Antigen Recognition By Autoreactive Cd4+ Thymocytes Drives Homeostasis Of The Thymic Medulla

Archive ouverte

Irla, Magali | Guerri, Lucia | Guenot, Jeanne | Sergé, Arnauld | Lantz, Olivier | Liston, Adrian | Imhof, Beat | Palmer, Ed | Reith, Walter

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

International audience. The thymic medulla is dedicated for purging the T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire of self-reactive specificities. Medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs) play a pivotal role in this process because they express numerous peripheral tissue-restricted self-antigens. Although it is well known that medulla formation depends on the development of single-positive (SP) thymocytes, the mechanisms underlying this requirement are incompletely understood. We demonstrate here that conventional SP CD4⁺ thymocytes bearing autoreactive TCRs drive a homeostatic process that fine-tunes medullary plasticity in adult mice by governing the expansion and patterning of the medulla. This process exhibits strict dependence on TCR-reactivity with self-antigens expressed by mTECs, as well as engagement of the CD28-CD80/CD86 costimulatory axis. These interactions induce the expression of lymphotoxin α in autoreactive CD4⁺ thymocytes and RANK in mTECs. Lymphotoxin in turn drives mTEC development in synergy with RANKL and CD40L. Our results show that Ag-dependent interactions between autoreactive CD4⁺ thymocytes and mTECs fine-tune homeostasis of the medulla by completing the signaling axes implicated in mTEC expansion and medullary organization.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Three-Dimensional Visualization of the Mouse Thymus Organization in Health and Immunodeficiency

Archive ouverte | Irla, Magali | CCSD

International audience

For3D: Full organ reconstruction in 3D, an automatized tool for deciphering the complexity of lymphoid organs

Archive ouverte | Sergé, Arnauld | CCSD

International audience

Stepwise development of MAIT cells in mouse and human.

Archive ouverte | Martin, Emmanuel | CCSD

International audience. Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells display two evolutionarily conserved features: an invariant T cell receptor (TCR)alpha (iTCRalpha) chain and restriction by the nonpolymorphic clas...

Chargement des enrichissements...