Cell Reports (Mar 2017)

Myocardial Infarction Primes Autoreactive T Cells through Activation of Dendritic Cells

  • Katrien Van der Borght,
  • Charlotte L. Scott,
  • Veronika Nindl,
  • Ann Bouché,
  • Liesbet Martens,
  • Dorine Sichien,
  • Justine Van Moorleghem,
  • Manon Vanheerswynghels,
  • Sofie De Prijck,
  • Yvan Saeys,
  • Burkhard Ludewig,
  • Thierry Gillebert,
  • Martin Guilliams,
  • Peter Carmeliet,
  • Bart N. Lambrecht

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.02.079
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 12
pp. 3005 – 3017

Abstract

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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.

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