- Marchitto, Mark C;
- Dillen, Carly A;
- Liu, Haiyun;
- Miller, Robert J;
- Archer, Nathan K;
- Ortines, Roger V;
- Alphonse, Martin P;
- Marusina, Alina I;
- Merleev, Alexander A;
- Wang, Yu;
- Pinsker, Bret L;
- Byrd, Angel S;
- Brown, Isabelle D;
- Ravipati, Advaitaa;
- Zhang, Emily;
- Cai, Shuting S;
- Limjunyawong, Nathachit;
- Dong, Xinzhong;
- Yeaman, Michael R;
- Simon, Scott I;
- Shen, Wei;
- Durum, Scott K;
- O’Brien, Rebecca L;
- Maverakis, Emanual;
- Miller, Lloyd S
T cell cytokines contribute to immunity against Staphylococcus aureus, but the predominant T cell subsets involved are unclear. In an S. aureus skin infection mouse model, we found that the IL-17 response was mediated by γδ T cells, which trafficked from lymph nodes to the infected skin to induce neutrophil recruitment, proinflammatory cytokines IL-1α, IL-1β, and TNF, and host defense peptides. RNA-seq for TRG and TRD sequences in lymph nodes and skin revealed a single clonotypic expansion of the encoded complementarity-determining region 3 amino acid sequence, which could be generated by canonical nucleotide sequences of TRGV5 or TRGV6 and TRDV4 However, only TRGV6 and TRDV4 but not TRGV5 sequences expanded. Finally, Vγ6+ T cells were a predominant γδ T cell subset that produced IL-17A as well as IL-22, TNF, and IFNγ, indicating a broad and substantial role for clonal Vγ6+Vδ4+ T cells in immunity against S. aureus skin infections.