Abstract
Although most self-reactive T cells are eliminated in the thymus, mechanisms to inactivate or control T cells specific for extrathymic antigens are required and exist in the periphery. By investigating the site in which autoreactive T cells are tolerized, we identify a unique mechanism of peripheral deletion in which naïve autoreactive CD8 T cells are rapidly eliminated in the liver after intrahepatic activation. T cells actively invade hepatocytes, enter endosomal/lysosomal compartments, and are degraded. Blockade of this process leads to accumulation of autoreactive CD8 T cells in the liver and breach of tolerance, with the development of autoimmune hepatitis. Cell into cell invasion, or emperipolesis, is a long-observed phenomenon for which a physiological role has not been previously demonstrated. We propose that this "suicidal emperipolesis" is a unique mechanism of autoreactive T-cell deletion, a process critical for the maintenance of tolerance.
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Benseler, V., Warren, A., Vo, M., Holz, L. E., Tay, S. S., Le Couteur, D. G., … Bertolino, P. (2011). Hepatocyte entry leads to degradation of autoreactive CD8 T cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(40), 16735–16740. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1112251108
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