstract
Commensals shape host physiology through molecular crosstalk with host receptors. Identifying specific microbial factors that causally influence host immunity is key to understanding homeostasis at the host-microbe interface and advancing microbial-based therapeutics. Here, we identify trehalose monocorynomycolate (TMCM) fromCorynebacterium mastitidis(C. mast) as a potent stimulator of IL-17 production by γδ T cells at the ocular surface. Mechanistically, TMCM-driven IL-17 responses require both IL-1 signals and γδ TCR signaling, which also supports endogenous γδ T cell IL-1R1 expression. Notably, synthetic TMCM alone is sufficient to mimic the effect ofC. mastin inducing γδ T cell immunity and protect against pathogenic corneal infection. Our findings establish TMCM as a key mediator of commensal-driven immune defense, highlighting its potential as a γδ T cell adjuvant and a microbiome-informed therapeutic to enhance IL-17-driven protection at barrier sites such as the ocular surface.
Graphical Abstract
<fig id="ufig1" position="float" orientation="portrait" fig-type="figure"><graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="643820v1_ufig1" position="float" orientation="portrait"/></fig>HIGHLIGHTS
Corynomycolates enable ocularC. mastcolonization and protective IL-17 immunity
TMCM drives IL-17 from γδ T cells through TCR and IL-1R signaling
γδ TCR signaling maintains the expression of endogenous IL-1R1
Synthetic TMCM mimics the ability ofC. mastto induce γδ T cell immunity in the eye
TMCM protects againstP. aeruginosakeratitis, highlighting its therapeutic potential
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