Publication | Open Access
CTLA-4–mediated transendocytosis of costimulatory molecules primarily targets migratory dendritic cells
141
Citations
58
References
2019
Year
CTLA-4 is a critical negative regulator of the immune system and a major target for immunotherapy. However, precisely how it functions in vivo to maintain immune homeostasis is not clear. As a highly endocytic molecule, CTLA-4 can capture costimulatory ligands from opposing cells by a process of transendocytosis (TE). By restricting costimulatory ligand expression in this manner, CTLA-4 controls the CD28-dependent activation of T cells. Regulatory T cells (T<sub>regs</sub>) constitutively express CTLA-4 at high levels and, in its absence, show defects in TE and suppressive function. Activated conventional T cells (T<sub>conv</sub>) are also capable of CTLA-4-dependent TE; however, the relative use of this mechanism by T<sub>regs</sub> and T<sub>conv</sub> in vivo remains unclear. Here, we set out to characterize both the perpetrators and cellular targets of CTLA-4 TE in vivo. We found that T<sub>regs</sub> showed constitutive cell surface recruitment of CTLA-4 ex vivo and performed TE rapidly after TCR stimulation. T<sub>regs</sub> outperformed activated T<sub>conv</sub> at TE in vivo, and expression of ICOS marked T<sub>regs</sub> with this capability. Using TCR transgenic T<sub>regs</sub> that recognize a protein expressed in the pancreas, we showed that the presentation of tissue-derived self-antigen could trigger T<sub>regs</sub> to capture costimulatory ligands in vivo. Last, we identified migratory dendritic cells (DCs) as the major target for T<sub>reg</sub>-based CTLA-4-dependent regulation in the steady state. These data support a model in which CTLA-4 expressed on T<sub>regs</sub> dynamically regulates the phenotype of DCs trafficking to lymph nodes from peripheral tissues in an antigen-dependent manner.
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