Hedgehog costimulation during ischemia-reperfusion injury potentiates cytokine and homing responses of CD4+ T cells

缺血再灌注损伤期间 Hedgehog 共刺激增强 CD4+ T 细胞的细胞因子和归巢反应

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作者:Shaoxun Wang ,Guiyu Song ,Mahsa Nouri Barkestani ,Zuzana Tobiasova ,Qianxun Wang ,Quan Jiang ,Roberto Lopez ,Yasmin Adelekan-Kamara ,Matthew Fan ,Jordan S Pober ,George Tellides ,Dan Jane-Wit

Abstract

Introduction: Ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI) confers worsened outcomes and is an increasing clinical problem in solid organ transplantation. Previously, we identified a "PtchHi" T-cell subset that selectively received costimulatory signals from endothelial cell-derived Hedgehog (Hh) morphogens to mediate IRI-induced vascular inflammation. Methods: Here, we used multi-omics approaches and developed a humanized mouse model to resolve functional and migratory heterogeneity within the PtchHi population. Results: Hh-mediated costimulation induced oligoclonal and polyclonal expansion of clones within the PtchHi population, and we visualized three distinct subsets within inflamed, IRI-treated human skin xenografts exhibiting polyfunctional cytokine responses. One of these PtchHi subsets displayed features resembling recently described T peripheral helper cells, including elaboration of IFN-y and IL-21, expression of ICOS and PD-1, and upregulation of positioning molecules conferring recruitment and retention within peripheral but not lymphoid tissues. PtchHi T cells selectively homed to IRI-treated human skin xenografts to cause accelerated allograft loss, and Hh signaling was sufficient for this process to occur. Discussion: Our studies define functional heterogeneity among a PtchHi T-cell population implicated in IRI.

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