Cross-dressed dendritic cells sustain effector T cell responses in islet and kidney allografts
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American Society for Clinical Investigation
Abstract
Activation of host T cells that mediate allograft rejection is a 2-step process. The first occurs in secondary lymphoid organs where T cells encounter alloantigens presented by host DCs and differentiate to effectors. Antigen presentation at these sites occurs principally via transfer of intact, donor MHC-peptide complexes from graft cells to host DCs (cross-dressing) or by uptake and processing of donor antigens into allopeptides bound to self-MHC molecules (indirect presentation). The second step takes place in the graft, where effector T cells reengage with host DCs before causing rejection. How host DCs present alloantigens to T cells in the graft is not known. Using mouse islet and kidney transplantation models, imaging cytometry, and 2-photon intravital microscopy, we demonstrate extensive cross-dressing of intragraft host DCs with donor MHC-peptide complexes that occurred early after transplantation, whereas host DCs presenting donor antigen via the indirect pathway were rare. Cross-dressed DCs stably engaged TCR-transgenic effector CD8+ T cells that recognized donor antigen and were sufficient for sustaining acute rejection. In the chronic kidney rejection model, cross-dressing declined over time but was still conspicuous 8 weeks after transplantation. We conclude that cross-dressing of host DCs with donor MHC molecules is a major antigen presentation pathway driving effector T cell responses within allografts. © 2020, American Society for Clinical Investigation.
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Allografts, Animals, Cd8-positive t-lymphocytes, Dendritic cells, Graft rejection, Islets of langerhans transplantation, Kidney transplantation, Lymphocyte activation, Mice, Mice, knockout, Transplantation immunology, Acute graft rejection, Animal cell, Animal experiment, Animal model, Antigen presentation, Article, Cellular cross-dressing, Controlled study, Cytometry, Dendritic cell, Effector cell, Graft recipient, Intravital microscopy, Kidney allograft, Kidney graft rejection, Lymphoid organ, Major histocompatibility complex, Mouse, Nonhuman, Pancreas islet cell, Priority journal, T lymphocyte, Allograft, Animal, Cd8+ t lymphocyte, Histocompatibility, Immunology, Knockout mouse, Pancreas islet transplantation, Pathology