- Hammer, Gianna Elena;
- Turer, Emre E;
- Taylor, Kimberly E;
- Fang, Celia J;
- Advincula, Rommel;
- Oshima, Shigeru;
- Barrera, Julio;
- Huang, Eric J;
- Hou, Baidong;
- Malynn, Barbara A;
- Reizis, Boris;
- DeFranco, Anthony;
- Criswell, Lindsey A;
- Nakamura, Mary C;
- Ma, Averil
Dendritic cells (DCs), which are known to support immune activation during infection, may also regulate immune homeostasis in resting animals. Here we show that mice lacking the ubiquitin-editing molecule A20 specifically in DCs spontaneously showed DC activation and population expansion of activated T cells. Analysis of DC-specific epistasis in compound mice lacking both A20 and the signaling adaptor MyD88 specifically in DCs showed that A20 restricted both MyD88-independent signals, which drive activation of DCs and T cells, and MyD88-dependent signals, which drive population expansion of T cells. In addition, mice lacking A20 specifically in DCs spontaneously developed lymphocyte-dependent colitis, seronegative ankylosing arthritis and enthesitis, conditions stereotypical of human inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Our findings indicate that DCs need A20 to preserve immune quiescence and suggest that A20-dependent DC functions may underlie IBD and IBD-associated arthritides.