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Hedgehog costimulation during ischemia-reperfusion injury potentiates cytokine and homing responses of CD4+ T cells
oleh: Shaoxun Wang, Shaoxun Wang, Shaoxun Wang, Guiyu Song, Guiyu Song, Guiyu Song, Mahsa Nouri Barkestani, Mahsa Nouri Barkestani, Zuzana Tobiasova, Qianxun Wang, Qianxun Wang, Quan Jiang, Quan Jiang, Roberto Lopez, Yasmin Adelekan-Kamara, Matthew Fan, Jordan S. Pober, George Tellides, Dan Jane-wit, Dan Jane-wit
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-10-01 |
Deskripsi
IntroductionIschemia 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.MethodsHere, we used multi-omics approaches and developed a humanized mouse model to resolve functional and migratory heterogeneity within the PtchHi population. ResultsHh-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. DiscussionOur studies define functional heterogeneity among a PtchHi T-cell population implicated in IRI.