Priming of CD4+ T cells by liver sinusoidal endothelial cells induces CD25low forkhead box protein 3- regulatory T cells suppressing autoimmune hepatitis

  • Nils Kruse
  • Katrin Neumann
  • Arnhild Schrage
  • Katja Derkow
  • Eckart Schott
  • Ulrike Erben
  • Anja Kühl
  • Christoph Loddenkemper
  • Martin Zeitz
  • Alf Hamann
  • Katja Klugewitz

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Elucidating cellular mechanisms that maintain the intrahepatic immune balance is crucial to our understanding of viral or autoimmune liver diseases and allograft acceptance. Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) play an important role in modifying local immune responses to tolerance in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) I-restricted models, whereas their contribution in the MHCII context is still controversial. In an MHCII chimeric mouse model that excludes MHCII-mediated antigen presentation by professional antigen-presenting cells, we demonstrated that LSECs prime CD4(+) T cells to a CD45RB(low) memory phenotype lacking marker cytokine production for effector cells that was stable in vivo following immunogenic antigen re-encounter. Although these cells, which we term T(LSEC), had the capacity to enter lymph nodes and the liver, they did not function as effector cells either in a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction or in a hepatitis model. T(LSEC) inhibited the proliferation of naïve CD4(+) T cells in vitro although being CD25(low) and lacking expression of forkhead box protein (FoxP)3. Furthermore, these cells suppressed hepatic inflammation as monitored by alanine aminotransferase levels and cellular infiltrates in a T cell-mediated autoimmune hepatitis model in vivo.

CONCLUSION: T(LSEC) first described here might belong to the expanding group of FoxP3(-) regulatory T cells. Our findings strengthen the previously discussed assumption that CD4(+) T cell priming by nonprofessional antigen-presenting cells induces anti-inflammatory rather than proinflammatory phenotypes. Because recruitment of CD4(+) T cells is increased upon hepatic inflammation, T(LSEC) might contribute to shifting antigen-dependent immune responses to tolerance toward exogenous antigens or toward endogenous self-antigens, especially under inflammatory conditions.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0270-9139
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2009
PubMed 19787806