Schurich, Anna: Distinct dynamics and kinetics determine efficient antigen-presentation by LSEC and support IL-2 dependent CD8 T cell activation. - Bonn, 2009. - Dissertation, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn.
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:5N-17461
@phdthesis{handle:20.500.11811/4072,
urn: https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:5N-17461,
author = {{Anna Schurich}},
title = {Distinct dynamics and kinetics determine efficient antigen-presentation by LSEC and support IL-2 dependent CD8 T cell activation},
school = {Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn},
year = 2009,
month = may,

note = {Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSEC) have important clearance and immune regulatory functions, acting as unique organ resident APC. Soluble antigens are rapidly taken up by LSEC and can be cross-presented within 1h to CD8 T cell. We investigate the mechanism of efficient antigen uptake and cross-presentation by LSEC which are distinct from DC. We found LSEC to show more pronounced antigen uptake and cross-presentation than CD8a+ DC on a per cell basis ex vivo and in vitro. However, whereas DC cross-presented antigen for a prolonged period of time, antigen taken up by LSEC in vivo was rapidly cleared (t1/2= 5h) and cross-presentation declined accordingly within 24h.
It has recently been shown in DC, that cross-presentation of ovalbumin (OVA) is exclusively dependent on uptake by the mannose receptor (MR) which routes antigen into stable early endosomes (EEA1+), while antigen taken up via scavenger receptors (SR) was routed into lysosomal compartments and was not cross-presented. In contrast, MR-deficient LSEC did not show a significant reduction in cross-presentation. Furthermore there was no spatial separation of antigen taken up via the MR or SR receptor, which colocalized in transiently EEA1+ endosomal sorting compartments in LSEC. Receptor-mediated endocytosis did not always lead to cross-presentation, because immune-complexed antigen taken up via Fc-receptors was badly cross-presented by LSEC indicating that induction of CD8 T cell tolerance by LSEC was impaired in the presence of preexisting immunity. Our results provide a mechanistic explanation how organ-resident LSEC accommodate continuous scavenger function as well as cross-presentation of circulating antigens, utilizing distinct kinetics and dynamics for antigen-uptake, routing and cross-presentation compared to DC.
The functional outcome of cross-presentation of exogenous soluble antigen by LSEC on MHC-I-molecules to naïve CD8 T cells is the induction of T cell tolerance which depends on mutual up-regulation of co-inhibitory B7-H1 on LSEC and PD1 on CD8 T cells during antigen-specific interaction.
We further addressed the question whether the highly efficient cross-presentation by LSEC had an influence on tolerance induction over a range of antigen-concentrations. The concentration of OVA used to pulse LSEC directly correlated with the expression-levels of peptide-loaded MHC-I-molecules and thus strength of initial T cell-receptor stimulation. Surprisingly, LSEC induced tolerance only at low but not at high antigen-concentrations. T cell-differentiation into effector T lymphocytes (CTL) was caused by early release of IL-2 by naïve CD8 T cells. IL-2 expression and subsequent CTL-differentiation was influenced by B7-H1 mediated signals from cross-presenting LSEC and strength of T cell receptor (TCR) avidity. Dynamic expression of B7-H1 on LSEC correlated with the strength of TCR-signaling at low but not at high antigen-concentrations, indicating that the balance between TCR- and co-inhibitory signals controlled IL-2 expression. Exogenously added IL-2 abrogated LSEC mediated tolerance induction resulting in full CTL-differentiation. Our results indicate that T cell tolerance mediated by LSEC can be broken in situations where T cells with high-avidity TCR encounter LSEC cross-presenting high numbers of cognate MHC-I-peptide molecules, such as during viral infection of the liver. Furthermore, IL-2 produced by T cells during priming has a strong co-stimulatory function which might promote local induction of immunity in the liver.},

url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/4072}
}

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