4.7 Article

Peripheral CD103+ dendritic cells form a unified subset developmentally related to CD8α+ conventional dendritic cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 207, Issue 4, Pages 823-836

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20091627

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists
  3. Washington University School of Medicine
  4. German Research Foundation
  5. National Institutes of Health

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Although CD103-expressing dendritic cells (DCs) are widely present in nonlymphoid tissues, the transcription factors controlling their development and their relationship to other DC subsets remain unclear. Mice lacking the transcription factor Batf3 have a defect in the development of CD8 alpha(+) conventional DCs (cDCs) within lymphoid tissues. We demonstrate that Batf3(-/-) mice also lack CD103(+)CD11b(-) DCs in the lung, intestine, mesenteric lymph nodes (MLNs), dermis, and skin-draining lymph nodes. Notably, Batf3(-/-) mice displayed reduced priming of CD8 T cells after pulmonary Sendai virus infection, with increased pulmonary inflammation. In the MLNs and intestine, Batf3 deficiency resulted in the specific lack of CD103+ CD11b. DCs, with the population of CD103(+)CD11b(+) DCs remaining intact. Batf3(-/-) mice showed no evidence of spontaneous gastrointestinal inflammation and had a normal contact hypersensitivity (CHS) response, despite previous suggestions that CD103(+) DCs were required for immune homeostasis in the gut and CHS. The relationship between CD8 alpha(+) cDCs and nonlymphoid CD103(+) DCs implied by their shared dependence on Batf3 was further supported by similar patterns of gene expression and their shared developmental dependence on the transcription factor Irf8. These data provide evidence for a developmental relationship between lymphoid organ-resident CD8 alpha(+) cDCs and nonlymphoid CD103(+) DCs.

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