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Intragraft memory-like CD127hiCD4+Foxp3+ Tregs maintain transplant tolerance
Yuanfei Zhao, Leigh Nicholson, Hannah Wang, Yi Wen Qian, Wayne J. Hawthorne, Elvira Jimenez-Vera, Brian S. Gloss, Joey Lai, Adwin Thomas, Yi Vee Chew, Heather Burns, Geoff Y. Zhang, Yuan Min Wang, Natasha M. Rogers, Guoping Zheng, Shounan Yi, Stephen I. Alexander, Philip J. O’Connell, Min Hu
Yuanfei Zhao, Leigh Nicholson, Hannah Wang, Yi Wen Qian, Wayne J. Hawthorne, Elvira Jimenez-Vera, Brian S. Gloss, Joey Lai, Adwin Thomas, Yi Vee Chew, Heather Burns, Geoff Y. Zhang, Yuan Min Wang, Natasha M. Rogers, Guoping Zheng, Shounan Yi, Stephen I. Alexander, Philip J. O’Connell, Min Hu
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Research Article Transplantation

Intragraft memory-like CD127hiCD4+Foxp3+ Tregs maintain transplant tolerance

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Abstract

CD4+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) play an essential role in suppressing transplant rejection, but their role within the graft and heterogeneity in tolerance are poorly understood. Here, we compared phenotypic and transcriptomic characteristics of Treg populations within lymphoid organs and grafts in an islet xenotransplant model of tolerance. We showed Tregs were essential for tolerance induction and maintenance. Tregs demonstrated heterogeneity within the graft and lymphoid organs of tolerant mice. A subpopulation of CD127hi Tregs with memory features were found in lymphoid organs, presented in high proportions within long-surviving islet grafts, and had a transcriptomic and phenotypic profile similar to tissue Tregs. Importantly, these memory-like CD127hi Tregs were better able to prevent rejection by effector T cells, after adoptive transfer into secondary Rag–/– hosts, than naive Tregs or unselected Tregs from tolerant mice. Administration of IL-7 to the CD127hi Treg subset was associated with a strong activation of phosphorylation of STAT5. We proposed that memory-like CD127hi Tregs developed within the draining lymph node and underwent further genetic reprogramming within the graft toward a phenotype that had shared characteristics with other tissue or tumor Tregs. These findings suggested that engineering Tregs with these characteristics either in vivo or for adoptive transfer could enhance transplant tolerance.

Authors

Yuanfei Zhao, Leigh Nicholson, Hannah Wang, Yi Wen Qian, Wayne J. Hawthorne, Elvira Jimenez-Vera, Brian S. Gloss, Joey Lai, Adwin Thomas, Yi Vee Chew, Heather Burns, Geoff Y. Zhang, Yuan Min Wang, Natasha M. Rogers, Guoping Zheng, Shounan Yi, Stephen I. Alexander, Philip J. O’Connell, Min Hu

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Figure 7

CD127hi Tregs and graft Tregs in transplant-tolerant recipients share transcriptional trajectory with tissue Tregs.

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CD127hi Tregs and graft Tregs in transplant-tolerant recipients share tr...
(A) Heatmap of the 237 unique DEGs (FDR < 0.05) derived from 9 paired cross-comparisons within 7 Treg subsets (Supplemental Table 1 with a symbol, §). Treg subsets were the same as shown in Figure 6. Compared with either naive Treg or CD127– Treg subsets, the shared upregulated DEGs or tendency of enhanced gene expressions (DEGs with FDR < 0.05 for at least 1 paired comparison) across SP/CD127hi Treg, DLN/CD127hi Treg and graft Treg subsets were marked with the star, among DLN/CD127hi Treg and graft Treg subsets were indicated with the filled dot, and among SP/CD127hi Treg and graft Treg subsets were marked with the unfilled dot. (B) GO Biological Process pathway analysis based on DEGs (absolute log FC > 1.5 and P < 0.01) in the 6 paired cross-comparisons listed in Supplemental Table 3.

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