Lymph Node Occupancy Is Required for the Peripheral Development of Alloantigen-Specific <i>Foxp3</i> + Regulatory T Cells

Jordi Ochando(Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult), Adam C. Yopp(Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult), Yu Yang(Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult), Alexandre Garin(Mount Sinai Hospital), Yansui Li(Mount Sinai Hospital), Péter Boros(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jaime Llodrá(Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult), Yaozhong Ding(Mount Sinai Hospital), Sérgio A. Lira(Mount Sinai Hospital), Nancy Krieger(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jonathan S. Bromberg(Mount Sinai Hospital)
The Journal of Immunology
June 1, 2005
Cited by 182

Abstract

We previously demonstrated that L-selectin (CD62L)-dependent T cell homing to lymph nodes (LN) is required for tolerance induction to alloantigen. To explore the mechanisms of this observation, we analyzed the development and distribution of regulatory T cells (Treg), which play an important protective role against allograft rejection in transplantation tolerance. Alloantigen-specific tolerance was induced using either anti-CD2 plus anti-CD3 mAbs, or anti-CD40L mAbs plus donor-specific transfusion, in fully mismatched (BALB/c donor, C57BL/6 recipient) vascularized cardiac allografts. An expansion of CD4(+)CD25(+)CD62L(high) T cells was observed specifically within the LN of tolerant animals, but not in other anatomic sites or under nontolerizing conditions. These cells exhibited a substantial up-regulation of Foxp3 expression as measured by real-time PCR and by fluorescent immunohistochemistry, and possessed alloantigen-specific suppressor activity. Neither LN nor other lymphoid cells expressed the regulatory phenotype if recipients were treated with anti-CD62L mAbs, which both prevented LN homing and caused early allograft rejection. However, administration of FTY720, a sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor modulator that induces CD62L-independent T cell accumulation in the LNs, restored CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg in the LNs along with graft survival. These data suggest that alloantigen-specific Foxp3(+)CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg develop and are required within the LNs during tolerization, and provide compelling evidence that distinct lymphoid compartments play critical roles in transplantation tolerance.


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