2025-12-10
Human gut M cells resemble dendritic cells and present gluten antigen
Publication
Publication
Microfold (M) cells are rare intestinal epithelial cells that reside in the follicle-associated epithelium of Peyer’s patches1. M cells transport luminal antigens to submucosal antigen-presenting cells2,3. These insights primarily derive from transmission electron microscopy and studies using genetically modified mice2,3,4. Here we establish an intestinal organoid model to study human M cells and reconstruct the differentiation trajectory of M cells through transcriptome profiling. The results indicate that as well as facilitating luminal antigen transport, human M cells also directly present antigens via the class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC-II). Notably, the related enterocytes only express MHC-II in chronic inflammatory states and do not express typical dendritic cell markers. Human M cells physiologically express a gene profile that resembles that of dendritic cells. Similar to dendritic cells, M cell development is induced by RANKL and CSF2 and requires the transcription factors SPIB and RUNX2. HLA-DQ2.5 M cells process and present gluten antigen as demonstrated in organoid–T cell co-culture assays. These findings suggest that M cells may have a central role in coeliac disease.
| Additional Metadata | |
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| Springer Science | |
| Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) | |
| doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09829-8 | |
| Nature | |
| Organisation | Quantitative Developmental Biology |
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Wang, D., Lim, S., van de Wetering, W., Lopez-Iglesias, C., Okura, Y., Teranishi-Ikawa, Y., … Clevers, H. (2025). Human gut M cells resemble dendritic cells and present gluten antigen. Nature. doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09829-8 |
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