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Absence of MHC class II on cDC1 dendritic cells triggers fatal autoimmunity to a cross-presented self-antigen
Author(s) -
Christian Wohn,
Valentin Le Guen,
Odessa Voluzan,
Frédéric Di Fiore,
Sandrine Henri,
Bernard Malissen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.83
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2470-9468
DOI - 10.1126/sciimmunol.aba1896
Subject(s) - biology , cross presentation , autoimmunity , immunology , effector , microbiology and biotechnology , cd8 , antigen , mhc class i , immune system
Conventional dendritic cells expressing the XCR1 chemokine receptor (cDC1s) excel at cross-presentation. Here, we developed and used a mouse model in which a Cre recombinase is expressed under the control of the Xcr1 gene while preserving XCR1 expression. We used it to generate mice with conditional deletion of MHC class II (MHCII) molecules on cDC1s. By preventing cDC1s to receive suppressive regulatory T cell inputs via MHCII-restricted interactions, the objective of the present study was to gauge whether MHCII-deficient cDC1s lose their capacity of tolerizing autoreactive CD8 + T cells. Whereas MHCII + cDC1 readily cross-tolerized strongly autoreactive CD8 + T cells specific for a keratinocyte-derived self-antigen, MHCII-deficient cDC1s converted them into potent effectors capable of triggering a fast-onset lethal autoimmunity associated with severe skin histopathological manifestations. Preventing egress of such pathogenic self-reactive CD8 + T cell effectors from the cutaneous draining lymph nodes abrogated the autoimmune condition. Therefore, our results revealed that the cross-tolerizing capacity of cDC1s is not a property fully acquired at the time they undergo homeostatic maturation but needs to be enforced via MHCII-restricted, suppressive interactions with regulatory T cells.

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