4.8 Article

Cross-dressed dendritic cells sustain effector T cell responses in islet and kidney allografts

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 130, Issue 1, Pages 287-294

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI125773

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [AI099465, AI064343, HL130191, 1S10RR028478, 1S10OD019942]
  2. ASN Merrill Grant in Transplantation
  3. American Society of Transplantation TIRN predoctoral scholarship
  4. American Society of Nephrology Ben J. Lipps Research Fellowship
  5. Frank & Athena Sarris Chair in Transplantation Biology

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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.

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