Failures in thymus medulla regeneration during immune recovery cause tolerance loss and prime recipients for auto-GVHD

Author:

Alawam Abdullah S.1ORCID,Cosway Emilie J.1ORCID,James Kieran D.1ORCID,Lucas Beth1ORCID,Bacon Andrea1ORCID,Parnell Sonia M.1ORCID,White Andrea J.1ORCID,Jenkinson William E.1ORCID,Anderson Graham1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, Medical School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is a widely used therapy for blood cancers and primary immunodeficiency. Following transplant, the thymus plays a key role in immune reconstitution by generating a naive αβT cell pool from transplant-derived progenitors. While donor-derived thymopoiesis during the early post-transplant period is well studied, the ability of the thymus to synchronize T cell development with essential tolerance mechanisms is poorly understood. Using a syngeneic mouse transplant model, we analyzed T cell recovery alongside the regeneration and function of intrathymic microenvironments. We report a specific and prolonged failure in the post-transplant recovery of medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs). This manifests as loss of medulla-dependent tolerance mechanisms, including failures in Foxp3+ regulatory T cell development and formation of the intrathymic dendritic cell pool. In addition, defective negative selection enables escape of self-reactive conventional αβT cells that promote autoimmunity. Collectively, we show that post-transplant T cell recovery involves an uncoupling of thymopoiesis from thymic tolerance, which results in autoimmune reconstitution caused by failures in thymic medulla regeneration.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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