Virally infected mouse liver endothelial cells trigger CD8+ T-cell immunity

  • Michaela Kern
  • Alexey Popov
  • Kai Scholz
  • Beatrix Schumak
  • Dominik Djandji
  • Andreas Limmer
  • Daniela Eggle
  • Torsten Sacher
  • Rainer Zawatzky
  • Rafaela Holtappels
  • Matthias J Reddehase
  • Gunther Hartmann
  • Svenja Debey-Pascher
  • Linda Diehl
  • Ulrich Kalinke
  • Ulrich Koszinowski
  • Joachim Schultze
  • Percy A Knolle

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Dendritic cell activation through ligation of pattern recognition receptors leading to full functional maturation causes induction of CD8(+) T-cell immunity through increased delivery of costimulatory signals instead of tolerance. Here we investigate whether organ-resident antigen-presenting cells, such as liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs), also switch from tolerogenic to immunogenic CD8(+) T-cell activation upon such stimulation.

METHODS: Murine LSECs were isolated by immunomagnetic separation and analyzed for functional maturation upon triggering pattern recognition receptors or viral infection employing gene expression analysis and T cell coculture assays. In vivo relevance of the findings was confirmed with bone-marrow chimeric animals.

RESULTS: LSECs expressed numerous pattern recognition receptors that allowed for sentinel function, but ligand-induced activation of these receptors was not sufficient to overcome tolerance induction of CD8(+) T cells. Importantly, viral infection with murine cytomegalovirus caused functional maturation of antigen-presenting LSECs and was sufficient to promote antigen-specific differentiation into effector CD8(+) T cells in the absence of dendritic cells and independent of CD80/86.

CONCLUSIONS: These results shed new light on the generation of organ-specific immunity and may contribute to overcoming tolerance in relevant situations, such as cancer.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0016-5085
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.2010
PubMed 19737567