Small intestinal CD103+ dendritic cells display unique functional properties that are conserved between mice and humans

Author:

Jaensson Elin1,Uronen-Hansson Heli1,Pabst Oliver2,Eksteen Bertus3,Tian Jiong4,Coombes Janine L.5,Berg Pia-Lena6,Davidsson Thomas7,Powrie Fiona5,Johansson-Lindbom Bengt1,Agace William W.1

Affiliation:

1. Immunology Section, BMC D14, 221 84 Lund University, Lund, Sweden

2. Institute of Immunology, Hannover Medical School, 30625 Hannover, Germany

3. Liver Research Group, Medical Research Council Centre for Immune Regulation, Institute of Biomedical Research, University of Birmingham Medical School, Birmingham, England, UK

4. Department of Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, Hannover Medical School, 30625 Hannover, Germany

5. Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, UK

6. Department of Surgery

7. Department of Urology, Lund University Hospital, 221 85 Lund, Sweden

Abstract

A functionally distinct subset of CD103+ dendritic cells (DCs) has recently been identified in murine mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) that induces enhanced FoxP3+ T cell differentiation, retinoic acid receptor signaling, and gut-homing receptor (CCR9 and α4β7) expression in responding T cells. We show that this function is specific to small intestinal lamina propria (SI-LP) and MLN CD103+ DCs. CD103+ SI-LP DCs appeared to derive from circulating DC precursors that continually seed the SI-LP. BrdU pulse-chase experiments suggested that most CD103+ DCs do not derive from a CD103− SI-LP DC intermediate. The majority of CD103+ MLN DCs appear to represent a tissue-derived migratory population that plays a central role in presenting orally derived soluble antigen to CD8+ and CD4+ T cells. In contrast, most CD103− MLN DCs appear to derive from blood precursors, and these cells could proliferate within the MLN and present systemic soluble antigen. Critically, CD103+ DCs with similar phenotype and functional properties were present in human MLN, and their selective ability to induce CCR9 was maintained by CD103+ MLN DCs isolated from SB Crohn's patients. Thus, small intestinal CD103+ DCs represent a potential novel target for regulating human intestinal inflammatory responses.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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