CD1a-autoreactive T cells are a normal component of the human aß T cell repertoire.

Publication date

2010

Authors

de Jong, A.
Pena-Cruz, V.
Cheng, T.Y.
Clark, R.A.
Van Rhijn, IldikoORCID 0000-0002-1446-5701ISNI 0000000396974119
Moody, D.B.

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Article

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Abstract

CD1 activates T cells, but the function and size of the possible human T cell repertoires that recognize each of the CD1 antigen-presenting molecules remain unknown. Using an experimental system that bypasses major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction and the requirement for defined antigens, we show that polyclonal T cells responded at higher rates to cells expressing CD1a than to those expressing CD1b, CD1c or CD1d. Unlike the repertoire of invariant natural killer T (NKT) cells, the CD1a-autoreactive repertoire contained diverse T cell antigen receptors (TCRs). Functionally, many CD1a-autoreactive T cells homed to skin, where they produced interleukin 22 (IL-22) in response to CD1a on Langerhans cells. The strong and frequent responses among genetically diverse donors define CD1a-autoreactive cells as a normal part of the human T cell repertoire and CD1a as a target of the TH22 subset of helper T cells.

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Citation

de Jong, A, Pena-Cruz, V, Cheng, T Y, Clark, R A, van Rhijn, I & Moody, D B 2010, 'CD1a-autoreactive T cells are a normal component of the human aß T cell repertoire.', Nature Immunology, vol. 11, no. 12, pp. 1102-1109. https://doi.org/10.1038/ni.1956