Direct presentation of inflammation-associated self-antigens by thymic innate-like T cells induces elimination of autoreactive CD8+ thymocytes

  • Yuanyuan You
  • Josefine Dunst
  • Kewei Ye
  • Patrick A Sandoz
  • Annika Reinhardt
  • Inga Sandrock
  • Natalia R Comet
  • Rupak Dey Sarkar
  • Emily Yang
  • Estelle Duprez
  • Judith Agudo
  • Brian D Brown
  • Paul J Utz
  • Wolfgang Kastenmüller
  • Carmen Gerlach
  • Immo Prinz
  • Björn Önfelt
  • Taras Kreslavsky

Related Research units

Abstract

Upregulation of diverse self-antigens that constitute components of the inflammatory response overlaps spatially and temporally with the emergence of pathogen-derived foreign antigens. Therefore, discrimination between these inflammation-associated self-antigens and pathogen-derived molecules represents a unique challenge for the adaptive immune system. Here, we demonstrate that CD8+ T cell tolerance to T cell-derived inflammation-associated self-antigens is efficiently induced in the thymus and supported by redundancy in cell types expressing these molecules. In addition to thymic epithelial cells, this included thymic eosinophils and innate-like T cells, a population that expressed molecules characteristic for all major activated T cell subsets. We show that direct T cell-to-T cell antigen presentation by minute numbers of innate-like T cells was sufficient to eliminate autoreactive CD8+ thymocytes. Tolerance to such effector molecules was of critical importance, as its breach caused by decreased thymic abundance of a single model inflammation-associated self-antigen resulted in autoimmune elimination of an entire class of effector T cells.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1529-2908
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 08.2024

Comment Deanary

© 2024. The Author(s).

PubMed 38992254