Summary: | The Fas pathway is critical for the maintenance of normal T cell homeostasis. Humans and mice with defects in this pathway exhibit the accumulation of large numbers of peripheral lymphocytes and lupus-like autoimmunity. A major feature of these organisms is the accumulation of non-NK TCRαβ+CD4-CD8- “double negative” (DN) T cells. While regulatory T cells (Tregs) with the DN phenotype have been extensively characterized in Fas-sufficient mice and humans, limited data exist on the role of DN T cells as Tregs in Fas-deficient animals. In fact, most of the literature suggests that the DN T cells accumulating in Fas-deficiency states are pathogenic, contributing to secondary lymph node enlargement and autoimmune disease. In this body of work, data are presented that illustrate that Fas-deficient lymphoproliferative (LPR) DN T cells can act as Tregs in an interferon γ (IFNγ)- and Fas ligand (FasL)-dependent fashion toward Fas-sufficient T cells. LPR DN T cells needed to be able to secrete and respond to IFNγ in order to upregulate surface FasL, in order to ameliorate GVHD mediated by CD4+ T cells in vivo and to suppress the proliferation of and kill activated CD4+ T cells in vitro.
FcRγ, a key molecule involved in innate immune responses, can substitute for CD3ζ in the T cell receptor (TCR) of mouse and human T cells in certain circumstances; in doing so, it is essential for the regulatory function of TCR transgenic DN Tregs. FcRγ-deficient LPR mice were found to have exacerbated T cell accumulation and early mortality. We show that while FcRγ expression was required for LPR DN T cells to regulate CD4+ and CD8+ T cells responding to alloantigens in vitro and in vivo, it does not control autologous lymphoproliferation in LPR mice by supporting the function of a regulatory cell, nor does it affect the rate of proliferation of LPR T cells in vivo. Instead, FcRγ-expressing LPR CD4+, CD8+ and DN T cells were found to be undergoing apoptosis at a high rate in vivo, and in contrast to their FcRγ-deficient counterparts, FcRγ+ LPR DN T cells were capable of undergoing TCR restimulation-induced cell death (RICD).
The data presented in this thesis therefore show that LPR DN T cells can exhibit IFNγ-, FasL- and FcRγ-dependent regulatory function, and also illustrate a previously unknown function for FcRγ in controlling the expansion of Fas-deficient T cells. The implications of these data for autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndromes, and normal T cell homeostasis, are discussed.
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