Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2023)

Acute irradiation causes a long-term disturbance in the heterogeneity and gene expression profile of medullary thymic epithelial cells

  • Kenta Horie,
  • Kenta Horie,
  • Kano Namiki,
  • Kano Namiki,
  • Kyouhei Kinoshita,
  • Maki Miyauchi,
  • Tatsuya Ishikawa,
  • Tatsuya Ishikawa,
  • Mio Hayama,
  • Mio Hayama,
  • Yuya Maruyama,
  • Yuya Maruyama,
  • Naho Hagiwara,
  • Takahisa Miyao,
  • Shigeo Murata,
  • Tetsuya J. Kobayashi,
  • Nobuko Akiyama,
  • Nobuko Akiyama,
  • Taishin Akiyama,
  • Taishin Akiyama

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1186154
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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The thymus has the ability to regenerate from acute injury caused by radiation, infection, and stressors. In addition to thymocytes, thymic epithelial cells in the medulla (mTECs), which are crucial for T cell self-tolerance by ectopically expressing and presenting thousands of tissue-specific antigens (TSAs), are damaged by these insults and recover thereafter. However, given recent discoveries on the high heterogeneity of mTECs, it remains to be determined whether the frequency and properties of mTEC subsets are restored during thymic recovery from radiation damage. Here we demonstrate that acute total body irradiation with a sublethal dose induces aftereffects on heterogeneity and gene expression of mTECs. Single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis showed that irradiation reduces the frequency of mTECs expressing AIRE, which is a critical regulator of TSA expression, 15 days after irradiation. In contrast, transit-amplifying mTECs (TA-mTECs), which are progenitors of AIRE-expressing mTECs, and Ccl21a-expressing mTECs, were less affected. Interestingly, a detailed analysis of scRNA-seq data suggested that the proportion of a unique mTEC cluster expressing Ccl25 and a high level of TSAs was severely decreased by irradiation. In sum, we propose that the effects of acute irradiation disrupt the heterogeneity and properties of mTECs over an extended period, which potentially leads to an impairment of thymic T cell selection.

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