Publikation

Myocardial Infarction Primes Autoreactive T Cells through Activation of Dendritic Cells

Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 21.03.2017

Bereiche
PubMed
DOI

Zitation
Van der Borght K, Carmeliet P, Guilliams M, Gillebert T, Ludewig B, Saeys Y, De Prijck S, Vanheerswynghels M, Van Moorleghem J, Sichien D, Martens L, Bouché A, Nindl V, Scott C, Lambrecht B. Myocardial Infarction Primes Autoreactive T Cells through Activation of Dendritic Cells. Cell Rep 2017; 18:3005-3017.
Art
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
Zeitschrift
Cell Rep 2017; 18
Veröffentlichungsdatum
21.03.2017
eISSN (Online)
2211-1247
Seiten
3005-3017
Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung

Peripheral tolerance is crucial for avoiding activation of self-reactive T cells to tissue-restricted antigens. Sterile tissue injury can break peripheral tolerance, but it is unclear how autoreactive T cells get activated in response to self. An example of a sterile injury is myocardial infarction (MI). We hypothesized that tissue necrosis is an activator of dendritic cells (DCs), which control tolerance to self-antigens. DC subsets of a murine healthy heart consisted of IRF8-dependent conventional (c)DC1, IRF4-dependent cDC2, and monocyte-derived DCs. In steady state, cardiac self-antigen α-myosin was presented in the heart-draining mediastinal lymph node (mLN) by cDC1s, driving the proliferation of antigen-specific CD4(+) TCR-M T cells and their differentiation into regulatory cells (Tregs). Following MI, all DC subsets infiltrated the heart, whereas only cDCs migrated to the mLN. Here, cDC2s induced TCR-M proliferation and differentiation into interleukin-(IL)-17/interferon-(IFN)γ-producing effector cells. Thus, cardiac-specific autoreactive T cells get activated by mature DCs following myocardial infarction.