Defining the processes of autoimmune attack of tissues is important for inhibiting continued tissue destruction. In type 1 diabetes, it is not known how cytotoxic effector T cell responses evolve over time in the pancreatic islets targeted for destruction. We used two-photon microscopy of live, intact, individual islets to investigate how progression of islet infiltration altered the behavior of infiltrating islet-specific CD8+ T cells. During early-islet infiltration, T-cell interactions with CD11c+ antigen-presenting cells (APCs) were stable and real-time imaging of T cell receptor (TCR) clustering provided evidence of TCR recognition in these stable contacts. Early T cell-APC encounters supported production of IFN-γ by T effectors, and T cells at this stage also killed islet APCs. At later stages of infiltration, T-cell motility accelerated, and cytokine production was lost despite the presence of higher numbers of infiltrating APCs that were able to trigger T-cell signaling in vitro. Using timed introduction of effector T cells, we demonstrate that elements of the autoimmune-tissue microenvironment control the dynamics of autoantigen recognition by T cells and their resulting pathogenic effector functions.
CITATION STYLE
Friedman, R. S., Lindsay, R. S., Lilly, J. K., Nguyen, V., Sorensen, C. M., Jacobelli, J., & Krummel, M. F. (2014). An evolving autoimmune microenvironment regulates the quality of effector T cell restimulation and function. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(25), 9223–9228. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1322193111
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.