Regulatory Innate Lymphoid Cell (ILCreg) Markers
Click on one of the ILC subsets shown in the buttons below to see the markers that are commonly used to identify each cell type.
CD2-
CD3-
CD14-
CD19-
Glycophorin A/CD235a-
Fc gamma RIII/CD16-
NCAM-1/CD56-
Mouse
CD3-
CD4-
CD8-
CD11b-
CD11c-
CD19-
F4/80-
Gr-1/Ly6G-
NK1.1-
Ter-119-
A note regarding Lin- Markers
Overview
Regulatory innate lymphoid cells (ILCregs) are a population of IL-10-secreting innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) present in both mouse and human intestines that was found to suppress ILC1- and ILC3-induced intestinal inflammation. ILCregs arise from a common helper-like innate lymphoid precursor (CHILP) cell that can also give rise to ILC1s, ILC2s, ILC3s, and LTi cells, but not from the PLZF+ common ILC precursor (ILCP) that gives rise to ILC1s, ILC2s, ILC3s, suggesting that ILCregs are a distinct cell lineage. Similar to regulatory T cells (Tregs), ILCregs constitutively express high levels of TGF-beta RI, TGF-beta RII, CD122/IL-2 R beta, and IL-2 R gamma/Common gamma chain. Accordingly, IL-2 and TGF-beta 1 were found to be required for the proliferation and/or maintenance of ILCregs. In both mouse and human, ILCregs are phenotypically identified as Lin-CD45+CD127/IL-7 R alpha+IL-10+ cells that also express CD25/IL-2 R alpha, CD90/Thy1, and Sca-1/Ly6, and lack expression of markers associated with other ILC subsets including NK1.1 and NKp46 (ILC1s), ST2 and KLRG1 (ILC2s), and NKp46 and ROR gamma t (ILC3s). ILCregs were also found to uniquely express the transcriptional regulator, Id3, and secrete large amounts of TGF-beta 1 in addition to IL-10.