4.8 Article

Kupffer cells required for high affinity peptide-induced deletion, not retention, of activated CD8+T cells by mouse liver

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 1017-1027

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hep.20153

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [K08DK002965, P 30 DK34989, T32 DK07356] Funding Source: Medline

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The immune response to foreign antigens in the liver is often suboptimal and this is clinically relevant in chronic persistence of hepatotropic viruses. In chronic infection with the hepatitis C virus, activated CD8+ T cells specific for viral epitopes are present in the peripheral blood and the liver, yet viral clearance is unusual. To define the fate of activated CD8+ entering the liver, we developed a mouse model of portal vein injection of activated CD8+ T cells in vivo. Activated CD8+ T cells are retained very efficiently by the liver and undergo an approximately 8-fold expansion in the first 48 hours. This expansion is followed by apoptosis and a decline in numbers of the retained cells over the next 4 days. The presence of high affinity (HA) antigen does not affect the initial retention by the liver but greatly limits the expansion in the first 48 hours by increasing apoptosis of the retained cells. In the absence of Kupffer cells, the initial retention and expansion are unchanged, but HA antigen does not limit the expansion of the liver CD8+ T cell pool. In conclusion, these data identify a previously unknown phase of CD8+ T cell expansion after entering the liver, demonstrate that RA antigen limits the hepatic CD8+ T cell pool by inducing apoptosis, and that this effect requires Kupffer cells. Interfering with antigen presentation by Kupffer cells may be a strategy to limit RA antigen-induced deletion of activated CD8+ T cells entering the liver.

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