Resident memory T cells form during persistent antigen exposure leading to allograft rejection

Abstract

Tissue-resident memory T cells (TRM) contained at sites of previous infection provide local protection against reinfection. Whether they form and function in organ transplants where cognate antigen persists is unclear. This is a key question in transplantation as T cells are detected long term in allografts, but it is not known whether they are exhausted or are functional memory T cells. Using a mouse model of kidney transplantation, we showed that antigen-specific and polyclonal effector T cells differentiated in the graft into TRM and subsequently caused allograft rejection. TRM identity was established by surface phenotype, transcriptional profile, and inability to recirculate in parabiosis and retransplantation experiments. Graft TRM proliferated locally, produced interferon-γ upon restimulation, and their in vivo depletion attenuated rejection. The vast majority of antigen-specific and polyclonal TRM lacked phenotypic and transcriptional exhaustion markers. Single-cell analysis of graft T cells early and late after transplantation identified a transcriptional program associated with transition to the tissue-resident state that could serve as a platform for the discovery of therapeutic targets. Thus, recipient effector T cells differentiate into functional graft TRM that maintain rejection locally. Targeting these TRM could improve renal transplant outcomes. © 2021 American Association for the Advancement of Science. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Allografts, Animals, Antigens, Biomarkers, Cd8-positive t-lymphocytes, Disease models, animal, Graft rejection, Immunohistochemistry, Immunologic memory, Immunophenotyping, Kidney transplantation, Memory t cells, Mice, Organ specificity, Organ transplantation, T-lymphocyte subsets, Antigen, Biological marker, Animal experiment, Animal model, Animal tissue, Article, Cd8+ t lymphocyte, Controlled study, Female, Flow cytometry, Histology, Male, Memory t lymphocyte, Mouse, Nonhuman, Resident, Rna sequencing, Spleen cell, Vascular disease, Adverse event, Allograft, Animal, Antibody specificity, Disease model, Genetics, Immunological memory, Immunology, Metabolism, Pathology, Procedures, T lymphocyte subpopulation

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