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Failures in thymus medulla regeneration during immune recovery cause tolerance loss and prime recipients for auto-GVHD
Author(s) -
Abdullah S. Alawam,
Emilie J. Cosway,
Kieran D. James,
Beth Lucas,
Andrea Bacon,
Sonia M. Parnell,
Andrea J. White,
William E. Jenkinson,
Graham Anderson
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of experimental medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.483
H-Index - 448
eISSN - 1540-9538
pISSN - 0022-1007
DOI - 10.1084/jem.20211239
Subject(s) - central tolerance , foxp3 , biology , immunology , immune tolerance , autoimmunity , transplantation , regeneration (biology) , clonal deletion , t cell , immune system , bone marrow , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer research , t cell receptor , medicine
Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is a widely used therapy for blood cancers and primary immunodeficiency. Following transplant, the thymus plays a key role in immune reconstitution by generating a naive αβT cell pool from transplant-derived progenitors. While donor-derived thymopoiesis during the early post-transplant period is well studied, the ability of the thymus to synchronize T cell development with essential tolerance mechanisms is poorly understood. Using a syngeneic mouse transplant model, we analyzed T cell recovery alongside the regeneration and function of intrathymic microenvironments. We report a specific and prolonged failure in the post-transplant recovery of medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs). This manifests as loss of medulla-dependent tolerance mechanisms, including failures in Foxp3+ regulatory T cell development and formation of the intrathymic dendritic cell pool. In addition, defective negative selection enables escape of self-reactive conventional αβT cells that promote autoimmunity. Collectively, we show that post-transplant T cell recovery involves an uncoupling of thymopoiesis from thymic tolerance, which results in autoimmune reconstitution caused by failures in thymic medulla regeneration.

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