Hierarchical Immune Suppressive Functions of Regulatory T Cells Built on Mechanical Force

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Abstract

Regulatory T (Treg) cells maintain immune tolerance via contact-dependent inhibition and soluble mediators. While canonical suppressive mechanisms are well characterized, their hierarchical spatiotemporal organization remains unclear. We previously showed Foxp3 represses ER Ca 2+ channel RyR2, reducing cytoplasmic Ca 2+ to inactivate m-Calpain (Calpain-2) and stabilize high-affinity LFA-1-mediated Treg–dendritic cell (DC) adhesion—an early step blocking DC antigen presentation. Using m-Calpain as a molecular switch, we generated mechanically deficient Tregs (TregFD) with constitutively active m-Calpain that abrogated high-force Treg-DC adhesion. TregFD retained a near-wild-type transcriptome (differential expression limited to adhesion pathways), yet failed to suppress autoimmunity or DC-driven T cell proliferation. Stable adhesion was required for localized TGF-β/IL-10 delivery to DCs. Single-cell RNA sequencing of rescued Scurfy mouse lymphoid tissues revealed organ-specific division of labor: non-mechanical modules support homeostasis/tissue repair, while mechanical modules dominate epithelial barrier/antigen presentation suppression. Combined TregFD and RyR2-deficient Tconv transfer restored wild-type Treg activity, demonstrating module synergism. These findings establish a mechanical force-centered, two-tiered hierarchical model of Treg suppression, providing a framework for targeting Treg mechanics in autoimmunity and inflammation.

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