Ablation of interferon regulatory factor 4 in T cells induces "memory" of transplant tolerance that is irreversible by immune checkpoint blockade. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Achieving transplant tolerance remains the ultimate goal in the field of organ transplantation. We demonstrated previously that ablation of the transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) in T cells induced heart transplant acceptance by driving allogeneic CD4+ T cell dysfunction. Herein, we showed that heart-transplanted mice with T cell-specific IRF4 deletion were tolerant to donor-specific antigens and accepted the subsequently transplanted donor-type but not third-party skin allografts. Moreover, despite the rejection of the primary heart grafts in T cell-specific Irf4 knockout mice under immune checkpoint blockade, the establishment of donor-specific tolerance in these mice was unhindered. By tracking alloantigen-specific CD4+ T cells in vivo, we revealed that checkpoint blockade restored the expression levels of the majority of wild-type T cell-expressed genes in Irf4-deficient T cells on day 6 post-heart grafting, indicating the initial reinvigoration of Irf4-deficient T cells. Nevertheless, checkpoint blockade did not restore cell frequency, effector memory cell generation, and IFN-γ/TNF-α production of Irf4-/- alloreactive T cells at day 30 post-heart grafting. Hence, targeting IRF4 represents a potential therapeutic strategy for driving intrinsic T cell dysfunction and achieving alloantigen-specific transplant tolerance.

publication date

  • December 25, 2018

Research

keywords

  • CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes
  • Graft Rejection
  • Graft Survival
  • Heart Transplantation
  • Immunologic Memory
  • Interferon Regulatory Factors
  • Transplantation Tolerance

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6440205

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85059031527

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/ajt.15196

PubMed ID

  • 30468559

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 19

issue

  • 3