Intestinal cDC1 drive cross-tolerance to epithelial-derived antigen via induction of FoxP3+CD8+ Tregs
T Joeris, C Gomez-Casado, P Holmkvist… - Science …, 2021 - science.org
T Joeris, C Gomez-Casado, P Holmkvist, SJ Tavernier, A Silva-Sanchez, L Klotz, TD Randall…
Science immunology, 2021•science.orgAlthough CD8+ T cell tolerance to tissue-specific antigen (TSA) is essential for host
homeostasis, the mechanisms underlying peripheral cross-tolerance and whether they may
differ between tissue sites remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that
peripheral cross-tolerance to intestinal epithelial cell (IEC)–derived antigen involves the
generation and suppressive function of FoxP3+ CD8+ T cells. FoxP3+ CD8+ Treg
generation was dependent on intestinal cDC1, whose absence led to a break of tolerance …
homeostasis, the mechanisms underlying peripheral cross-tolerance and whether they may
differ between tissue sites remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that
peripheral cross-tolerance to intestinal epithelial cell (IEC)–derived antigen involves the
generation and suppressive function of FoxP3+ CD8+ T cells. FoxP3+ CD8+ Treg
generation was dependent on intestinal cDC1, whose absence led to a break of tolerance …
Although CD8+ T cell tolerance to tissue-specific antigen (TSA) is essential for host homeostasis, the mechanisms underlying peripheral cross-tolerance and whether they may differ between tissue sites remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that peripheral cross-tolerance to intestinal epithelial cell (IEC)–derived antigen involves the generation and suppressive function of FoxP3+CD8+ T cells. FoxP3+CD8+ Treg generation was dependent on intestinal cDC1, whose absence led to a break of tolerance and epithelial destruction. Mechanistically, intestinal cDC1-derived PD-L1, TGFβ, and retinoic acid contributed to the generation of gut-tropic CCR9+CD103+FoxP3+CD8+ Tregs. Last, CD103-deficient CD8+ T cells lacked tolerogenic activity in vivo, indicating a role for CD103 in FoxP3+CD8+ Treg function. Our results describe a role for FoxP3+CD8+ Tregs in cross-tolerance in the intestine for which development requires intestinal cDC1.
