T cell exhaustion dynamics in systemic autoimmune disease
Turner, C. N.; Camilo Sanchez Arcila, J.; Huerta, N.; Quiguoe, A. R.; Jensen, K. D. C.; Hoyer, K. K.
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Unlike in infection and cancer, T cell exhaustion in autoimmune disease has not been clearly defined. Here we set out to understand inhibitory protein (PD-1, Tim3, CTLA4, Lag3) expression in CXCR5- and CXCR5+ CD8 and CD4 T cells in systemic lupus erythematosus. CXCR5+ CD8 and CD4 T cells express PD-1 and engage B cells in germinal center reactions, leading to autoantibody formation in autoimmunity. We hypothesized that CXCR5+ CD8 T cells develop an exhausted phenotype as SLE autoimmunity expands from initial to chronic, self-perpetuating disease due to chronic self-antigen exposure. Our results indicate that there is no exhaustion frequency differences between sexes, although disease kinetics vary by sex. CXCR5+ CD8 T cells express primarily IFN{gamma}, known to promote autoimmune disease development, whereas CXCR5-CD8 T cells express TNF and IFN{gamma} as disease progresses from 2-6 months. Tim3 is the highest expressed inhibitory marker for all CD4 and CD8 T cell populations demonstrating potential for terminally exhausted populations. CTLA4 expression on CD4 T cells suggests potential tolerance induction in these cells. We identified exhaustion phenotypes within autoimmune disease that progress with increasing lupus erythematosus severity and possibly provide a feedback mechanism for immunological tolerance. HighlightsO_LICXCR5- and CXCR5+ CD8 T cells expand with rate of disease in SLE mouse model. C_LIO_LICXCR5+ CD8 T cells are low contributors to TNF disease progression unlike CXCR5-CD8 T cells but may increase disease mechanisms through high IFN{gamma} production. C_LIO_LIInhibitory markers upregulate in frequency with the highest amounts seen in Tim3+ populations. Tim3+Lag3+ expression may be an indicator of terminal differentiation for all populations. C_LIO_LIInhibitory marker expression frequency was unrelated to sex. C_LI
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