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Transplantation Tolerance to a Single Noninherited MHC Class I Maternal Alloantigen Studied in a TCR-Transgenic Mouse Model

Authors :
Yoshinobu Akiyama
Gilles Benichou
Yoshiko Iwamoto
Colette Kanellopoulos-Langevin
Katsunori Tanaka
Cécile Vernochet
Stéphane M. Caucheteux
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston]
Institut Jacques Monod (IJM (UMR_7592))
Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health (Grants RO1HD050484 and KO2AI53103, french Ministry of Education and Research, Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale and Ligue contre le Cancer, North Atlantic Treaty Organization Science Program collaborative grant
Source :
Journal of Immunology, Journal of Immunology, Publisher : Baltimore : Williams & Wilkins, c1950-. Latest Publisher : Bethesda, MD : American Association of Immunologists, 2011, 186 (3), pp.1442-9. ⟨10.4049/jimmunol.1003023⟩
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The mechanisms underlying tolerance to noninherited maternal Ags (NIMA) are not fully understood. In this study, we designed a double-transgenic model in which all the offspring’s CD8+ T cells corresponded to a single clone recognizing the Kb MHC class I protein. In contrast, the mother and the father of the offspring differed by the expression of a single Ag, Kb, that served as NIMA. We investigated the influence of NIMA exposure on the offspring thymic T cell selection during ontogeny and on its peripheral T cell response during adulthood. We observed that anti-Kb thymocytes were exposed to NIMA and became activated during fetal life but were not deleted. Strikingly, adult mice exposed to NIMA accepted permanently Kb+ heart allografts despite the presence of normal levels of anti-Kb TCR transgenic T cells. Transplant tolerance was associated with a lack of a proinflammatory alloreactive T cell response and an activation/expansion of T cells producing IL-4 and IL-10. In addition, we observed that tolerance to NIMA Kb was abrogated via depletion of CD4+ but not CD8+ T cells and could be transferred to naive nonexposed mice via adoptive transfer of CD4+CD25high T cell expressing Foxp3 isolated from NIMA mice.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221767 and 15506606
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Immunology, Journal of Immunology, Publisher : Baltimore : Williams & Wilkins, c1950-. Latest Publisher : Bethesda, MD : American Association of Immunologists, 2011, 186 (3), pp.1442-9. ⟨10.4049/jimmunol.1003023⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d71f750ff9fe49aa3c8242cd32c60537