Release of dendritic cells from cognate CD4+ T-cell recognition results in impaired peripheral tolerance and fatal cytotoxic T-cell mediated autoimmunity

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Abstract

Resting dendritic cells (DCs) induce tolerance of peripheral T cells that have escaped thymic negative selection and thus contribute significantly to protection against autoimmunity. We recently showed that CD4 +Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) are important for maintaining the steady-state phenotype of DCs and their tolerizing capacity in vivo. We now provide evidence that DC activation in the absence of Tregs is a direct consequence of missing DC-Treg interactions rather than being secondary to generalized autoimmunity in Treg-less mice. We show that DCs that lack MHC class II and thus cannot make cognate interactions with CD4+ T cells are completely unable to induce peripheral CD8+ T-cell tolerance. Consequently, mice in which interactions between DC and CD4+ T cells are not possible develop spontaneous and fatal cytotoxic T lymphocyte- mediated autoimmunity.

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Muth, S., Schuẗze, K., Schild, H., & Probst, H. C. (2012). Release of dendritic cells from cognate CD4+ T-cell recognition results in impaired peripheral tolerance and fatal cytotoxic T-cell mediated autoimmunity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(23), 9059–9064. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1110620109

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